Hell, I barely knew how to be a man.

You think you know now? No, but at least now I know.

I don’t know.

That’s something.

Mara laughed softly.

That’s more honest than I expected.

You asked for truth.

I did.

She shifted in her blankets.

What are you going to do after? After after the divorce? Yeah, where will you go? Caleb realized he hadn’t thought about it.

For years, the answer to that question had been automatic.

Somewhere else, wherever work was.

Wherever he could disappear.

But now, I don’t know, he admitted.

Maybe I’ll stay in Haven Creek.

Really? I’ve been running for 9 years.

Maybe it’s time to stand still for a while.

See what that’s like.

And if it’s terrible, then at least I’ll know.

They arrived back in Haven Creek 3 days after they’d left.

The town looked the same, half rebuilt, slightly shabby, perched on the edge of wilderness.

But something felt different.

Or maybe Caleb felt different.

He helped Mara down from the horse, and they stood there in the street while curious eyes watched from windows and doorways.

“Well,” Mara said, “Here we are.

Here we are.

8 months, give or take.

She looked at him and something complicated passed between them.

Not quite forgiveness, not quite hope, but maybe the beginning of something that could become either.

Try not to run off before breakfast tomorrow, she said.

I’ll do my best.

She smiled, small, tired, but real, and walked toward the boarding house.

Caleb watched her go, then led the horse to the livery.

As he unsaddled the rone, he caught sight of his reflection in a water bucket.

Same face, same scars, same haunted eyes.

But maybe, just maybe, not quite the same man.

He had 8 months to find out.

The first week back in Haven Creek passed in a kind of uneasy truce.

Caleb worked the rebuilding crews during the day, and Mara took in sewing for Mrs.

Brennan and helped at the boarding house in exchange for reduced rent.

They crossed paths in the street at the general store outside the church on Sunday morning.

Each time they exchanged brief nods, careful words, nothing more.

The town watched them like spectators at a prize fight, waiting for the next blow.

It came on a Thursday afternoon.

Caleb was helping Garrett reinforce the blacksmith shop’s roof when he heard the laughter.

Not the easy kind that came from genuine humor, but the sharp cutting variety that drew blood.

He looked down and saw three women clustered near the general store.

Mrs.

Brennan, the banker’s wife, and a younger woman whose name he didn’t know.

“Mara was walking past them, head down, arms full of fabric.

” “Must be nice,” one of them said, voice carrying, “traveling all this way for a man who doesn’t want you.

” Mara’s steps faltered, but didn’t stop.

I heard she showed up with nothing but a carpet bag and a story, another added.

How do we even know she’s telling the truth? could be any woman claiming to be his wife.

“She’s got the paper to prove it,” Mrs.

Brennan said, but her tone was uncertain.

“Papers can be forged, and even if it’s true, what kind of woman chases a man across the country? Shows a lack of dignity, if you ask me.

” Caleb’s hands stilled on the hammer.

Garrett glanced at him, then at the women below.

“You going to let that stand?” Garrett asked quietly.

Caleb climbed down the ladder without answering.

He crossed the street in long strides, and the women’s laughter died when they saw his face.

“Ladies,” he said, voice flat.

The banker’s wife had the grace to look embarrassed.

The younger woman simply stared.

Mrs.

Brennan met his eyes directly.

“Mr.

Hart, that woman you’re talking about, she’s my wife, legal and proper, and she didn’t chase me.

She came to settle a debt I owed her.

So maybe before you tear her apart with gossip, you might consider showing some Christian charity instead.

We didn’t mean the younger woman started.

Yeah, you did.

You meant every word.

Caleb looked at each of them in turn.

She’s been here less than 2 weeks, and she’s already working, paying her way, bothering no one, which is more than I can say for some folks who’ve got nothing better to do than stand around inventing cruelty.

He turned and walked away before they could respond, his heart pounding with something that felt uncomfortably like rage.

He found Mara behind the boarding house, sitting on the back steps with her sewing in her lap.

She wasn’t working, just staring at the fabric like she couldn’t remember what she was supposed to do with it.

You heard? She said without looking up.

Yeah, you didn’t have to defend me.

Yeah, I did.

She finally looked at him and her eyes were dry but hard.

It won’t help.

It’ll just make them talk more.

Now you’re the tragic husband trying to protect the pathetic wife he doesn’t love.

