Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Historical,
Contemporary,
Montana,
Western,
Man-Woman Relationships,
Love Stories,
Divorced women,
Widows - Montana
her womb and radiating down her inner thighs. Unbearable ripping pain.
Iâm just tired, thatâs all. She clung stubbornly to that thought as tightly as she gripped the leather top of Thorâs shoulder harness. She needed to get home and lie down. Rest, just like the doc said. And then sheâd be fine.
She was up too soon after losing the baby, that was all. She willed the pain to stop. Willed it with all of her strength, all of her being. The rock of the giant horseâs gait lanced through her midsection. If she could make it home, thatâs what she needed. But how far?
The prairie stretched out around her, lost in the blinding whiteout. She couldnât tell exactly how far sheâd already come. The snow scrubbed like ice at her eyes as the storm worsened. Gradually she could see nothingbut endless white, whirling snow. Not even her own mittens in front of her face.
Thor will get me home. The thought sustained her. Time had passedâhow much she didnât know, but enough that they had to be nearly home. And that meant rest.
Her bed was waiting, the feather mattress would feel like a cloud after this hard ride, and the flannel sheets and thick goose-down comforter as warm as melted butter. Sheâd lay her head on her feather pillow and let her heavy eyelids drift shut.
Thorâs pace seemed to pick up. Maybe he sensed her need. That would explain why the pain came more quickly. And if the pain changed from hurt to agony, from agony to killing, then it was because she was tired. And if she felt warm instead of cold and then hotter, it was her desperation.
Weâre almost home, she thought, surprised at how hard it was to breathe. Her pulse drummed in her ears and her head seemed to throb with it. Air rasped into her lungs. She couldnât seem to get enough air.
Maybe it was the storm. Or the cold. She didnât know. Or the shock of seeing Joshua Gable at the funeral. Of having him act as if nothing had gone on between them, as if he hadnât roped Ham like a steer and berated him for his cruel treatment of her. He hadnât deserved Ham pulling a gun on him, and heâd defended himself. Heâd defended her.
Joshua Gableâs gunshot had been the cause of Hamâs death, but she wasnât going to tell that to anyone.
Thorâs gait became horribly jarring. It couldnât be the pain was getting worse. No, she couldnât allow thatthought. Because she had to hold on. Sheâd lost her baby, she didnât want to lose her life.
A pain clamped like a vultureâs claw and then squeezed. Talons dug deep into her insides, tearing. Ripping. Warmth slid from her body. No, after all she had survivedâHamâs treatment and beatings and the wagon accident, her miscarriage and now this, she would not give up now. She buried her face in the horseâs ice-caked mane and gritted her teeth, hanging on with all her might.
She tried to hold back the next pain, but it was too strong, an enemy too big to fight or to placate. A sickening wave of nausea washed through her and she fought that down, too. She would not give in. Sheâd will the contractions to stop, the warm seep of blood to cease. She was going to be okay. She had to be.
Agony seized her from the inside, the talons turning into something more monstrous. It was as if her entire abdomen was being vised from the inside out, and the torture blinded her. Seemed to enter every inch of her body until she was screaming helplessly.
She was slipping, her arms and hands clutched Thorâs harness but her muscles turned watery. Her strength drained away and she was sliding down the horseâs flank, falling like the ruthless snow, tumbling until she hit the unforgiving ground.
Someone help me. The vise within her twisted hard. There was only the bright flash of white sparks before her eyes and then she felt the vising gain strength. She lay helpless on the ground, shrouded by snow.