“I can’t carry them alone,” she said, and the words came out like a confession. “I’ve tried. I’ve been trying for 2 weeks, but I can’t do it. I can’t carry them anymore.” Garrett looked at the children, at the broken wagon, at the woman who was holding herself together with nothing but stubbornness and fear. He thought about his own ranch, 30 mi of open country between here and there, and the fact that Jed would have his hide for being late.
He thought about the storm he’d seen building on the northern horizon that morning, the kind that turned gullies into rivers and left people stranded for days. He thought about walking away. Then he looked at the boy who was watching him with eyes that had already seen too much, and he knew he wasn’t going to. “All right,” Garrett said quietly.
“Get your things. We’re leaving,” Clare blinked. “What? Whatever you can carry. Food, blankets, anything that’ll keep you warm tonight. We’re not staying here. I can’t just leave the wagon. The wagon’s done, Mom. But you’re not, so let’s move before the sun goes down and we’re all dead.” For a moment, she just stared at him.
Then something shifted in her face, something like hope, or maybe just the absence of despair. She nodded once, sharp and quick, and turned to the children. Emma, Daniel, get your things now. They moved fast, pulling small bundles from the wagon, closed a tin cup, a doll with one arm missing. Clare grabbed a satchel and a canteen, her movements mechanical, like she was forcing herself to keep going through sheer will.
Garrett watched, calculating. two kids, one woman, all of them exhausted. It would take them 3 days to reach the ranch on foot, maybe four. And that was if the weather held. When they were ready, Clare turned back to the wagon one last time. Her hand lingered on the splintered wood, and for a second, Garrett thought she might cry, but she didn’t.
She just pressed her palm flat against it, like she was saying goodbye to something more than canvas and nails. Then she walked away. Garrett tied the children’s bundles to his saddle, keeping his rifle within reach. He offered Clare his canteen. She took it without a word, drank, then passed it to Emma, who drank and passed it to Daniel.
The boy handed it back to Garrett, his small hands trembling. “Thank you, mister,” he whispered. Garrett nodded. “Don’t thank me yet, kid. We’ve got a long walk ahead.” They started south into the fading light. The canyon walls rose around them, red and jagged, and the wind carried the smell of dust and distant rain. Garrett led the horse.
Clare walked beside him, and the children followed, their footsteps soft and unsteady on the hard ground. No one spoke. Behind them, the broken wagon sat in the canyon mouth, a ghost of what used to be, and ahead. The desert stretched out like an open wound, endless, unforgiving, and waiting. They walked until full dark, until the stars came out cold and sharp overhead.
Garrett found a hollow between two boulders, sheltered from the wind, and built a small fire with brush and deadwood. The flames crackled and hissed, throwing shadows against the stone. Clare sat with her back to the rock, the children pressed close on either side of her. Emma’s head rested on her mother’s shoulder.
Daniel stared into the fire, his face black. Garrett handed Clare a strip of jerky from his saddle bag. She took it, broke it in half, gave the pieces to the kids. They chewed slowly like they were trying to make it last. You didn’t eat, Garrett said. They needed more. You need it, too. She didn’t answer. Added just wrapped her arms around the children and closed her eyes.
Garrett sat across from them back to the opposite rock, rifle resting on his knees. The fire was small, just enough to keep the cold off. In the distance, a coyote yipped and Emma flinched. “It’s all right,” Clare murmured. It’s far away. But her voice was tight, and her hand moved to the knife on her belt. A small rusted blade that wouldn’t do much against anything bigger than a rabbit.
Garrett watched her. She was running on fumes. He’d seen it before in soldiers after long campaigns, in settlers who’d lost everything. “That hollow looked like the inside had burned out and only the shell was left. If she pushed much farther, she’d break.” “How long since you slept?” he asked. She opened her eyes, looked at him. I don’t know, days.
You need rest. I’ll rest when we’re safe. You won’t make it that far if you don’t sleep now. Her jaw clenched. I don’t need your advice, Mr. Moss. Maybe not, but your kids need you alive. That l She looked down at Emma and Daniel, both of them half asleep already, and something in her face cracked.
