Bruised Teacher Dumped By Stagecoach, Saved By A Cowboy-rosocute

The stagecoach came in hard under the white New Mexico sun, wheels grinding over ruts, horses lathered and wild-eyed from the last stretch of road.

Dust rolled behind it like smoke from a grass fire.

By the time it stopped outside the trading post at Redemption Springs, most of the men on the porch had already decided it was no business of theirs.

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A trunk came down first.

It struck the ground on one corner, burst a strap, and spilled a ribbon of pale cloth into the dirt.

Then a woman was shoved down after it.

She did not step from the coach.

She fell.

Her knees hit first, then one hand, then her shoulder as though every bone in her body had lost its argument with gravity.

The driver tossed a carpetbag beside her, looked once toward the general store, and climbed back to his seat.

No one asked him a question.

No one told him to wait.

The whip cracked, the team lurched, and the stagecoach dragged its dust down the road toward Santa Fe.

Nathan Harding watched from the shade of the general store porch, the bitter taste of coffee still on his tongue.

He had seen men thrown from saloons, drifters dropped from wagons, boys fall from broncs and rise laughing with broken pride.

This was different.

The woman in the road was trying to stand because she understood no one had come to help her.

That knowledge sat on Nathan like a stone.

She was slim, dressed too fine for a place like Redemption Springs, though the dress was torn now and soiled at the hem.

Her bonnet hung loose by its ribbon.

Both wrists were marked in deep purple bands.

When she pushed herself up, her arms trembled so hard they folded beneath her.

She hit the dirt again without a sound.

Nathan set his cup down.

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