A Frontier Seamstress Cut Open A Cowboy’s Shirt And Found Trouble-rosocute

The Seamstress Stitched a Cowboy’s Wound, He Came Back to Have Her Stitch His Heart

The blood on the stranger’s shirt told Lilly Bennett more than his face did.

A man could grit his teeth, straighten his back, and pretend pain was only weather.

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Blood did not pretend.

It spread dark through the cotton at his side while he stumbled along the dusty street of Kingman, Arizona Territory, under a July sun that seemed determined to cook the whole town down to bone and board.

Lilly had been carrying thread back to her shop when she saw him.

A basket hung from one arm, full of spools she had bought carefully and counted twice, because every yard of thread mattered when a woman made her living one hem, one sleeve, one patched coat at a time.

Then the cowboy hit the hitching post.

His hand was pressed hard to his ribs, but not hard enough.

Red slipped between his fingers.

For a breath, Lilly stood still in the street with the sun burning the part in her hair and dust biting at her lips.

Then the basket fell.

Spools bounced into the dirt, rolling away in little bright streaks of blue, brown, and cream, but Lilly did not look back.

She crossed the street fast, skirts catching at her boots, one hand already reaching for the stranger’s arm.

“Sir, you need a doctor.”

His knees dipped before she finished speaking.

Lilly caught him badly and almost lost her balance under the weight of him.

He was tall, broad, and solid in the way men became solid after years of saddle work, rope work, heat, hunger, and days when no one asked if they were tired.

His shirt was wet beneath her palm.

The heat coming off him was almost as frightening as the blood.

“Doc’s gone to Prescott,” he said.

The words came out thin and hard, dragged through clenched teeth.

“Won’t be back till next week.”

Lilly looked down the street.

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