She pulled them closer, buried her face in Emma’s hair. I’m trying, she whispered. I’m trying so hard. Garrett said nothing. What could he say? that it would be all right, that the world was fair. He didn’t believe in lies. “Get some sleep,” he said instead. “I’ll keep watch. Why are you helping us?” The question caught him off guard.
He looked at her across the fire at the exhaustion and distrust in her eyes, and for a moment he didn’t have an answer. “Because someone has to,” he said finally. She studied him like she was trying to decide if he was lying. Then she nodded once, slow and deliberate, and closed her eyes again. Within minutes, she was asleep.
The children followed soon after, curled against her like small animals, seeking warmth. Garrett stayed awake, feeding the fire, listening to the night. The coyotes called again closer this time. An owl hooted from somewhere high in the rocks. The wind shifted, carrying the scent of rain.
He thought about the ranch, about Ged’s gruff voice, and the bunk house, and the work waiting for him. Oh, he thought about the strays he’d been tracking now long gone. He thought about the three men who’d taken Clare’s oxen, who’d left her and her children to die in the desert. And he thought about the choice he’d made. It would have been easy to leave them, to point them south, and wish them luck.
No one would have blamed him. Out here, you looked after your own. That was the rule. But rules didn’t mean much when you looked a kid in the eye and saw your own past staring back. The second day was harder. They started at dawn before the heat came. Garrett set a steady pace, not too fast, mindful of the children’s short legs.
Clare walked beside him, silent and focused. Emma held her mother’s hand. Daniel walked a few steps behind, dragging a stick through the dirt. By midm morning, the boy was limping. Garrett stopped, crouched down. Let me see. Daniel hesitated, glanced at his mother. Clare nodded. The boy lifted his foot.
His boot was worn through at the heel, and a blister had opened, raw and bleeding. Garrett pulled a strip of cloth from his pack, wrapped it tight. “That’ll hold for now, but we need to go slower.” “We can’t afford slower,” Clare said. Her voice was flat, automatic. “If we don’t reach the ranch soon, if we push too hard, he won’t make it at all.
” She looked at her son at the pain he was trying to hide, and her face went pale. I didn’t know. He didn’t say anything. He’s a tough kid. But tough doesn’t mean invincible. Clare knelt beside Daniel, cuped his face in her hands. Why didn’t you tell me? I didn’t want to slow us down, he whispered, her eyes filled.
She pulled him close, held him tight. You don’t have to be brave all the time. Not for me, not for anyone. Garrett stood, turned away to give them space. He scanned the horizon. No movement, no dust. But that didn’t mean they were alone. This country had eyes everywhere. When Clare stood again, her face was set. You all go slower.
Good or slower? They walked through the heat of the day, stopping often to rest in whatever shade they could find. Garrett gave Daniel water, let him ride on the horse for a while. Emma walked beside her brother, holding the rains, talking to him in low, soothing tones. By afternoon, the sky had changed.
Dark clouds masked on the northern horizon, heavy and bruised. The wind picked up, carrying the smell of wet earth and electricity. “Storm’s coming,” Carrot said. Clare looked up, shading her eyes. “How long? Tonight? Maybe sooner. Can we outrun it? No. She bit her lip, nodded. Nodded. Then we find shelter.
They pressed on faster now, urgency sharpening every step. The landscape shifted to flat desert, giving way to broken foothills and dry washes. Garrett led them into a narrow canyon, steep walled and winding, and found a shallow cave tucked beneath an overhang. “Here,” he said. “We’ll wait it out.” Clare ushered the children inside.
Garrett tied the horse, gathered what dry wood he could find, and built another fire near the cave mouth. The first drops of rain began to fall, fat and heavy, kicking up dust. They sat in the cave as the storm broke. Rain hammered the ground outside, turning the wash into a churning brown river. Lightning split the sky, and thunder rolled through the canyon like cannon fire. Emma cried, and Clare held her.
Daniel pressed close, shaking. Garrett sat at the cave mouth, watching the water rise, and wondered if they’d made the right choice, stopping here. The rain didn’t let up. It poured for hours, drowning the world in noise and water. And in the distance, barely audible over the storm. Garrett heard something else.
