Bozeman Mocked The Heavy Apothecary — Then Sylvan Watched Her Cut Death Out Of His Father’s Leg-QuynhTranJP

Inside the black tin, live white larvae shifted over one another in a bed of goose fat and crushed yarrow, small as rice grains and clean as peeled bone. Firelight touched them and slid away. Sylvan’s face changed first at the mouth, then at the eyes. The cabin had gone so still I could hear sap ticking in the pine logs by the stove and Jedediah’s breath catching on the edge of another scream.

‘You brought worms into my father’s house?’

‘Not worms,’ I said. ‘Blowfly larvae. They eat what is dead and leave what still wants to live.’

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The old man’s fingers clawed the blanket. The smell coming off his leg had turned heavier in the heat, sweet as spoiled fruit and sharp as old blood. I set the tin on the table beside the carbolic bottle, reached for my knife, and nodded toward the bed.

‘Hold him.’

Sylvan did.

His hands could have split cordwood in half without an axe, but when he took his father by the shoulders, he did it gently, almost reverently, as if Jedediah were made of stove ash and might lift away if the room breathed too hard. I cut dead flesh from the wound in thin strips. Dark tissue fell into the basin with soft, wet sounds. Jedediah bellowed once, then bit down on a rolled leather strap until his jaw shook. Steam rose from the wash water. The knife flashed. My sleeves stuck damp against my forearms. Sylvan’s grip turned the old quilt rope-tight under his fists.

At 11:41 a.m., when the worst of the rot had been pared away, I laid the larvae into the wound with the tip of a spoon.

Sylvan looked as if he might drag me out into the snow himself.

‘If you stop me now,’ I said, ‘dig the grave before dark.’

He did not move again.

I sealed the dressing with raw honey, spruce resin, and linen, then bound the leg from ankle to thigh. By the time the last knot was tied, my neck was slick with sweat under the wool at my collar and the room smelled of antiseptic, hot iron, and something cleaner struggling against the corruption. Jedediah had fallen past screaming into the gray stillness that comes after a body spends everything it has.

Sylvan poured coffee without asking whether I wanted any. His hands still shook when he handed me the cup.

Outside, wind struck the cabin wall in long white bursts. Inside, the fire snapped, the mule stamped in the lean-to, and the old clock on the mantel kept up its dry little heartbeat as though this were an ordinary afternoon and not a wager laid against death.

Before Bozeman taught itself to laugh when I passed, men from the outlying camps used to bring me real work. Burns. Frostbite. Childbed fevers. Knife slips. Mule kicks. My father had owned the apothecary first, back when he still had the use of both lungs and enough strength to carry flour sacks in from the wagon himself. After a winter cough hollowed him down to a frame and a beard, Fort Ellis sent us an army surgeon to examine the post’s medicine stock. Doctor Ezra Kittredge stayed for supper because a storm closed the road.

He watched me compound cough syrup by lamplight, then handed me a thread and needle and told me to stitch a strip of pigskin the way he had shown his orderlies. Most men looked at my body first and my hands second. Ezra watched my hands.

For three winters after that, whenever a supply wagon rolled in from the fort, he found a reason to stop by. He brought manuals with cracked leather spines, old surgical instruments wrapped in oilcloth, and stories no lady in Bozeman would have allowed at her tea table. Gangrene. Wagon crushes. battlefield filth. Men saved by methods prettier doctors mocked until they needed them. On a lantern-lit table in a barracks room that smelled of whiskey, tallow, and blood, he once laid out a black tin much like the one beside me now.

‘The living clean the dead,’ he had said. ‘Remember that, Margaret Vale. Vanity has buried more patients than ignorance ever did.’

After my father died, I kept the shop. The shelves stayed full. The ledger stayed neat. So did the laughter. Dressmakers measured me with tight mouths. Church women shifted their daughters half a step away. Men who bought liniment called me useful in the tone reserved for mules and stovewood. I learned to hear contempt the way other women heard weather. It arrived before the door opened.

Jedediah Montgomery had never used it on me.

Years before the wagon crushed his leg, he had come in every October for camphor rub and peppermint drops, carrying snow in on his boots and the forest on his coat. He always paid exact coin. Once, when a shelf brace gave way and half a crate of tonic bottles came down, it was Jedediah who caught the board before it split my shoulder. Another time Sylvan came with him, younger then but already built like he had been cut from the same mountain he lived on. He said almost nothing. He lifted a rain barrel onto its stand in my back alley and left before I could thank him. After that, a haunch of venison appeared at my door every first freeze, wrapped in butcher paper with no note.

It is a strange thing, being treated decently often enough that you remember each instance by season.

By noon, Jedediah’s fever had climbed so high his skin burned under my palm. I changed the cloth on his head, measured laudanum into a spoon, and made Sylvan force down half a heel of bread before he swayed where he stood. The mountain man had not shaved in days. Exhaustion had dug deep blue hollows under his eyes. He looked at the bandaged leg as if staring hard enough might keep the old man tethered to the bed.

‘Bell came three days after the accident,’ he said at last.

He was not looking at me when he said it. He was looking at the fire.

‘Took $18 for the visit. Poked the wound twice. Told my father the bone would cost $900 to save in Helena. Said Miller Bank could advance it if I put 120 acres of south timber as security.’

I turned toward him.

He reached into the pocket of his coat hanging by the hearth and took out a folded paper, greasy from having been opened too often. Bell’s handwriting slanted across the page in tidy black strokes. Consultation fee. Proposed surgical transfer. Timber lien discussed in event of default.

Not a doctor’s note. A scavenger’s menu.

‘When Pa told him to go to hell,’ Sylvan said, ‘the girls started coming.’

That explained more than the storm ever could. Clara Higgins with her fur collar and mayor’s smile. Sarah Miller with banker arithmetic in her eyes. They had not climbed the ridge for romance. They had come to take the measure of a sick man’s house.

The second dressing came at 2:03 a.m.

I peeled back the linen slowly. The cabin was blue-black with night except for the lamp on the table and the embers breathing red along the stove grate. Sylvan stood at my shoulder, silent. When the layers came free, the smell had changed. Less sugar-rot. Less death. The larvae had bloated pale and fat on the necrotic tissue. The margin of healthy flesh around the wound looked cleaner, angrier, alive.

‘There,’ I said.

One word. That was all.

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