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Help Me,’ Said the Wounded Apache to the Gunslinger… Then She Handed Him Something Terrifying

She took it without thanking him. He respected that. Pleasantries were for people who had time. “How did you get my badge?” he asked. She wrapped both hands around the cup. “One of the men who took my father dropped it. I don’t think he meant to. It fell from his coat during the fight.” She paused. “I recognized the name engraved on it. My father had mentioned you.

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So I rode for 11 days, wounded. My father waited longer in chains.” Cole had nothing to say to that. He stood, walked to the window, watched the heat already beginning to shimmer off the desert floor. His mind was working, turning over facts the way his hands turned over that badge. Government rifles, no uniforms, a frame-up targeting a peaceful chief.

“Who ordered it?” he asked. “You have a name?” Ayana was quiet for a moment. Then, >>  >> “Harlan Dusk.” The coffee cup stopped halfway to Cole’s mouth. He set it down very carefully, very slowly. “Say that again.” “Harlan Dusk, territorial senator. They say he’s positioning himself for Washington, for real power.

” Cole’s jaw tightened until he could feel it in his temples. Harlan Dusk, the name that lived like a splinter under his skin. Deep enough to ignore most days, painful enough to wake him some nights. Harlan Dusk had been the last name on Deputy Whitfield’s lips before he died. Cole had never been able to prove it, never been able to touch him.

The man was made of money and protection and political armor so thick that justice couldn’t find a seam. But now he had something he didn’t have 3 years ago, a witness, a reason, and a badge that just found its way home. They left before noon. Cole hadn’t packed light in years, but old instincts return fast when the situation demands it.

Ammunition, dried meat, two canteens, medical cloth for Ayana’s wound, and the revolver, the one in the drawer he hadn’t opened in 3 years, loaded, holstered, and sitting on his hip like it had never left. Ayana watched him strap it on without comment, but he caught the small shift in her expression. Relief, maybe, or the recognition that the man her father described was still in there somewhere.

Buried, but not gone. They rode south. The plan involved reaching a former contact in the town of Red Rock, a half-Apache tracker named Jonas Gray, who knew the Arizona cliff country better than anyone alive. If Harlan Dusk had a private fortress out there, Jonas would know where. The desert was brutal and beautiful and indifferent, as always.

By midday, the sun was an enemy. They rode without much conversation, Cole scanning the ridgelines out of habit, Ayanna riding with a straight back and steady hands despite the wound that had to be burning in the heat. Around the third hour, she broke the silence. Why did you stop being a marshal? Cole kept his eyes on the trail.

I failed someone. Whitfield. He glanced at her. Your father told you a lot. My father paid attention. She paused. Whitfield wasn’t your fault. Harlan Dusk pulled that trigger. Even if another man’s finger was on the gun. Cole said nothing. But something shifted in his chest. Small. Like a stone being moved after years in the same place.

You didn’t fail him. Ayanna said quietly. You just haven’t finished the job yet. The trail stretched ahead. Long and red and unforgiving. Cole rode a little straighter. Redstone Canyon kind of place that looked beautiful and killed you for admiring it. Narrow walls the color of dried blood rose 60 ft on either side.

The trail twisted, sound bounced and lied. Cole had ridden through it once before years ago and hadn’t liked it then either. We could go around. Ayanna said reading his hesitation. Adds 4 hours. Jonas won’t wait past sundown. Then we go through fast. They pushed the horses to a trot. Cole’s hand rested near his holster, not on it, just near it.

The kind of readiness that lives in the body after enough years. The canyon air was cooler, shadowed and absolutely silent. Too silent. No birds, no lizards skittering across the rocks, nothing. Cole pulled his horse to a stop. Ayana did the same without being told. She felt it, too. Then the first shot cracked off the canyon wall like a thunderbolt.

Cole shoved Ayana sideways off her horse, not gentle, no time  for gentle. And hit the ground rolling, coming up behind a boulder with the revolver already drawn. He counted muzzle flashes, left ridge, two shooters, right ridge, one, three total, probably more waiting. “Stay down.” He shouted. “I am down.

” She snapped back. Which meant she was fine. Cole moved fast, low and tight against the canyon wall, drawing fire away from her position. He returned two shots. One attacker went silent. The second on the left ridge shifted position, rookie mistake. And Cole put him down before he settled. The third tried to run. Cole let him.

Running men talk, dead men don’t. He holstered the revolver and walked back to Ayana. She was on her feet, blood showing through her bandage, but eyes steady as stone. “You good?” He asked. “Ask me again when my heart stops racing.” She said. And for the first time, just barely, Cole almost smiled.

Hey, I have to stop here for just a second because I need to be honest with you. When I first built this story, I didn’t expect to get this attached to these two. Cole carrying three years of guilt, never forgiving himself. Ayana riding 11 days through the desert, wounded and alone, refusing to give up on her father. There’s something about two people like that finding each other right in the middle of all this chaos that just hits differently.

Are you feeling this story? Are you team Cole? Team Ayana? Drop a comment. I read every single one. Let’s keep going. Jonas Gray was exactly where Cole expected him to be, sitting outside a crumbling adobe building in Red Rock, drinking something that wasn’t coffee, looking like a man who had decided the world could handle itself without his input.

He was 50, lean as wire, with Apache blood on his mother’s side, and a tracker’s eyes that never fully stopped working, even when the rest of him was at rest. He saw them coming from a hundred yards and didn’t move, which for Jonas meant he was pleased to see them. When Cole dismounted, Jonas looked at Ayana, then back at Cole.

“You found trouble,” Jonas said. “Trouble found me,” Cole replied. “Always does with you.” Jonas stood, nodded respectfully to Ayana. “White Mountain?” he asked her. “Yes. You know my father?” “Runs with Thunder. Good man. Heard he was taken.” Jonas’s jaw tightened. “Heard wrong things about why.

” That night they camped outside Red Rock. Jonas built a fire. Ayana sat close to it, re-bandaging her own wound with calm, practiced hands. Cole watched her without meaning to, the firelight catching the angles of her face, the quiet, fierce concentration she brought to everything. She caught him looking. He looked away. “Cole,” she said softly.

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