Voices. Voices. He stood moved to the edge of the edge of the overhang, peered into the rain. Three riders, maybe four, moving through the canyon. They were searching for something or someone. Clare saw his expression and her face went white. It’s them,” she whispered. “The men from the wagon.
” Garrett’s hand moved to his rifle. “Get the kids to the back of the cave. Stay quiet. They’ll find us. Not if I can help it.” She grabbed the children, pulled them deeper into the shadows. Garrett crouched to the cave mouth, rifle ready, and watched the riders approach through the rain. They were close now, close enough that he could see their faces, hard and mean, eyes scanning the rocks.
One of them pointed toward the cave. Garrett’s finger tightened on the trigger and the storm raged on. The riders stopped 50 yards out their horses restless in the downpour. Garrett could see them through the sheets of rain. Three men roughl looking with the kind of eyes that had seen too much and cared too little.
One of them wore a battered cavalry jacket. Another had a scar running from his temple to his jaw. The third was younger, maybe 20, with a wild look that made Garrett’s gut tighten. They were arguing about something, gesturing toward the cave and the rocks beyond. The scarred one kept shaking his head, pointing back the way they’d come.
But the young one dismounted, started walking toward the overhang. Garrett pulled back into the shadows, heart pounding. Behind him, he heard Emma’s quiet whimper. Clare’s whispered reassurance. The fire had burned down to embers barely visible. He prayed it was enough. The young man stopped 10 ft from the cave mouth, squinting into the darkness.
Rain streamed off his hat brim. His hand rested on the pistol at his hip. “Anyone in there?” he called. Garrett didn’t move, didn’t breathe. The man took another step. I said, “Anyone in there?” Silence. Just the rain and the distant rumble of thunder. The scarred rider called out, “Riley, get back here.
Huh? Ain’t nobody out in this mess.” Riley hesitated, peering into the cave. For a moment, Garrett was sure he’d been spotted. Then the young man turned, spat into the mud, and walked back to his horse. Told you it was nothing, the scarred one said. Now let’s get out of this damned rain before we drown. They rode off, disappearing into the storm.
Garrett stayed frozen, rifle raised, until the sound of hoof beatats faded completely. Only then did he lower the gun and let out the breath he’d been holding. Clare emerged from the shadows, pale as a ghost. They were looking for us. Maybe. Or maybe they’re just drifters. You don’t believe that? He didn’t.
But saying it out loud wouldn’t help. will stay here tonight. Move at first light and if they come back,” Garrett met her eyes. “Then I’ll handle it,” she nodded, but the fear didn’t leave her face. She returned to the children, wrapped them in the blankets, whispered words Garrett couldn’t hear. Emma had stopped crying, but her eyes were wide and glassy.
Daniel stared at the cave wall, unmoving. Garrett moved to the fire, coaxed it back to life with dry twigs from his pack. The flames grew warm and flickering, pushing back the darkness. Outside, the rain continued its relentless assault. But inside the cave, it was almost peaceful, almost morning came cold and gray.
The storm had passed, leaving the canyon floor slick with mud and standing water. Garrett woke before dawn, his body stiff from sleeping upright against the cave wall. Clare was already awake, sitting with the children, her hand resting on the knife at her belt. “You didn’t sleep,” Garrett said. “Neither did you. He didn’t argue. We should move.
those men might circle back.” Clare nodded, roused the children. They ate the last of the jerky in silence, then gathered their things and stepped out into the damp morning. The canyon looked different in daylight, wider, more exposed. Garrett didn’t like it. Too many sidelines, too many places for someone to wait in ambush.
He kept his rifle ready, eyes scanning the ridges. They walked for 2 hours before they saw the smoke. It rose in a thin black column from somewhere ahead, maybe a mile south. Garrett stopped, held up a hand. Clare froze, pulling the children close. “What is it?” she whispered. “Don’t know.” “Huh? Could be nothing.” “But it wasn’t nothing.
