The frost was melting. As Troy stood there, on the rough wooden porch of the farmstead, he could almost see in real time the crisp morning sun cutting through the leaden March sky. Starting to pick away at the snow that lined his low stone walls and clung to the idle furroughs of his handful of fields. From this vantage point on the hillside he could see most of the twenty-odd acres he'd bought here after settling down. It seemed odd to many, at the age of just thirty two, for a man to crave a quiet life on the edge of civilisation such as he did, but it was all Troy wanted.
His brown eyes ran down, past the clutch of apple trees bare and stark in the winter with their branches reaching up towards the steely Idaho sky, down to where the sheep clustered by the bottom wall. Huddled together, their breath misting the air as they chewed and murmured, they had been the only other witnesses to the excitement of two days ago. Whether they were discussing it themselves or not, he had no idea as he watched the thick woolly bundles group together. Sometimes, very occasionally, he envied their comradely clustering. It brought back memories of his time back East. Of ten years ago. And, of course, with those good memories came the very bad...
Troy sighed. He ran a scarred hand through his thick brown hair. It nestled, messy and chaotic, on top of his face. A straight nose, freckles and wind-burn competing for prominence before the close-cut beard took over. He had to stoop a little to enter the house, his six foot three frame ever-so-slightly bigger than the average build for which this farmstead had originally been constructed. Such were the perils of having your plot set up for you as you moved West in the wagon trains.
It was a square, with the back right hand corner a bedroom portioned off by a curtain on a rail hanging from the ceiling. The rest of the space was open-plan, a mixture of old furniture scrounged or made or bought in town from other people's cast offs. A stove, which burned with a low, comforting, heat. A great shaggy dog, who snored lazily before it, his russet coloured fur rising and falling slowly. Troy grinned, reaching down to tussle with Sherman's ears, only to elicit a snore from the beast. He slumped in the battered green armchair, near the fire, and looked over at the bed through the drawn curtains. The only thing out of place here was her.
He'd found the girl two days ago, slumped against his outer stonewall, shivering in a cold morning frost like the one that wrapped the little farmstead presently. She'd looked small yet somehow fierce. Hair a mess, her clothes gone save for a chemise and bloomers, the latter torn and bloodied. And, of course, the pistol. His eyes drifted up to it, where it hung suspended by a nail from the wooden wall above the fire. Like his own. And his rifle and shotgun. He'd oiled it, cleaned it, going through the mechanics he'd learned in the field ten years before. It had recently been fired, but had no bullets.
God only knew what had happened to this young woman. She hadn't woken when he had, tentatively, undressed her, trying to look away as he did, before sliding her into an oversized nightshirt that hung loose on her smaller frame. And she'd been asleep for two days after. Tucked into his bed whilst he slept on the couch. She was a mystery, and Troy didn't like mysteries. She'd not staggered in from the direction of town, nor from the turnpike road most often used by travelers heading further West to the coast. Instead she'd come, barefoot and scratched, across the hillside. What had she witnessed? What had she fled from?
His introspection was interrupted when, looking back over, he noticed her eyes were open. 'Hello...' he hazarded. Not even knowing if she spoke English. 'You're safe. You stumbled into my farmstead two days ago and you've been asleep ever since' . Even saying it out loud seemed strange...
His brown eyes ran down, past the clutch of apple trees bare and stark in the winter with their branches reaching up towards the steely Idaho sky, down to where the sheep clustered by the bottom wall. Huddled together, their breath misting the air as they chewed and murmured, they had been the only other witnesses to the excitement of two days ago. Whether they were discussing it themselves or not, he had no idea as he watched the thick woolly bundles group together. Sometimes, very occasionally, he envied their comradely clustering. It brought back memories of his time back East. Of ten years ago. And, of course, with those good memories came the very bad...
Troy sighed. He ran a scarred hand through his thick brown hair. It nestled, messy and chaotic, on top of his face. A straight nose, freckles and wind-burn competing for prominence before the close-cut beard took over. He had to stoop a little to enter the house, his six foot three frame ever-so-slightly bigger than the average build for which this farmstead had originally been constructed. Such were the perils of having your plot set up for you as you moved West in the wagon trains.
It was a square, with the back right hand corner a bedroom portioned off by a curtain on a rail hanging from the ceiling. The rest of the space was open-plan, a mixture of old furniture scrounged or made or bought in town from other people's cast offs. A stove, which burned with a low, comforting, heat. A great shaggy dog, who snored lazily before it, his russet coloured fur rising and falling slowly. Troy grinned, reaching down to tussle with Sherman's ears, only to elicit a snore from the beast. He slumped in the battered green armchair, near the fire, and looked over at the bed through the drawn curtains. The only thing out of place here was her.
He'd found the girl two days ago, slumped against his outer stonewall, shivering in a cold morning frost like the one that wrapped the little farmstead presently. She'd looked small yet somehow fierce. Hair a mess, her clothes gone save for a chemise and bloomers, the latter torn and bloodied. And, of course, the pistol. His eyes drifted up to it, where it hung suspended by a nail from the wooden wall above the fire. Like his own. And his rifle and shotgun. He'd oiled it, cleaned it, going through the mechanics he'd learned in the field ten years before. It had recently been fired, but had no bullets.
God only knew what had happened to this young woman. She hadn't woken when he had, tentatively, undressed her, trying to look away as he did, before sliding her into an oversized nightshirt that hung loose on her smaller frame. And she'd been asleep for two days after. Tucked into his bed whilst he slept on the couch. She was a mystery, and Troy didn't like mysteries. She'd not staggered in from the direction of town, nor from the turnpike road most often used by travelers heading further West to the coast. Instead she'd come, barefoot and scratched, across the hillside. What had she witnessed? What had she fled from?
His introspection was interrupted when, looking back over, he noticed her eyes were open. 'Hello...' he hazarded. Not even knowing if she spoke English. 'You're safe. You stumbled into my farmstead two days ago and you've been asleep ever since' . Even saying it out loud seemed strange...