Eat this while you wait, both of you. Toby didn’t need to be told twice. He scrambled onto the wooden chair and began tearing into the venison and potatoes with a feral hunger that made Liam’s chest ache. The woman sat down slowly, her eyes never leaving Liam’s face. I’m Clara, she said softly, her voice barely a breath.
Clara Jennings. And this is Toby. Liam, he replied curtly, leaning back into the shadows of his corner. He watched them eat. He noticed the way Clara took only tiny bites, making sure the boy had the lion’s share. He noticed the dark bruises blooming on her left wrist, hidden beneath the frayed cuff of her sleeve.
Someone was hunting her. Liam knew the look of hunted prey. He had seen it in the eyes of deer, elk, and wolves. He was seeing it now in the woman sitting across from him. And God help him, the man who had vowed never to care about another living soul was already calculating how many rounds of ammunition he had in his saddlebags.
By the time Clara and Toby finished their fresh meals, the blizzard outside had escalated into a howling monster. The saloon windows rattled ominously in their frames. Toby had fallen asleep right at the table, his small head resting on Clara’s lap. Clara traced the rim of her empty water glass. The warmth of the food had brought a faint flush to her pale cheeks, making those striking eyes even more prominent.
Liam had spent the last hour in silence, observing her, drinking his whiskey, and fighting the ghost of a feeling he thought had died in Montana. I can mend, Clara suddenly offered, breaking the quiet between them. She gestured toward Liam’s heavy coat. There’s a tear in the shoulder of your hide. I have a needle and thread in my satchel.
It’s the least I can do, Liam. Please, I don’t take charity. Liam looked at the tear she pointed out. It was a gash from a rogue branch 3 weeks ago. He didn’t care about it, but he recognized the desperation in her voice. She needed to retain her dignity. Mrs. Gable runs a boarding house two streets over, Liam said, standing up.
His towering frame cast a long shadow across the table. She owes me a favor from last spring. You and the boy will sleep in a warm bed tonight. You can sew my coat there. Clara looked as if she might cry, but she swallowed hard and nodded, gently shaking Toby awake. Liam threw two silver dollars onto the table, enough to cover the meals and buy O’Gara’s silence, and led them out into the freezing night.
The wind howled, biting through Clara’s thin shawl instantly. Without a word, Liam stripped off his massive grizzly coat and draped it over her and the boy. The sheer weight of it almost buckled her knees, but the trapped heat was glorious. Liam walked ahead in just his flannel shirt and suspenders, seemingly impervious to the sub-zero temperatures. They reached Mrs.
Gable’s boarding house, a sturdy, two-story clapboard building. True to his word, Liam secured a small but warm room at the end of the hall, complete with a potbelly stove. Once the boy was tucked into the feather bed, fast asleep, Clara sat by the light of a single kerosene lamp, expertly weaving heavy thread through the thick hide of Liam’s coat.
Liam sat in a straight-backed wooden chair by the window, watching the snow bury the street below. The silence between them was different now, no longer the tense quiet of strangers, but a cautious, fragile peace. “Your husband,” Liam said abruptly, his deep voice startling her. He didn’t look at her, keeping his eyes on the snowy street.
“He the one who put those bruises on your wrists?” Clara stopped sewing. The needle trembled in her fingers. She looked down at her hands, shame washing over her features. “No. My husband, Thomas. He was a good man, a prospector. He died 4 months ago in a mine collapse down in Creek.” Liam turned his head, his dark eyes locking onto hers.
“Then, who are you running from, Clara?” She took a shaky breath. The dam she had built to hold back her terror finally cracked. “Jeremiah Reed,” she whispered, the name carrying a weight of pure dread. “He’s a cattle baron, but he owns half the town’s lawmen. Thomas owed him money. After Thomas died, Reed came to collect.
When I told him I had nothing, he he told me the debt would be settled if I became his property.” A cold fury ignited in Liam’s gut, burning hotter than the stove in the corner. “I took Toby and ran in the middle of the night,” Clara continued, tears finally spilling over her lashes, catching the golden light of the lamp.