” Garrett could feel it his bones. They approached slowly, using the rocks for cover. As they got closer, the smell hit them. Burning wood and something else. Something sweet and sickly that made Garrett’s stomach turn. Then they crested a rise, and he saw it. A homestead, or what was left of one. The cabin was a blackened skeleton, smoke still curling from the collapsed roof.
The barn had been torn apart, boards scattered like matchsticks, and in the yard, lying face down in the mud, was a body. Clare gasped, covered Emma’s eyes. Daniel stared, his face blank. Garrett dismounted, approached the body. It was a man middle-aged shot twice in the back. His hands were bound. Executed.
Garrett’s jaw tightened. He’d seen this before back during the war. raiders, deserters, men who took what they wanted and left nothing but ash and grief. The kind of men who didn’t care about right or wrong, only survival. The kind of men who’d been in the canyon last night. He straightened, scanned the area.
No other bodies. Maybe the family had escaped. Or maybe they were still here hiding, too scared to come out. Garrett. Clare’s voice was tight. We need to go now. She was right. Whoever did this might still be close. he nodded, started back toward the horse, and froze. The three riders stood on the ridge above, silhouetted against the pale sky.
The scarred one, the young one, and the third, still wearing that battered cavalry jacket. They sat perfectly still, watching. Then the scarred one raised his hand and waved. Garrett’s blood ran cold. “Run,” he said quietly. Clare didn’t need to be told twice. She grabbed the children, pulled them toward the rocks. Garrett swung onto his horse, kicked it into a gallop, and followed.
Behind them, he heard the riders shouting. Heard the thunder of hoof beatats. They were coming fast. Garrett glanced back. The riders had split up, two coming straight on, one circling wide to cut them off. Smart organized. These weren’t just drifters. They were hunters, and they’d found their prey. The landscape blurred past, rocks, scrub, dry gullies.
Garrett’s horse was strong, but Clare and the children were on foot, and they couldn’t keep this pace. He could see Emma stumbling, Daniel gasping for breath. They weren’t going to make it. Garrett made a choice. He wheeled the horse around, pulled his rifle, and fired. The shot echoed through the canyon, and one of the riders jerked back, clutching his shoulder.
The other two pulled up, taking cover behind a boulder. “Go!” Garrett shouted at Clare. “Don’t stop. Follow the canyon south. There’s a ranch 20 mi out. Tell them Garrett Moss sent you. I’m not leaving you. You don’t have a choice. He fired again, keeping the riders pinned. Clare hesitated one more second and grabbed the children and ran.
Garrett watched them disappear around a bend, then turned back to the riders. The scarred one was shouting something, gesturing. The young one was reloading. The third, the one with the cavalry jacket, was staring directly at Garrett, a cold smile on his face. Garrett fired again, missed.
And then his rifle clicked empty. The riders saw it. They emerged from cover, spreading out, moving in for the kill. Garrett drew his pistol, backed his horse toward a narrow defile. If he could bottleneck them, make them come at him one at a time. The young one charged, pistol blazing. Garrett fired twice, and the young man fell, tumbling from his saddle.
But the other two kept coming. Garrett turned, spurred his horse into the defile, and came face to face with the man in the cavalry jacket. He must have circled around, cut through the rocks. He sat on his horse, pistol level, that same cold smile on his face. “End of the line, friend,” he said. Garrett’s hand tightened on his pistol.
The man was 10 ft away, too close to miss, but so was Garrett. They stared at each other across the narrow space. Two men with guns and no good options. “You got a family?” the man asked. Garrett didn’t answer. Me neither. Lost him years ago. Comanche raid, so I figured why not take from folks who still got theirs. Seems fair, don’t it? Nothing fair about murder. The man shrugged.
Fair’s a word rich men use out here that’s just alive and dead. Which are you planning to be? The man’s smile widened. Oh, I’m planning to be alive a long time. You, on the other hand, Garrett shot him. Garrett shot him. The bullet took him in the chest and he fell backward off his horse crashing into the rocks. The scarred rider appeared at the mouth of the defile, saw his partner down and froze for a heartbeat.
