The letter began with a jagged scrawl that cut like a knife: “To any Bennett of my blood who finds this box: Do not trust Lawrence, for he has sold his soul for a mine that does not exist.”

Paula took a ragged breath, her chest heaving in the dim firelight. Uncle Matthew hadn’t been crazy, nor had he been the destitute hermit the Bennett family claimed back in the valley. The papers tucked beneath the silver coins weren’t just a will; they were geological surveys and original land deeds.

As it turned out, the “Landslide” wasn’t a wasteland. It sat directly atop a rare vein of crystal—high-grade auriferous quartz that major mining corporations were desperate to acquire for the emerging electronics industry in the city. Lawrence had known this for a decade. He had tricked Matthew into signing a forged power of attorney, but Matthew had hidden the original deeds just in time.

Worse yet, the letter revealed a chilling truth: Paula’s father hadn’t died of “slow rot in the lungs.” Matthew wrote: “Lawrence swapped your father’s medicine. He needed his brother’s inheritance to consolidate the sale of this entire mountain. Do not drink anything they give you, Paula.”

Paula’s hands shook. For twenty years, she hadn’t been living on the charity of kin; she had been living with the murderers who robbed her parents and turned her into an unpaid slave. They hadn’t sent her up here to survive—they sent her here to “accidentally” perish in a collapsing shack, erasing the last legal heir before the final sale contract could be signed at the end of the month.


Rising from the Ruins

The next morning, Paula was no longer the submissive woman with swollen eyes. She stood tall, her gaze as cold as northern frost.

She used the machete to hack away the briars choking the entrance. She didn’t just fix the house; she fortified it like a fortress. Every stroke of the blade was a vow of vengeance. Beneath the old barn, she discovered a hidden cellar where Matthew had cached tools and a double-barreled shotgun, perfectly preserved in grease.

A week passed. Paula ate eggs from her three hens, gathered wild greens, and trapped rabbits. Instead of weakening, the mountain air and the simmering fury in her heart turned her body as resilient as ancient roots.

On the afternoon of the tenth day, the roar of an engine echoed up the slope. Paula stood on the porch, the shotgun resting across her lap, concealed beneath her old wool blanket.

The truck skidded to a halt. Out stepped Lawrence, Roger, and a stranger in a sharp suit—likely the lawyer Matthew had warned her about.

“Paula, dear!” Lawrence called out, a plastic smile plastered on his face. “We’ve been so worried. The storm was fierce, so I brought a lawyer to help you… transfer this place back to us for your own safety. You should come back to town, where it’s warm.”

Roger stepped forward, hands in his pockets, looking at the ruin with smug contempt. “Sign it quickly, Paula. Don’t make us hike up here again. Look at you—you look like a forest ghost.”

Paula said nothing. She waited until they stepped into the muddy yard, right onto the spot where she had pre-cut the fence supports.

“Uncle Lawrence,” Paula began, her voice clear and sharp as a copper bell. “Do you remember what my father said before he died? He said you were always a man who ‘knew how to calculate’.”

Lawrence froze, his smile faltering. “Your father was delirious. Sign the papers, niece.”

“I’m not signing,” Paula stood up. The blanket fell away, revealing the black muzzles of the shotgun aimed directly at Lawrence’s chest. “And I’ve read Uncle Matthew’s letter. I know about the gold, I know about the medicine, and I know your name on the deed is a forgery.”

Lawrence’s face went from pale to purple. The lawyer took a step back, while Roger hissed, tensing to spring.

BOOM!

The warning shot grazed Roger’s feet, plowing into the mud. An owl in the woods took flight, screaming.

“Don’t test the patience of someone who has nothing left to lose,” Paula growled. “You thought I was a lame mule, but you forgot that this mule lived in your house for twenty years. I know every secret, every ledger, and every tax you dodged at the southern port.”


The Strange Traveler

In the midst of the standoff, a low voice vibrated from the shadows of the collapsed barn.

“She’s right. You gentlemen should step back.”

A man stepped out from the ruins. He wore the rough clothes of a laborer, his face weathered by the sun and his eyes deep-set. Though lean, he carried an aura of authority that made even Lawrence tremble.

“Who are you?” Lawrence barked. “This is private property!”

“My name doesn’t matter,” the stranger said, gripping an iron pickaxe. “But I’ve been living in this barn for three days. I promised the former owner of this land that if anyone came to bully this girl, I’d help her ‘clean up’.”

He looked at Paula and gave a slight nod. “Can I stay in the barn? I’ll do any work for you. I just need a place to sleep and a bit of justice.”

Paula looked at the stranger. There was a haunting familiarity in his eyes—as if he, too, was a discarded soul, someone the Bennetts had thrown away long ago.

“Who are you?” she asked again, more softly this time.

The man smiled, revealing a long scar on his wrist—the exact scar her father used to describe when telling stories about their youngest uncle who vanished in the mines years ago.

“I am the keeper of the truth,” he said.


Blood and Justice

Lawrence realized the tide had turned. Desperate, he reached into his coat for a small pistol. But before he could aim, the stranger hurled the pickaxe with terrifying precision, striking the man’s wrist.

In the chaos, Roger tried to bolt for the truck, but the ground beneath him suddenly groaned. The storm from three days prior had destabilized the thin soil over the quartz vein. A sickening crack echoed through the canyon.

The name “Landslide” wasn’t a coincidence.

A section of the mountainside behind the house gave way. Mud and boulders swallowed their only escape vehicle. Lawrence, Roger, and the lawyer were pinned in the muck, screaming as the earth continued to shift.

Paula stood on the solid porch—the only part of the property built on bedrock. She watched the men who had tormented her groveling in the filth.

“Save us, Paula! Please!” Lawrence shrieked.

Paula didn’t lower the gun, but she didn’t fire either. She looked at the stranger, who now stood by her side.

“Should we save them?” she asked.

The man looked down at the valley, where sunlight was finally piercing the fog. “This gold vein will bring wealth, but it demands a price. This land chose you, Paula. As for them… they chose their path twenty years ago.”

Paula lowered the shotgun. She turned her back on them and walked into her cabin, where the hearth fire still glowed.

“I won’t save them,” she called back. “But I won’t kill them either. Let the mountain judge. If they can crawl back to the valley with nothing but their lives, that is God’s mercy.”


A New Dawn

A month later.

The house on Landslide had been transformed. The roof no longer leaked, and the briars had been replaced by rows of valuable medicinal herbs.

Lawrence and Roger survived, but they were ruined. The documents Paula found had reached the provincial court via the hands of her “dead” Uncle Silas. The entire Bennett estate was seized to pay for years of fraud and reparations.

Paula sat on her porch, sipping hot tea. Silas was quietly mending the fence.

The gold remained where it was, deep underground. Paula decided not to mine it. She knew gold only attracted men like Lawrence. She chose to keep the peace of the mountain—the secret Matthew had spent his life protecting.

That night, the owl called three times again. But this time, Paula wasn’t afraid. She knew it wasn’t an omen of death, but the sound of freedom.

She was no longer the discarded girl. She was the mistress of the Landslide, the woman who had turned a destined grave into her own throne.

The End.