Author Elizabeth Lane
Book Excerpt
"The Stranger"
by Elizabeth Lane
Excerpt from "The Stranger"
Caleb unwrapped his sandwich and laid it on the chipped bone china plate
Laura had placed in front of him. He had sat at the same table five years ago.
This time he occupied the place at the end, where Mark Shafton had sat on that
day of horror.
Caleb was hungry and the food was well prepared. But his dry mouth had lost its
ability to taste. Why had he come back here, to this place, these memories and
this beautiful, damaged woman? He should have headed west to California or south
to Mexico, where he could put the past behind him. Instead he’d chosen to open
old wounds, and he was already bleeding.
Laura stood at the stove, measuring dried chamomile into a porcelain pot. He
noticed the way she kept the left side of her face turned away from him, hiding
the scar. “We don’t get many travelers out here since they finished the
railroad,” she said, making polite conversation. “Where are you headed?”
“Texas. San Antone, most likely. Thought I’d take my time and see some new
country on the way.” Another lie, as was everything he’d told her except his
name. “I don’t see any hired help around,” he said, changing the subject. “How
do you manage out here, a woman alone with a youngster? Wouldn’t you be better
off selling the place and moving to a town?”
“I might.” She poured boiling water into the teapot. The flowery aroma of
chamomile drifted into the room. “But I stay here to keep the land for Robbie.
That’s what his father would have wanted—a legacy for him, his children, his
grandchildren...” Her voice broke slightly as she spooned some honey out of a
jar and dribbled a little of it into the tea. “I sold off the beef cattle and
the spare horses after Mark died,” she said. “I wasn’t up to taking care of
them, and I needed the money to live on. Steers and mustangs can be replaced.
Land can’t. I’ll wear rags and go barefoot before I sell a single acre.”
Struck by the passion in her voice, Caleb studied the proud angle of her head
and the determined thrust of her jaw. He had thought of Laura as fragile. But
underneath her porcelain doll exterior was a core of tempered steel. He had
glimpsed that steel when she’d turned on Zeke, sunk her teeth into his arm and
grappled for the knife that would slash her face. Now he was seeing it again.
He should have guessed he would find her here, holding on to what was hers. So
why hadn’t he turned around and left as soon as she opened the front door? Why
was he still here, risking the chance he might be recognized?
Caleb took a sip of cold cider and managed to swallow it. If he had any brains
he’d get up from the table, thank Laura for the meal and ride away before he dug
himself any deeper. But there was the matter of a small, broken boy who might
yet need a trip to the nearest doctor. And there was the matter of this scarred,
beautiful woman to whom he owed a monstrous debt.
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