Neither man moved. Then the scarred rider turned and rode away, his horse’s hoof beatats fading into the distance. Garrett slumped in his saddle, hands shaking. The man in the cavalry jacket lay still, eyes open and empty. Garrett dismounted, checked for a pulse. Nothing. He stood there for a long moment, staring at the body, at the blood seeping into the dirt.
Then he climbed back on his horse and rode south toward Clare and the children, toward the ranch, toward whatever came next. Behind him, the canyon fell silent, and the sun climbed higher, burning away the last of the rain. Garrett found them a mile south, huddled beneath an outcropping of rock. Clare was on her feet, knife in hand, ready to fight.
When she saw it was him, her knees buckled and she sank to the ground. I thought she couldn’t finish. Garrett dismounted, legs unsteady. I’m all right. The men gone. They won’t be following us. She looked at him at the blood on his shirt and understood. She didn’t ask, just nodded and turned back to the children. Emma was crying softly.
Her face pressed into her mother’s shoulder. Her face pressed into her mother’s shoulder. Daniel stood a few feet away, staring at nothing. Garrett approached him slowly, crouched down. You all right, kid?” Daniel didn’t answer. His hands were clenched into fists, his whole body rigid. “Daniel,” Garrett said quietly.
“Look at me,” the boy turned. His eyes were wet, but no tears fell. “Are they dead? The bad men?” Garrett hesitated, then nodded. “Some of them good.” The word came out flat, empty. Not relief, not anger, just nothing. Garrett’s chest tightened. He’d seen that look before in the mirror back when he was a kid, not much older than Daniel.
Waxin’s own father had been shot by claimed jumpers and he’d been left alone with his mother and sister in a cabin with no food and winter coming. He’d learned to stop feeling then learned that feeling hurt too much that it was easier to just go cold inside. He didn’t want that for this kid. Come here, Garrett said. Daniel stared at him uncertain.
Then slowly he stepped forward. Garrett put a hand on his shoulder, felt the boy trembling. You’re scared. That’s all right. I’m scared too. You don’t look scared. That’s cuz I’ve had practice. But being scared don’t make you weak. Oh, it makes you smart. I don’t feel smart. I feel I don’t know. Empty. Daniel nodded. Yeah, I know that feeling.
Garrett paused, choosing his words carefully. My P died when I was about your age. Men came to our claim. Wanted the land. He fought back. They killed him. And for a long time after, I felt like you do now. Like something inside me had gone out and I couldn’t get it back. How’d you fix it? I didn’t. Not really. But I kept going.
And eventually, little by little, things started to matter again. Not the same way, but enough. Daniel looked up at him, eyes searching. Does it still hurt? Missing your part? Yeah, every day, but you’re okay now. I’m alive, and most days that’s enough. The boy considered this. Then, without warning, he leaned forward and wrapped his arms around Garrett’s neck.
The hug was brief, awkward, but it hit Garrett like a punch to the chest. When Daniel pulled back, his face was still serious, but something in his eyes had shifted. Not much, just a flicker, but it was there. Garrett stood, cleared his throat. We should get moving. Still got a ways to go. Still got a ways to go. Clare had been watching silent.
Now she stepped closer, her face unreadable. Thank you, she said quietly. Not just for saving us. For that, Garrett shrugged. Kid needed to hear it. So did I. Their eyes met and for a moment the hardness between them softened. She reached out, touched his arm. Just a brief contact then and gone, but it was enough. An acknowledgement, a bridge.
Let’s go home, she said. They walked through the afternoon, the sun warm on their backs. Garrett let Emma ride on the horse, her small hands clutching the saddle horn. Daniel walked beside his mother, occasionally glancing back at Garrett like he was making sure he was still there. As the miles passed, the tension began to ease. Not completely.
Too much had happened for that, but enough that they could breathe a little easier. At one point, Emma started singing quietly at first, then louder, a song about a bluebird and a river. Clare joined in. Her voice cracked but steady. Daniel hummed along off key and tented. Garrett listened, feeling something he hadn’t felt in a long time.
Something warm and unfamiliar. Hope maybe or just the absence of dread. They stopped to rest near a creek, the water clear and cold. Garrett filled the cantens while Clare washed the children’s faces and hands. Emma found a smooth stone and gave it to her mother, who turned it over in her palm like it was precious. For luck, Emma said.