I don’t care what they say about me.

Well, I care what they say about me.

She set the sewing aside.

I’ve spent 9 years being pied.

The abandoned wife, the grieving mother, poor Mara Quinn with her dead baby and her missing husband.

I came here thinking I could finally be something else.

But it’s the same story, just a different town.

Caleb sat down beside her, leaving a respectful foot of space between them.

What do you want to be? I don’t know.

Just not this.

Not defined by what I lost.

They sat in silence for a moment.

Then Caleb said, “When I was in the army, there was this soldier, kid, really, maybe 19.

He got shot through the leg at Shiloh.

Survived it, but the wound got infected.

Surgeon wanted to take the leg.

Kid refused.

said he’d rather die than be the for the rest of his life.

What happened? He died.

3 days later, fever took him.

Caleb picked up a wood chip from the steps, turned it over in his fingers.

I used to think he was stupid, throwing away his life over pride.

But now I think maybe he just understood something I didn’t.

That sometimes who people think you are matters more than whether you’re breathing.

Mara looked at him with something like surprise.

That’s darker than I expected.

Yeah, well, war teaches dark lessons.

So, what’s the lesson here? That I should care less what people think? No, that you get to decide who you are, not them.

They can talk all they want.

Doesn’t make it true.

Easy to say when you’re not the one they’re talking about.

They talk about me, too.

I just stopped listening a long time ago.

Mara studied him.

How? Practice and spiked.

He stood, offered her his hand.

Come on, you’ll see.

She took his hand and he pulled her to her feet.

They walked through town together, side by side, making no effort to hide or hurry.

People stared.

A few whispered.

Caleb ignored them all, and after a moment, Mara lifted her chin and did the same.

He led her to the saloon.

Caleb, I can’t.

Women don’t.

You can and you will.

He pushed through the door.

The saloon was half full.

Mostly men nursing afternoon drinks.

Conversation stopped when they entered.

Dutch looked up from behind the bar, eyebrows climbing.

“Two whisies,” Caleb said.

“Caleb,” Mara hissed.

“Trust me.

” Dutch poured two glasses, set them on the bar.

Caleb paid, handed one to Mara.

“What are we doing?” she whispered, “Giving them something real to talk about.

” He raised his voice slightly.

“This is my wife, Mara Hart.

We were married 9 years ago in Kansas, and due to my own stupidity and cowardice, we’ve been separated ever since.

We’re filing for divorce once we establish residency, which means she’ll be here for the next 8 months.

During that time, I expect her to be treated with the same respect you’d show any resident of this town.

Anyone who has a problem with that can take it up with me directly.

” The silence was absolute.

Then Garrett, who’d followed them from the blacksmith shop, raised his glass.

Fair enough.

Welcome to Haven Creek, Mrs.

Hart.

One by one, the other men lifted their drinks.

Not all of them.

A few turned away, muttering, but enough.

Enough that it mattered.

Mara’s hand trembled slightly as she raised her glass.

She took a sip, coughed, and set it down.

“Thank you,” she said quietly, and Caleb wasn’t sure if she was talking to the room or to him.

They left the saloon together.

Outside, the sun was lowering, turning the street gold.

That was either the bravest or the stupidest thing you’ve ever done, Mara said.

Probably both.

They’re going to talk about this for weeks.

Let them.

At least now they know where we stand.

Mara stopped walking, turned to face him.

Where do we stand, Caleb? The question was heavier than it sounded.

He chose his words carefully.

We stand as two people trying to do right by a mistake we made when we were too young to know better.

We stand as two people who owe each other honesty and respect for the next 8 months.

After that, he trailed off.

After that, we go our separate ways.

Something flickered across her face.

Relief? Disappointment? He couldn’t tell.

She nodded slowly.

Okay.

But as she walked back toward the boarding house, Caleb felt the weight of those words settle into his chest like stones.

The days accumulated into weeks.

October gave way to November, and the cold came down from the mountains like a warning.

Caleb found work helping prepare the town for winter, cutting firewood, reinforcing roofs, checking chimneys.

Mara’s sewing business grew as women brought her torn coats and worn blankets to mend.

They fell into a routine.

Caleb would stop by the boarding house most mornings, ostensibly to check if Mara needed anything, but really just to see her face, to confirm she was still there.

They’d exchange a few words about the weather or work, careful and polite, then part ways until the next day.

It was during one of these morning visits that Mara said, “I need to go to the livery.

The mayor I’ve been renting, Mrs.

Patterson wants her back for winter hauling.

I’ll walk with you.

” They headed to the livery together.

Inside, the smell of hay and horse sweat was almost comforting.

Caleb was helping Mara settle the mayor in her stall when they heard voices outside.

Don’t care what Hart says.

Whole thing’s suspicious.

Caleb recognized the voice.

Roy Haskell, a ranchand who’d been in town about as long as Caleb had.

Woman shows up claiming to be his wife.

He suddenly becomes her defender.

Convenient.

What are you suggesting? That was another man.

Someone Caleb didn’t know.

I’m suggesting maybe she’s working an angle.

Get him to marry her proper.

Wait for him to drink himself to death.

Inherit whatever he’s got.

Hart doesn’t have anything worth inheriting.

Maybe she doesn’t know that.

Mar had gone very still beside him.

Caleb felt anger rise hot and sharp.

He stepped out of the stall.

Say that again.

Both men spun around.

Haskell’s face went red.

I didn’t.

We were just You were just spreading lies about my wife.

Third time this week I’ve heard somebody question her character.

I’m getting tired of it.

Look, Hart, no offense, meant then don’t give any.

Caleb took a step forward.

You got questions about our situation? Ask me.

You got opinions about our character? Keep them to yourself.

Otherwise, we’re going to have a problem.

The other man raised his hands.

We’re leaving.

Come on, Roy.

They backed out quickly.

Caleb stood there breathing hard, fists clenched.

“Caleb.

” Mara’s voice was quiet behind him.

He turned.

She was watching him with an expression he couldn’t read.

“You can’t fight everyone in town,” she said.

“Watch me.

” “This is what I was afraid of.

You defending me just makes it worse.

Makes people think we’re hiding something.

We’re not hiding anything, aren’t we?” She moved closer.

“We’re married, but living separately.

filing for divorce but acting protective.

You can’t blame people for being confused.

I can blame them for being cruel.

Cruelty is just confusion with teeth.

She touched his arm lightly.

Let it go, please.

I’ve survived worse than gossip.

But Caleb couldn’t let it go.

Over the next week, he found himself paying closer attention to how people treated Mara.

Most were merely cold.

They didn’t go out of their way to speak to her, but they didn’t actively shun her either.

A few, like Mrs.

Brennan and Garrett, made efforts to be kind, but others, like Haskell and his friends, seemed to take pleasure in their quiet cruelties.

Conversations that stopped when Mara approached.

Deliberate exclusion from church social events, prices at the general store that seemed to climb when she was the customer.

It gnawed at him.

Then came the day supplies needed hauling from the railroad depot.

15 mi south.

Caleb volunteered, grateful for the work and the distance.

He was loading the wagon when Mara appeared.

I’m coming with you, she said.

I need fabric.

Mrs.

Brennan said there’s a dry goods store in Rston that carries better quality than what’s here.

It’s a hard ride.

We’ll be gone all day.

I can handle hard rides.

I got here, didn’t I? So they set out together in the pre-dawn cold, the wagon creaking beneath them.

The road was rough, carved through hills that were just beginning to show their winter colors.

They rode in comfortable silence for the first hour.

Then Mara said, “Can I ask you something?” “You can ask.

Can’t promise I’ll answer.

” “Fair enough.

” She was quiet for a moment.

“When you were in the war, did you ever think about me?” The question surprised him sometimes.

What did you think? That you were probably better off? That whatever life you’d built without me was probably happier than anything I could have given you.

He glanced at her.

I was wrong about that.

You couldn’t have known about James.

No, but I should have known leaving would hurt you.

Should have cared enough to find out.

Would it have changed anything if you’d known I was pregnant? Caleb turned the question over honestly.

I want to say yes, but truthfully, I don’t know.

I was so young, so scared.

I might have run anyway and just hated myself more for it.

At least that’s honest.

They rode on.

Around midday, they stopped to rest the horses.

Mara unpacked bread and cheese from her bag, and they ate sitting on a flat rock overlooking a valley that stretched toward distant mountains.

“It’s beautiful here,” Mara said.

“I promised to take you to the mountains.

Guess I’m 9 years late.