“We’ve been running for 3 weeks, hitching rides on wagons, hiding in freight trains. But Reed doesn’t let things go. He sent his top dog after us, a bounty hunter named Caleb Dunn. Dunn is a monster, Liam. He tracks people for sport.” Liam knew the name. Everyone in the territory knew Caleb Dunn. He was a ruthless killer who wore a deputy’s badge to legitimize his murders. “He’ll find us.
” Clara sobbed quietly, dropping the coat and burying her face in her hands. “I saw his horse outside the livery stable when we arrived in Leadville today. A massive black roan with a white star. He’s here, Liam. I thought we could lose him in the snowstorm, but we have nowhere left to go.” Liam stood up slowly.
He walked over to where Clara sat weeping. He was a man who lived by a strict code, survive and stay out of the affairs of the dying world below the tree line. But as he looked at her shaking shoulders, he realized he had already made his choice back in the saloon the moment she looked at him. He reached out, his massive, scarred hand gently lifting her chin, so she was forced to look at him.
Those broken, beautiful hazel eyes stared back, wide with fear. “You’re not running anymore,” Liam said, his voice a low, gravelly vow that brooked no argument. “Tomorrow, at first light, we head up the mountain to my claim. The snow is too deep for horses. Dunn will have to track us on foot in territory I know better than the back of my own hand.
” “Liam, no,” Clara gasped, shaking her head. “Dunn will kill you. You don’t owe us this. You don’t even know me.” “I know enough,” Liam replied, dropping his hand and turning toward the window. Just as he peered through the frosted glass, a figure materialized through the blinding snow on the street below, a tall man in a long black duster holding a lit cigar.
The man stopped right in front of the boardinghouse, looked up at the glowing window where Liam stood, and smiled. It was Caleb Dunn. The hunt had arrived at their doorstep. “Grab the boy,” Liam growled, turning away from the frosted glass. He didn’t waste a second. The faint warmth of the boardinghouse room evaporated, replaced by the icy grip of adrenaline.
Clara didn’t scream or ask questions. She saw the deadly serious set of Liam’s jaw and immediately scooped Toby from the feather bed, wrapping him tightly in a wool blanket. “Is he coming up?” Clara whispered, her voice trembling as she clutched her sleeping son to her chest.
“Not if he thinks we’re trapped,” Liam replied, grabbing his Winchester and shoving his spare boxes of ammunition into his canvas satchel. “Dunn plays with his food. He’ll wait by the front door, maybe have a smoke, let the fear set in. We’re going out the back window.” Liam forced the frozen sash of the back window upward, the old wood groaning in protest.
Below them lay the narrow, trash-filled alleyway behind Harrison Avenue. The blizzard was fully unleashed now, a blinding, howling wall of white that masked their movements but threatened to freeze them solid within the hour. He climbed out first, dropping silently onto the snow-packed ground.
Reaching up, his massive hands effortlessly caught Clara and Toby as they descended. The wind immediately tore at Clara’s shawl, but Liam had already shrugged off his heavy grizzly hide coat again, forcing her to wear it. “Keep the boy inside the folds,” he ordered, his voice barely audible over the screaming wind. “Step exactly in my footprints.
Do not stop moving, Clara. If you stop, you die.” They moved like phantoms through the back alleys of Leadville, avoiding the flickering gas lamps of the main thoroughfares. Liam navigated by instinct and memory, leading them toward the tree line at the base of Mount Massive. The snow was already knee-deep and rising fast.
For Liam, it was a familiar struggle. For Clara, carrying a heavy child in a cumbersome coat, it was agony. By the time they hit the incline of the lower ridges, Clara was gasping for air, her lungs burning from the thin, frigid altitude. Liam stopped, turning back without a word. He took Toby from her arms. He unbuttoned his flannel shirt, placed the shivering boy directly against his broad, warm chest, and buttoned his suspenders and shirt tightly around him.
