A Torn Valise, Two Hundred Pesos, And The Skull Mine Claim-rosocute

The woman came into San Miguel de las Cruces looking as if the storm had tried to bury her and failed.

Mud dragged at the hem of her dress.

A torn valise hung from one hand, its leather scarred by rock and rain, and beneath the stiff line of her corset she carried a folded document she had not shown to anyone in town.

Image

The men inside Don Eulalio’s company store had been talking about that same woman before she arrived.

Not by name, because most of them did not know it yet.

They were speaking of her as men speak when they are warm, armed with coffee and liquor, and sure the person being judged cannot hear them.

They had heard a city woman had come asking about the high trails.

They had heard she wanted the Skull Mine.

They had heard she meant to ride toward the crest of Los 3 Hermanos in January, with the wind cutting through the canyon mouths and the old paths slick from storm.

So they bet among themselves, soft at first and then louder, that she would not last a single night in the mountains.

Some said she would faint before the first rise.

Some said she would beg for a cot in town before sundown.

One man, warmed by mezcal and his own cruelty, said the coyotes would have more patience than she did.

Then the door slammed inward, and the room went quiet.

Cold air rushed through the store with dust and wet grit in it.

The oil lamp shivered.

The stove gave a dull iron pop, as if even the fire had noticed her.

Mariana de la Vega stepped inside without asking permission from the room, the weather, or the men watching her.

Her dark blue coat had lost whatever clean city shape it once possessed.

Rain had darkened it almost black at the shoulders, and the mud at her skirt showed she had already walked ground most of the men would not have crossed without a mule and a curse.

Her brown hair stuck to her face in wet strands.

Her mouth was split from cold.

Her green eyes, though, were not broken, and that was the first thing Julián Ríos noticed from his place beside the stove.

He had been sitting with one boot near the heat and one shoulder turned toward the room, as he often did.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *