Sick And Abandoned In The Pines, She Was Carried Home By A Cowboy-rosocute

Catherine Summers had been sick long enough to know when pity was turning into fear.

For two days, the fever had moved through her body like a coal hidden under ash, sometimes dull, sometimes bright enough to burn the breath from her chest.

The family she had hired on with had watched her grow weaker beside the trail.

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At first they gave her water.

Then they kept their distance.

By the time they reached the Ponderosa pine forest near Elko, Nevada, in the autumn of 1878, Catherine could see the decision forming on their faces before anyone dared speak it.

A sick cook was not worth a mule.

A young woman with fever was not worth the risk of contagion.

A girl alone in the world was easy to leave.

They set her down beneath the trees with a canteen and a promise to send help from the next town.

Catherine heard the words, but she also heard the mule being led away.

She heard the leather creak.

She heard the low voices.

She heard her own small bundle being opened and searched.

When the sound of them faded, her wages were gone, her belongings were gone, and the locket her mother had given her was gone too.

Only the dress on her body remained.

The sun above the trees was warm, but she shivered so hard her teeth hurt.

Pine needles stuck to her damp sleeves.

Her hair clung to her face.

Every breath scraped hot in her lungs, and the world tipped whenever she tried to lift her head.

There was a road somewhere beyond the timber.

Wagons passed there, she thought.

People passed there.

But the road might as well have been across an ocean.

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