“Follow,” Liam commanded, turning back to face the mountain. The trek was a brutal, grueling test of endurance. Hours bled into one another. The darkness was absolute, save for the faint, ghostly glow of the snow. Liam post-holed through the waist-deep drifts, breaking a trail for Clara. He listened to her ragged breathing behind him, half expecting her to collapse.
Most hardened prospectors couldn’t make this climb in a storm, let alone a woman from the lowlands. But every time he glanced back, expecting to see her in the snow, she was there. Her hazel eyes were locked onto his back, fueled by a mother’s desperate will to survive. Just before dawn, the timberline broke, revealing a hidden, sheltered ravine near Half sat Liam’s cabin.
It was a sturdy structure of thick, interlocking pine logs with a sod roof, heavily insulated by snow. Liam pushed the heavy oak door open and ushered Clara inside. It was freezing in the cabin, but the absence of the biting wind felt like paradise. Liam immediately went to work, striking a match and lighting the cast-iron stove in the center of the single room.
Within minutes, the dry kindling caught and a beautiful, life-saving orange glow bathed the rough-hewn walls. Clara collapsed onto a wooden cot in the corner, exhausted beyond measure. Liam gently unwrapped Toby from his shirt and laid the sleeping boy next to his mother, covering them both with thick, heavy wolf skin blankets.
Liam sat by the stove, feeding it chunks of split oak. He watched Clara sleep, her face pale but peaceful in the firelight. He felt a strange, terrifying tightness in his chest. He had brought outsiders into his sanctuary. He had broken his one rule. Yet, looking at the rise and fall of her chest, he felt no regret. Hours later, Clara stirred.
The cabin was sweltering now, the smell of brewing coffee filling the air. She sat up, her eyes finding Liam sitting at a small table, meticulously cleaning the action of his Winchester rifle. “We made it,” she whispered, her voice hoarse. “For now,” Liam replied without looking up. “Dunn will find our tracks in the alley.
The storm will cover our trail up the mountain, but a man like Dunn doesn’t a clean trail. He knows the geography. He knows there are only a few places a man can survive a storm like that. He’ll start checking the high valleys. Clara walked over, wrapping a blanket around her shoulders. She sat across from him.
Her gaze fell to his hands. His knuckles were bruised and his fingers were raw and blistered from the cold. Gently, she reached out and took his large, scarred hand in her small, soft ones. Liam stiffened, his breath catching in his throat. He hadn’t felt the willing, gentle touch of a woman in a decade. “Why are you doing this, Liam?” Clara asked softly, her hazel eyes searching his face.
“You could have left us in Leadville. You could have walked away. You’re risking your life for strangers.” Liam stared at their joined hands. The silence stretched, thick with unspoken ghosts. Finally, he swallowed hard. The tough exterior cracking just a fraction. “10 years ago,” Liam began, his voice a low, gravelly rumble.
“I had a cabin up in the Bitterroots. Montana territory. Had a wife. Abigail, she was. She had a fire in her, much like you. We were waiting out a winter storm, expecting our first child.” He paused, the memory clearly agonizing. Clara tightened her grip on his hand, offering silent support. “I went out to check the trap lines.
Thought I’d only be gone a few hours, but I slipped on an ice ledge. Broke my leg. It took me 2 days to crawl back to the cabin.” Liam’s eyes darkened, turning hard and cold. “By the time I got back, the fire had gone out. The fever had taken her. I sat there with her body until the spring thaw. Then I buried her.
And I buried the man I used to be right next to her.” Clara felt a tear slip down her cheek. “Liam, I’m so sorry.” “I made a vow,” Liam continued, looking up into her eyes. “I swore I’d never let myself care again. Caring makes a man weak. It gives the world something to take from him.
” He slowly pulled his hand away from hers, his expression hardening. “But when I saw you in that saloon, looking at me with those eyes, fighting for your boy when you had nothing left, I saw Abigail. And I knew if I let that bounty hunter take you, I’d be letting her die all over again.” Clara leaned forward, her face inches from his.
“You are not weak, Liam Wade. You are the strongest man I have ever met.” For a fleeting second, the space between them vanished. Liam felt the pull, the undeniable gravity of her presence. But before he could lean in, a sharp, unnatural sound echoed from outside the cabin. Crack. It was the unmistakable sound of a dry pine branch snapping under a heavy boot.
Liam’s romantic vulnerability vanished instantly, replaced by the lethal instincts of a cornered predator. He held a finger to his lips, signaling Clara to be absolutely silent. He grabbed his Winchester, silently jacking a round into the chamber, and moved to the small, heavily frosted window.
The storm had broken during the night. Outside, the world was a blinding expanse of pristine white, illuminated by a brilliant, harsh morning sun. Liam scraped a tiny peephole through the frost with his thumb. Down by the tree line, about 200 yards out, he saw them. Three figures moving cautiously through the deep snow. Caleb Dunn was in the center, recognizable by his long black duster, which stood out against the snow like an ink stain.
He hadn’t come alone. Flanking him were two heavily armed men, wearing badges, hired muscle, likely corrupt deputies from a neighboring county, eager for a cut of the bounty. Three of them, Liam whispered, stepping back from the window. He turned to Clara, his eyes wide with a terrifying calm. “Get Toby. Get into the root cellar.
Now.” He pointed to a heavy wooden trapdoor integrated into the floorboards near the back wall. Clara didn’t hesitate. She dragged the half-asleep Toby from the cot, opened the heavy door, and hurried down into the dark, earth-smelling hole beneath the cabin. “Do not come out until I tell you,” Liam said, looking down at her.
“No matter what you hear.” “Liam,” Clara pleaded, her hands gripping the edge of the floorboards. “Please, don’t die for us.” “I don’t plan on dying today, Clara,” he said softly. He slammed the trapdoor shut and dragged a heavy oak dresser over it, completely concealing the entrance. Liam moved to the back wall and retrieved his secondary weapon, a heavy Sharps buffalo rifle, capable of punching through a pine tree at half a mile.
He grabbed a handful of massive .50-90 cartridges and shoved them into his pockets. He didn’t plan on fighting them inside. The cabin was a fortress, but it was also a trap if they decided to burn it down. He needed to take the high ground. Liam slipped out the back door, moving with terrifying speed and silence despite his massive frame.
He scrambled up the rocky incline behind the cabin, settling into a hidden crevice between two massive granite boulders that overlooked the approach to the front door. Below, Dunn and his men were fanning out. They were moving smartly, using the thick trunks of the ponderosa pines for cover.
“Liam Wade,” Dunn’s voice echoed through the crisp mountain air, dripping with arrogant amusement. “I know you’re in there, mountain man. I don’t give a damn about you. Send the woman and the boy out, and I’ll let you go back to eating pine cones in peace. Keep them, and I’ll burn your little shack to the ground with all of you in it.
” Liam rested the heavy barrel of the Sharps rifle on the granite ledge. He took a slow, deep breath, letting his heart rate drop. He lined up the iron sights on the deputy to Dunn’s left, a burly man with a red scarf named Wyatt. Liam exhaled. He squeezed the trigger. The boom of the buffalo rifle shattered the mountain silence like a cannon shot.
A massive puff of snow exploded off the pine tree Wyatt was hiding behind, right where his chest had been a millisecond before. The sheer kinetic force of the round splintered the tree, sending razor-sharp wood fragments into Wyatt’s face. The man screamed, dropping his rifle and clutching his bleeding eyes, falling backward into the snow.
“Sniper! Up on the ridge!” The other deputy, Jeb, yelled, blindly firing his repeater up the mountain. Bullets chipped away at the granite inches from Liam’s face, whining viciously as they ricocheted. Liam ducked, smoothly ejecting the spent brass, and shoving another massive cartridge into the Sharps.
Dunn, completely unfazed by his man going down, didn’t fire. Liam peeked over the ledge and saw the bounty hunter smiling. Dunn was a tactician. He realized instantly that Liam wasn’t in the cabin. “Keep him pinned, Jeb,” Dunn ordered, sprinting laterally through the deep snow, moving out of Liam’s line of sight, heading toward the blind spot on the east side of the cabin.
Liam cursed under his breath. He swung the heavy rifle, trying to track Dunn, but Jeb was laying down relentless suppressing fire. Wood chips and rock dust showered Liam. He had to silence the deputy. Liam waited for the split-second pause in Jeb’s firing, the moment the man had to reload. Click. Liam rose, leveled the Winchester, and fired three rapid shots.
Two missed, kicking up snow, but the third caught Jeb in the shoulder, spinning him violently to the ground. The perimeter was clear, but the silence that followed was entirely wrong. Liam looked down at the cabin. Dunn was gone. Panic, cold and sharp, pierced Liam’s chest. He abandoned his sniper nest, sliding recklessly down the icy incline, his boots tearing up the snow.
He hit the ground running, sprinting toward the back door of his cabin. He burst through the wooden door, his Winchester raised, his chest heaving. The cabin was empty. The fire in the stove crackled merrily, but the heavy oak dresser had been shoved aside. The trapdoor to the root cellar was wide open. “Clara!” Liam roared, his voice tearing from his throat.
He lunged toward the dark hole, but a sound from behind him stopped him dead in his tracks. The unmistakable sound of a revolver hammer being cocked back. “Drop the rifle, Wade.” Caleb Dunn’s voice sneered from the corner shadows. Liam slowly turned. Dunn was standing by the front window. In one hand, he held his Colt Peacemaker, leveled directly at Liam’s chest.
With his other hand, he held Clara by her hair. A hunting knife pressed tight against her throat. Her hazel eyes were wide with terror. A thin line of blood already trickling down her pale neck where the blade dug in. “Now.” Dun smiled, revealing rotting teeth. “Let’s talk about the bounty on your head, mountain man.
” Blood pounded in Liam’s ears, a deafening drumbeat that drowned out the crackle of the stove. He looked at the blade pressing into Clara’s neck. A single twitch from Caleb Dun and the hazel eyes that had brought Liam back to the land of the living would be extinguished forever. “Drop it.” Dun repeated, his voice laced with venomous glee.
“Or I carve her like a Thanksgiving turkey right here.” Liam didn’t break eye contact with Clara. He saw the sheer, unadulterated terror in her gaze. But beneath it, that familiar, stubborn fire still burned. He slowly lowered the Winchester, letting the heavy barrel tip toward the floorboards. “Let her go, Dun.
” Liam said, his voice a dangerous low rumble. “Jeremiah Reed wants her alive. You kill her, you lose your payday.” Dun scoffed, adjusting his grip on Clara’s hair, causing her to whimper. “Reed wants the boy alive to use as leverage against her family back east. He told me he didn’t care what condition the mother arrived in. Besides, there’s a federal warrant out of Denver signed by Governor John Root himself for a wild mountain man matching your exact description.
I figure bringing in the ghost of the San Juans will double my purse.” Liam let the Winchester slip from his fingers. But as it fell, Liam didn’t just stand there. He had calculated the distance, the angle, and the arrogant complacency of the bounty hunter. The heavy rifle hit the wooden floor with a loud thud. In the exact fraction of a second that Dun’s eyes flicked downward toward the sound, Liam exploded into motion. He didn’t lunge at Dun.
He kicked out with his heavy, steel-toed leather boot, striking the latch of the cast-iron stove. The door flew open and a cascade of blazing, red-hot oak coals spilled directly onto Dun’s snow-soaked boots and the floorboards around him. The sudden, searing heat and the sizzle of boiling snow caught Dun completely off guard.
