A Cowboy Heard Sobs By Willow Creek And Found A Truth Worth Fighting For-rosocute

The first thing Luke Frasier heard was not the creek.

It was crying.

The sound moved through the cottonwoods in broken pieces, soft enough to be mistaken for wind by a man who had forgotten what it was like to listen for another human being.

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Luke had been riding alone across the hot Wyoming plain outside Delta in the summer of 1878, with dust on his coat, leather creaking under him, and no plan beyond finding work after the last cattle drive had ended.

For fifteen years, drifting had been easier than staying.

Then the sobbing rose again.

His bay mare slowed before he touched the reins, and Luke looked toward the narrow thread of Willow Creek cutting through the dry grass.

At first he saw only shade, water, and the pale flash of a torn skirt near the bank.

Then the woman lifted her head.

She was young, maybe not much past twenty, with dirt streaked across her cheeks and hair half fallen from its pins.

Her calico dress had been ripped at the shoulder and hem, and her bare feet were scraped bloody from stone, root, and road.

She looked at Luke as if he were not a stranger but another piece of danger sent to drag her back.

He dismounted slowly, keeping his hands open.

“I will not hurt you,” he said.

The woman backed so fast her heel slid into the creek.

“Please,” she said, voice raw. “Do not make me go back.”

Luke had seen fear on cattle drives, in storms, in men cornered by debt or fever or a bad card table, but this was different.

This was fear that had learned to live inside the bones.

He asked who she was running from, and she answered with a name known across that part of the territory.

Conrad Nolan.

A rancher with money.

A husband with a clean public face.

A man who owned enough land, horses, and favors to make weaker men step aside.

Florence Nolan said the town respected him because they had never seen the rooms where his temper lived.

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