The Woman Left In The Sun Knew A Secret Men Would Kill To Take-lbsuong

I should have ridden past the vultures.

That is the cleanest truth I can tell about that day.

A man who wants peace learns to ignore things on the frontier.

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He learns to see tracks and not follow them.

He learns to hear a cry in the wind and tell himself it was a hawk.

He learns that trouble always has relatives, and by the time you help one person, a dozen others are riding toward your door.

I knew all of that.

I had lived long enough in New Mexico sun to know the difference between bravery and stupidity, and most days, I respected the line between them.

But grief had been living in my chest for two years by then, and grief has its own law.

It does not let a man pass suffering without asking whether he has become smaller than his sorrow.

My name is Samuel Garrett.

At the time, I kept a line shack along a telegraph section that cut across hard country north of Red Rock Canyon.

The shack was nothing much.

One room, a plank table, a cot, a stove that smoked in the wrong wind, and a door I barred every night because men got lonely enough out there to mistake any light for an invitation.

I had a mule named Amos, three shirts, one good knife, one rifle, and a section log I filled out every morning because paperwork was the only thing in that country that pretended life had order.

On the morning I found her, the sun was already cruel by 8:10.

I wrote the time because that was my habit.

The telegraph wire was intact near the wash.

A glass insulator had cracked on the ridge.

There were fresh hoofprints at the canyon mouth.

That last note stayed in my mind after everything else had changed.

Fresh hoofprints.

Several horses.

Coming in and going out.

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