He shrieked, stumbling backward to avoid the coals. His grip on Clara’s hair loosened just enough. “Get down.” Liam roared. Clara dropped to her knees, throwing her arms over her head. Dun recovered his balance and wildly leveled the Colt Peacemaker. The gun went off with a deafening crack. A sledgehammer of pain slammed into Liam’s left shoulder, spinning him sideways, but the adrenaline masking his nervous system kept him on his feet.
Ignoring the gunshot, the mountain man closed the distance. He hit the bounty hunter with the unstoppable force of a frightened grizzly. Both men crashed through the small wooden table, splintering it into kindling. Dun lost his grip on the revolver, the weapon sliding across the room.
He desperately slashed upward with his hunting knife, catching Liam across the ribs, tearing through his flannel shirt and drawing a deep line of blood. Liam didn’t even flinch. He pinned Dun’s knife hand to the floorboards with his massive knee. With his uninjured right arm, Liam seized Dun by the throat. He squeezed, his enormous, calloused fingers acting like a vice.
Dun thrashed violently, his eyes bulging, his free hand clawing uselessly at Liam’s scarred face. “You brought the hunt to my mountain.” Liam whispered, his face inches from Dun’s, his dark eyes devoid of any mercy. “Now you belong to it.” Dun’s thrashing weakened. Within seconds, the bounty hunter went entirely limp. His reign of terror permanently ended on the floor of the Timberline cabin.
Liam stayed there for a long moment, his chest heaving, the burning pain in his shoulder finally beginning to register. He slowly pushed himself up, clutching his bleeding arm. “Liam.” Clara scrambled across the floor, ignoring the burning coals. She reached him, her hands frantically pressing against the gunshot wound in his shoulder.
Her hazel eyes were wide, welling with fresh tears. “You’re shot.” She sobbed, ripping the hem of her woolen skirt to create a makeshift bandage. “Oh God, Liam. You’re bleeding so much.” “It went clean through.” He grunted, wincing as she tied the fabric tightly around his heavy bicep. He looked down at her, his rugged face softening.
He reached up with his bloodied right hand, gently wiping a tear from her cheek. “I told you I don’t plan on dying today.” A timid creak sounded from the corner. The heavy oak dresser shifted slightly and the trapdoor pushed open. Little Toby peeked out, his face pale and streaked with dirt. Seeing his mother, he scrambled out of the cellar and ran into Clara’s open arms.
Liam watched the mother and son embrace, a profound sense of peace washing over him, entirely alien to the violent reality of the blood-soaked cabin. The ghost of Abigail no longer felt like a heavy chain around his neck. It felt like a gentle blessing, granting him permission to live again. An hour later, the cabin was packed.
Liam had stamped out the coals and bandaged his ribs. He knew they couldn’t stay. Dun’s deputies were dead outside and when they didn’t return to Leadville, Jeremiah Reed would send a small army up the mountain. Liam pulled a loose floorboard near the hearth, retrieving a heavy leather satchel. Inside was a fortune in gold dust and nuggets he had panned over the last 10 years, enough to buy a new life anywhere in the world.
“Where do we go?” Clara asked, bundling Toby in to Liam’s massive grizzly coat. “South.” Liam replied, strapping his Winchester to his pack. “Texas. The Panhandle. I know a cattleman down there, a good man named Charles Goodnight. He runs the JA Ranch. He doesn’t take kindly to corrupt barons like Reed. He’ll give us sanctuary and work.
Reed’s reach doesn’t extend to Goodnight’s territory.” Clara walked over to him, her eyes locking onto his. The fear was entirely gone, replaced by a fierce, unwavering devotion. “We go together, then. The three of us.” Liam looked at her, then down at the boy clutching her hand. The bitter, frozen shell of the mountain man had completely shattered, leaving behind a man ready to brave the world once more. “Together.
” Liam agreed, offering her his hand. They stepped out of the cabin, leaving the ghosts of the past behind them and began the long descent down the mountain, walking side by side into the bright, blinding promise of a new dawn. Did Liam and Clara’s desperate fight for survival keep you on the edge of your seat? If you loved this Wild West romance, hit that like button and share it with your friends.
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