Mountain Man Heard A Birth Cry In The Pines And Found A Deadly Secret-rosocute

The first scream reached Gideon Vale while his rifle was already aimed at the tree line.

He had been tracking movement on the far slope, watching a dark flicker pass between pine trunks where late-spring snow still clung in ragged patches.

For a moment, he thought the sound belonged to the mountains.

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A catamount could make a cry close enough to a woman’s terror to turn a man’s blood cold.

Wind could tear through a narrow cut in the rocks and come out sounding almost alive.

But the second cry carried words.

Somebody was pleading.

Gideon lowered the rifle one inch, then another, listening so hard that the whole canyon seemed to hold still around him.

The birds had gone up from the timber in a black flutter.

The creek ran below, swollen with snowmelt and talking hard over stone.

The pines smelled of wet bark, old needles, and a little coal smoke carried from some distant camp that was not close enough to matter.

Then the voice came again, weaker this time.

It was not an animal.

It was a woman begging to be found before something worse found her first.

Gideon moved.

He left the elk trail and cut downhill through brush that grabbed at his coat and slapped snowmelt across his sleeves.

Shale slid under his boots.

A branch scraped his cheek.

He kept the rifle in one hand because a man who lived alone in the Colorado high country did not toss away sense just because mercy had called him.

Still, he ran harder than he had run in years.

Eleven years of solitude had taught him to measure every step.

It had also taught him that delay could be a kind of cruelty.

People in Georgetown had opinions about Gideon Vale.

They had made him into a warning before they ever tried to know him.

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