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Vernon shook his head, the smile sharpening. “Tomorrow doesn’t help me tonight,” he replied. “I’m going to have to ask you to leave.”
Eliza looked down at her plate, then up at her mother, and the words that slipped out were barely louder than a breath. “They won’t let me eat,” she whispered, and the honesty in her voice cut through the room in a way no raised voice ever could.
The bell over the door jingled as the riders stepped inside, and the change in the room was immediate and electric. Conversations died mid-sentence. One of the men, tall and broad-shouldered with a silvered beard and eyes that looked like they’d learned patience the hard way, stopped walking when he heard the child’s words. His name was Grant Mercer, and he had learned long ago that the most dangerous moments weren’t the loud ones but the quiet ones where something unfair was being decided.
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