A Missing Brother, A Broken Cabin Window, And Sterling’s Hunt-lbsuong

Anna Abernathy did not begin that winter as a woman who knew how to beg. In Philadelphia, she had been taught to keep her gloves clean, her voice low, and her family name polished enough to reflect other people’s expectations.

William Sterling understood polished things. He moved through drawing rooms with the gentle confidence of a man everyone had already forgiven in advance. He smiled at Anna’s mother, complimented her father’s judgment, and learned the shape of every locked door in their house.

The stolen necklace ruined her faster than fire could have. It was found in her room after breakfast, wrapped in a handkerchief she recognized but had not touched. By 6:10 a.m., the constable’s complaint carried her name.

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The Sterling household inventory described the necklace in neat black ink. The Philadelphia Central Station receipt listed the recovered item, the date, and the room where it had been “discovered.” Paper made the lie look tidy. That was Sterling’s gift.

Only Thomas Abernathy refused to bow to it. Thomas had been Anna’s brother, tutor, and shelter since childhood. He taught her ledgers before anyone thought a girl should read them, and taught her silence could be evidence too.

When she was twelve, storms drove her into his study, where he let her sit beneath his desk and count between thunderclaps. When she was sixteen, he showed her how a forged signature always betrayed the speed of the hand.

So when Thomas’s letter came from Idaho, Anna knew the danger inside it was real. The envelope was postmarked Wallace on October 18, the paper creased hard, as though it had been hidden against someone’s boot through wet travel.

If Sterling turns on you, come west. I have found something that can burn him to ash. The words were not dramatic by Thomas’s standards. They were careful. That made them more frightening than any plea could have been.

Wallace did not welcome ruined women. The boarding house keeper looked at Anna’s torn gloves and called her a stray with a carpetbag. At the church, a man gave her scripture instead of a bed and watched her shiver through the final verse.

The livery was worse because it almost sounded human at first. The men listened until she said Thomas Abernathy. Then one cup lowered, one saddle strap creaked, and every face learned not to know what it knew.

“Ain’t nobody up there but wolves and Lucien Huckabee,” one man told her. “And the wolves got better manners.” It was meant as a warning. In Wallace, warnings often served as permission to do nothing.

Anna kept three items in her satchel: Thomas’s letter, the torn police receipt from Philadelphia Central Station, and the copied page of Sterling’s inventory. They were not comfort. They were the edges of a trap she did not yet understand.

The mountain took the rest from her. It took the shine from her dress, the feeling from her fingers, and the skin from the backs of her heels. Her boots filled with snowmelt, then blood, then a numbness worse than pain.

When she saw smoke through the trees, she thought the cold had started inventing mercy. The cabin looked too solid to be real. Its porch sagged beneath snow, and its door seemed built for men who expected trouble by name.

She knocked once and heard nothing. She knocked again, harder, with a hand so cold it looked blue in the lantern spill. A board creaked inside, and she braced for the voice Wallace had promised her.

Instead, Lucien Huckabee opened the door. He was broad enough to block the fire behind him, wrapped in buffalo hide, scarred on one cheek, one hand near a rifle. He looked like judgment before it learned language.

His eyes moved from her face to the blood around her boots, then to the satchel clutched beneath her arm. He did not ask why a decent woman was outside. He asked whether she could still walk.

“Come sit by the fire,” he said. Anna almost wept because she did not understand mercy when it came without conditions. He gave her coffee, warmed her hands near the hearth, and set a folded blanket near her chair.

When she whispered her name, kindness left his face. Not cruelty. Recognition. He repeated “Anna Abernathy” as though the syllables had been buried under his floorboards and had just begun knocking back.

“My brother is Thomas Abernathy,” she told him. “He wrote that he had a claim near the ridge.” Lucien’s gaze shifted toward the window, where snow struck the glass like thrown salt.

“Thomas doesn’t have a claim,” Lucien said. “Your brother came to these mountains for something more dangerous than silver.” The line did not explain enough, but it explained why the town had gone still around Thomas’s name.

Thomas had found the shipping ledger first. Not a mine ledger. Not a claim deed. A private transfer sheet bearing William Sterling’s signature beside shipments of recovered jewelry, false assay notes, and one coded route through Wallace.

Lucien had sheltered him for two nights after Thomas arrived half-frozen with the ledger inside his coat lining. The plan had been simple: copy the evidence, send one set east, and ride the other to a judge willing to read it.

Then Thomas vanished. Lucien found only his torn coat strip on the ridge trail and a compass mark scratched into bark. In Wallace, men said storms swallowed travelers. Lucien knew storms rarely tied knots before they swallowed anyone.

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