Pregnant Settler Saved By A Lakota Hunter On The Wyoming Plains-rosocute

Sarah Elizabeth Morrison fell to her knees in the Wyoming grass with the taste of dust in her mouth and the weight of her unborn child pulling her toward the ground.

For a moment, she did not know whether she was praying or simply trying not to drop face-first into the dirt.

The sky above her had gone hard and empty, the kind of pale western sky that made a person feel small enough to disappear.

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Three days earlier, she had still been a wife traveling with a wagon train and believing, because she had to believe it, that hardship was something people endured together.

Then the raid came.

The world became hoofbeats, shouting, smoke, splintered wood, and the terrible finality of bodies that did not rise when called.

Her husband was among them.

Sarah had not had the strength to bury him.

She had barely had the strength to take his small knife, wrap one hand over her swollen belly, and walk until the smoke fell behind her.

Every hour after that had stripped something from her.

First went her certainty.

Then went her tears.

Then went the last careful movements of the child inside her, the little turns and nudges that had once annoyed her at night and comforted her in the morning.

By the third evening, even the baby seemed to be listening to the prairie and deciding whether there was any reason to keep fighting.

Sarah could not let herself think that way.

She dragged herself to a low cluster of rocks because rocks could break wind, and wind was the only wall the country had offered her.

Her boots were torn at the toes.

The skin underneath had split and stiffened with dried blood.

Her dress hung in dusty folds, the hem ragged from grass and stone.

When she knelt to gather brush, pain bent through her so sharply that she bit the inside of her cheek to keep from crying out.

There was no one to hear her anyway.

That was the worst part.

Not thirst.

Not hunger.

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