Clare smiled. The first real smile Garrett had seen from her. “Thank you, sweetheart.” She tucked the stone into her pocket, then looked at Garrett. “How much farther? We’ll reach the ranch by tomorrow afternoon. Maybe sooner if we push.” and your boss, he’ll let us stay. G’s a hard man, but he’s not cruel.
He’ll let you stay long enough to figure out your next step. And what is our next step? Garrett didn’t have an answer. Garrett didn’t have an answer. He didn’t know if her brother was still in Silver Springs, or if he’d ever existed at all. He didn’t know if she had money or prospects or anything beyond the clothes on her back and the will to keep moving.
But he knew she was still standing, and that counted for something. And that counted for something. One step at a time,” he said. “That’s all any of us can do.” She nodded, and they rested in silence, listening to the creek and the wind and the sound of Emma humming her bluebird song. And for a little while, the world felt almost gentle.
By evening, they reached the southern edge of the canyon country. The land opened up, rolling hills and dry grasslands stretching toward the horizon. In the distance, Garrett could see smoke from the ranch cookhouse, a thin gray line against the sky. “There,” he said, pointing. That’s home. Clare stared at the smoke, her expression unreadable.
Then she looked at her children at their tired faces and dusty clothes, and something in her settled. “We’re going to be all right,” she said more to herself than anyone else. “We’re going to be all right, Garrett hoped she was right.” They walked on into the fading light toward the smoke and the promise of rest. And somewhere behind them, in the canyon they left behind, the desert wind swept over broken wagons and empty trails, erasing all trace of their passage.
But they didn’t look back. They only looked ahead. The Double J Ranch sat in a shallow valley, protected by hills on three sides. The main house was sturdy timber and stone, smoke curling from the chimney. The barn was bigger than most Garrett had seen, and the corral were filled with horses and cattle.
Men moved between the buildings, working even as the sun dipped low. Garrett led Clare and the children through the gate and immediately a voice boomed from the porch. Moss, where the hell you been? You were due back three days ago. Jed Murphy stood at the top of the steps, arms crossed, scowlling beneath his gray beard.
He was built like a barrel, thick and solid, with eyes that missed nothing. He took one look at Clare and the children, and his scowl deepened. And who the hell are they? Garrett dismounted, helped Emma down from the horse, names Clare Holay and her kids. Found them stranded north of here. They need a place to rest. G’s eyes narrowed. This look like a boarding house to you.
No, sir, but it looks like a place run by a decent man. The two of them stared at each other, the air thick with tension. Then Jed grunted and waved a hand. Fine, but they pull their weight. I don’t care if they’re half dead. Everyone works on my ranch. Clare stepped forward, shoulders straight despite her exhaustion.
We’ll work whatever you need. We won’t be a burden. Jed looked her over, assessing. Then he nodded. “Maria,” he bellowed. “Get out here.” A woman appeared from inside the house, short, round with gray hair pulled back in a bun. She took one look at Clare and the children, immediately softened.
“Dear Mia,” she murmured, hurrying down the steps. “Look at them. Come, come, come. You need food. Water bed.” She ushered Clare and the children inside, clucking like a mother hen. Emma looked back at Garrett once, her eyes wide and uncertain, and he nodded. It’s all right. You’re safe now. When they were gone, Jed turned to Garrett.
You going to tell me what really happened? Garrett gave him the short version. The broken wagon, the men who’d robbed Clare, the chase, the shootings. He left out the parts that didn’t matter, the details that would only make Jed ask more questions. When he finished, Jed was silent for a long moment. Then he sighed, rubbed his face.
You killed two men. They didn’t leave me much choice. I know, but that don’t mean the law won’t ask questions. You carrying any proof? Witnesses? Just her and the kids and a burned out homestead with a dead man in the yard? Yeah. Jed swore under his breath. All right, here’s what we do. You keep your head down.
Stay close to the ranch. I’ll send word to the marshall in Silver Springs. Let him know what happened. If he wants to talk, he can come here. Garrett nodded. “Thanks, Jed. Don’t thank me yet. This could still blow up in our faces.” Pause then clapped Garrett on the shoulder. But you did right. Bringing them here. Even if you’re a damn fool.