She smiled slightly.

Better late than never.

They reached Rston by mid-afternoon.

It was barely bigger than Haven Creek.

A handful of buildings clustered around the depot.

While Caleb loaded supplies, Mara went to the dry goods store.

She emerged half an hour later with a wrapped parcel and an expression Caleb couldn’t quite read.

“Everything okay?” he asked.

“Fine, just the woman in the store.

She was kind.

Didn’t know me.

Didn’t have opinions about me.

It It was nice.

We could stay, Caleb said suddenly.

Mara looked at him.

What? Here, Rston.

For the residency requirement.

Nobody knows us here.

You could start fresh.

And you? I could I don’t know.

Work.

Same as anywhere.

Mara shook her head slowly.

No, we already told the lawyer Haven Creek.

Besides, running to a new place doesn’t fix anything, just gives you new scenery for the same problems.

When did you get so wise? 9 years of thinking gives you time to figure things out.

They started back as the sun lowered.

They were maybe 5 miles from Haven Creek when the weather turned.

It came fast, the way mountain storms do, the sky darkening from blue to bruised purple, the temperature dropping until their breath showed white.

Then the first snowflakes, fat and wet, falling faster and faster until the road ahead disappeared into a swirling white curtain.

“We need to find shelter!” Caleb shouted over the rising wind.

“Where? There’s nothing out here.

” But there was barely.

About a quarter mile off the road, half hidden by a stand of pines, stood an old line shack.

Caleb had passed it a dozen times without thinking much of it.

Now it looked like salvation.

He urged the horses toward it, fighting the wind.

By the time they reached the shack, snow had covered everything in a thick white blanket, and visibility was down to a few feet.

Caleb kicked the door open.

The inside was tiny, maybe 10 ft square, with a rusted stove, a broken chair, and a pile of old furs in the corner that smelled like mildew and mouse.

But it had four walls and a roof, and right now that was enough.

He helped Mara inside, then went back for the horses.

He managed to get them into a lean tube beside the shack, threw blankets over them, then fought his way back inside.

Mara was crouched by the stove, trying to coax life from the handful of kindling she’d found.

Her hands were shaking from cold.

Here.

Caleb took over, got a fire started with practice deficiency.

Smoke billowed at first, then the chimney caught and drew it up.

Weak heat began to radiate from the stove.

They stood close to it, not speaking, letting the warmth slowly penetrate their frozen layers.

Outside, the wind howled like something alive.

“How long will this last?” Mara asked.

“Could be an hour, could be all night.

” Caleb checked their supplies.

The food was in the wagon, but he’d managed to grab one of the blankets.

“We should stay warm.

Storm like this, cold’s more dangerous than anything.

” “I know.

” But as the temperature continued to drop and the fire burned through the limited fuel, Caleb realized they had a problem.

The stove was too small, the fuel too scarce, and the shack too drafty to hold heat properly.

We need to conserve warmth, he said quietly.

Mara looked at him.

Understanding dawned in her eyes.

You mean share body heat.

It’s not I’m not trying to I know.

She wrapped her arms around herself.

It’s just practical.

Yeah, practical.

They arranged the furs from the corner, musty but dry, and the blanket from the wagon.

Caleb sat down with his back against the wall.

After a moment’s hesitation, Mara settled beside him, close enough that their shoulders touched.

“This okay?” he asked.

“It’s fine.

” But her voice was tight, and he could feel the tension in her body.

Minutes passed.

The fire crackled.

The wind screamed.

Caleb, Mara said finally.

I need to tell you something about that night in Kansas.

His stomach tightened.

You don’t have to.

I wasn’t drunk.

She interrupted.

I told you that before, but I don’t think you understood what I meant.

I was completely sober.

I knew what I was doing.

I wanted to marry you.

Caleb didn’t know what to say.

I was so tired.

Mara continued, her voice soft.

Tired of being alone.

tired of being afraid.

You were kind to me that night.

Really kind, not just trying to get something.

You listened when I talked.

You made me laugh.

And when you asked me to marry you, even though you were drunk and probably didn’t mean it, I said yes because I wanted it to be real.

Mara, his voice cracked.

And when I woke up the next morning and you were gone, I told myself it didn’t matter, that I’d been stupid to hope.

But then I realized I was pregnant.

And suddenly it mattered more than anything.

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