Widow’s Winter Hire Becomes a Fight for Family and Survival-rosocute

The knock came after sundown, just once, hard enough to carry through the little cabin but not hard enough to be polite.

Mara Witkim did not move at first.

The stew pot gave off a thin smell of onions and old smoke, and the oil lamp shook on the table as wind shoved at the walls.

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No one knocked on a widow’s door after dark unless need had eaten through their manners.

Or unless trouble had come wearing boots.

She reached for the lamp with one hand and kept the other close to the rifle leaning near the hearth.

The knock did not come again.

That bothered her more than if it had.

A man who hammered twice was impatient.

A man who waited knew how to be still.

Mara lifted the latch and opened the door only wide enough for lamplight to spill over the threshold.

The stranger stood with his hat in both hands, tall and narrow from travel, his coat patched at the elbows and dust darkened along the hem.

Behind him, half hidden by that coat, stood a little girl.

Mara saw the child’s fingers first.

They were knotted in the cloth as if the man might be pulled away by the wind.

Then she saw the child’s face.

Dark hair, hollow cheeks, eyes too watchful for eight years on earth.

“Ma’am,” the stranger said. “I was told you might need a ranch hand.”

Mara held the lamp higher.

His eyes moved around the yard, not in greed, not in guilt, but in the careful way of a man who had learned danger sometimes came quiet.

“Who told you that?”

“Man at the dry goods store.”

Mara gave a bitter little breath.

“That sounds like Walter Finch.”

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