Garrett managed a tired smile. “Yes, sir. Now get cleaned up and get some food. You look like hell.” Over the next few days, Clare and the children settled into the rhythm of the ranch. Clare worked in the kitchen with Maria, helping prepare meals for the hands. Emma fed the chickens and gathered eggs. Daniel followed Garrett around asking questions about horses and cattle and everything else he could think of.
Garrett didn’t mind. The kid reminded him of himself at that age, curious, a little lost, trying to figure out where he fit. One afternoon, Garrett was mending a fence when Daniel appeared beside him holding a hammer. Can I help? Garrett glanced at him. You know how to use that. My p showed me before he died.
All right, hold the post steady while I nail. They worked in silence for a while, the sun warm on their backs. Daniel was careful, focused, his small hands gripping the post tight. You miss him? Garrett asked after a while. Your p? Daniel nodded. Everyday. Yeah, me too. Mine, I mean. Do you think he’d be proud of you? Your p? Garrett paused.
Hammer raised. It was a question he’d asked himself a thousand times, always with the same uncertain answer. I don’t know. Maybe. I hope so. I think he would be. Garrett looked at the boy, saw the earnestness in his face, and felt something tighten in his chest. Yeah. Yeah. You saved us. That’s what heroes do. I’m no hero, kid.
Just did what needed doing. That’s what makes you one. Garrett didn’t know what to say to that. So, he just nodded and they went back to work. A week later, the marshall arrived. His name was Tom Callaway, a lean man with a weathered face and eyes that had seen too much. He listened to Garrett’s story, asked a few questions, then rode out to the canyon with two deputies to see the burned homestead.
When he came back, he found Garrett in the barn brushing down his horse. “I talked to the widow,” Callaway said, leaning against the stall door. “She corroborated your story.” “So did the boy.” “So we’re clear. Far as I’m concerned, you acted in self-defense. Those men were wanted in three counties for robbery and murder.
You did the territory a favor.” He paused. But Moss, you got a habit of finding trouble. Troubles got a habit of finding me. Callaway smiled faint and tired. Fair enough. Just try to keep your nose clean for a while. All right. All right. I’ll do my best. The marshall tipped his hat and left.
Garrett watched him go, then returned to brushing his horse, feeling lighter than he had in days. 2 weeks after that, Clare made her decision. She found Garrett in the corral working with a young mayor. He saw her coming and climbed over the fence to meet her. “I wanted to thank you,” she said, “for everything, for saving us, for bringing us here, for giving us a chance. You don’t need to thank me.
I do because I don’t know where we’d be without you. Probably dead in that canyon.” Garrett didn’t argue. It was probably true. I sent word to my brother, she continued. “He’s in Silver Springs, like I said. He wants us to come. He’s got a house of business. Says there’s room for all of us. That’s good. You’ll be safe there.
I know. But she hesitated, looking out at the hills, the wide open sky. I wanted to ask if you’d come with us just to make sure we get there safe. Garrett blinked. You want me to? I know it’s a lot to ask, but I trust you. And Daniel, he’s he’s attached to you. Keeps asking when you’re going to visit.
Garrett’s throat tightened. He looked down at his hands, rough and scarred from years of hard work. Clare, I’m not. I’m not good at this. People, families, all that. I’m just a ranch hand. You’re more than that. You’re a good man, and good men are hard to find. He met her eyes, saw the sincerity there, and felt something shift inside him.
A door opening that he’d kept closed for years. “All right,” he said quietly. “I’ll take you.” Her smile was small, was small, but genuine. “Thank you.” They left a week later. Jed grumbled about losing his best hand, but Maria packed them enough food for the journey, and the other hands helped load the wagon Jed had grudgingly donated.
Clare drove the children beside her. Garrett rode alongside on his horse rifle resting across his lap. The journey to Silver Springs took 3 days. They traveled slowly, stopping often to rest, talking about everything and nothing. Emma told Garrett stories about her doll. Daniel asked him about the war, about the ranch, about what it was like to be alone.
And Clare, she talked about her late husband, about their dreams of a better life, about how scared she’d been when those dreams started falling apart. “I thought we were going to die out there,” she admitted one evening as they sat around the fire. “I really did, and I kept thinking, if I die, what happens to them? Who takes care of them?” “But you didn’t die. No, because of you.
” Garrett poked at the fire, uncomfortable with the praise. You did the hard part. You kept going. We both did. They sat in silence, the fire crackling between them. And Garrett realized something. He’d spent so many years moving from place to place, never staying anywhere long enough to matter. But here now, sitting with this woman and her children, he felt something he hadn’t felt in years. He felt like he mattered.
Silver Springs was bigger than Garrett expected. two streets lined with shops and houses, a church, a saloon, a hotel. Clare’s brother, Samuel, met them at the edge of town. He was younger than Clare with a kind face and a nervous energy that made Garrett instantly weary. But when Samuel saw his sister, his face crumpled, and he pulled her into a fierce hug.
“I thought I’d lost you,” he said, voiceing. “When you didn’t arrive, I thought, I’m here. We’re here. I thought I’m here. We’re all right.” Samuel pulled back, looked at the children at Garrett. Who’s this? This is Garrett Moss. He saved our lives. Samuel shook Garrett’s hand, his grip firm. I don’t know how to thank you. Don’t need thanks.
Just take care of them. I will. I swear it. They unloaded the wagon in front of Samuel’s house. A modest but sturdy building with a shop on the ground floor and living quarters above. Samuel showed them around, talking fast, excited. The children explored, their voices echoing through the room. Clare stood in the doorway, looking out at the street, and Garrett saw tears on her cheeks.
“You’re right?” he asked. She nodded. “It’s just I didn’t think we’d make it. I really didn’t. And now we’re here, and it’s real.” And I, she trailed off, wiping her eyes. Garrett stood beside her, not touching, just present. “You’re going to be all right,” he said. “All of you. I know. Because of you.
” He didn’t know what to say to that. So he just nodded. Garrett stayed in town for two more days, making sure they were settled. On the morning of the third day, he packed his things and prepared to leave. Clare walked him to his horse. The children trailing behind. Emma hugged his leg. Daniel shook his hand solemn and serious.
You’ll visit, right? The boy asked. If I can. Promise? Garrett hesitated, then nodded. Promise? Clare stepped forward and for a moment he thought she might hug him, but she just held out her hand. He took it and she squeezed tight. “Thank you,” she said. “For everything, for believing we were worth saving. You are always worth saving,” Garrett said.
“You just needed someone to remind you.” She smiled sad and grateful and let go. Garrett climbed onto his horse, tipped his hat, and rode out of town. He looked back once, saw them standing in the street, waving. Then he turned forward and kept riding and kept riding. Years later, people in Silver Springs would tell the story of the woman who arrived with nothing and built a life anyway.
They’d talk about her brother’s store, about the school she helped establish, about the children who grew up strong and kind, and sometimes on quiet evenings. They’d mentioned the cowboy who brought her there, the one who walked into the desert and came back with a family that wasn’t his, but became something close. Garrett Moss returned to the Double J Ranch and worked there for another 10 years.
He visited Silver Springs twice a year, always staying a few days, always welcome. He watched Emma grow into a teacher and Daniel into a rancher. He saw Clare remarry to a quiet man who treated her well, and he was glad. And when people asked him about that journey, about the woman and the children he saved, he always said the same thing. I didn’t save them.
They saved themselves. I just walked with them for a while. But Clare knew different. She kept that smooth stone Emma had given her, carried it in her pocket for the rest of her life. And on the days when things got hard, when the weight of the world pressed down, she’d take it out and remember.
She’d remember the cowboy who took their hands when she couldn’t carry them alone. And she’d remember that sometimes salvation comes not from being strong enough to stand alone, but from finding someone willing to walk beside you. The desert wind blew through silver springs, carrying dust and memory, and life went on.
But some stories, the good ones, they don’t end. They just keep going. A weathered hand holding a smooth stone. Sunlight streaming through a window. Voices of children playing in the
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