The Doctor Mocked Her Black Salve — Then The Mountain Man Learned Who Was Really Stealing Him Blind-QuynhTranJP

The spoon hovered over the ruined leg while spruce steam curled into the cabin air and caught the firelight in thin green ribbons. Jedediah Montgomery’s breathing rasped against the quilt. The kettle knocked softly on the iron stove. Dr. Pike stood with one hand braced on the table, the silver chain on his vest trembling against the buttons as if his own heartbeat had turned visible.

I let the salve warm only until the honey loosened and the resin glossed. Too hot and it would bite live flesh. Too cool and it would not draw anything out. My mother had taught me that before she died with lamp smoke in her hair and a mortar stone in her lap. The Salish widow had taught me the rest in August under a stand of spruce, with yellow needles sticking to our skirts and flies whining over a trapper’s torn thigh.

I set the spoon down.

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“Hold him steady,” I said.

Sylvan did not answer. He moved.

He slid onto the edge of the bed and gathered his father with those huge scarred arms, one forearm behind the shoulders, one hand flattening over the old man’s ribs so he would not thrash when the pain came. Firelight ran over the angles of Sylvan’s face and caught in the frost-melt on his beard. His jaw locked so hard a muscle jumped near his ear.

Pike found enough voice to say, “This is barbarism.”

I opened the lancet over the flame until the metal blushed dull orange. “Then you should avert your eyes again.”

His mouth tightened.

Jedediah’s eyelids fluttered. Up close, his skin carried that gray waxy color I had seen on men minutes before fever took them. His fingers pawed once at the blanket and found Sylvan’s sleeve instead. Outside, the storm shoved hard against the shutters and sent a long whistle through the logs.

I made three clean openings where the flesh was tightest. Dark matter pushed up at once, thick and foul, followed by a hotter seep that splashed into the cloth I had ready. The smell hit Pike first. He gagged into his cuff. Sylvan held his father more firmly and stared straight at my hands.

Jedediah gave one hoarse cry that turned into a cough.

“Breathe,” Sylvan said near his father’s ear. “That’s it. Stay with me, Pa.”

I packed the openings with the hot salve, pressed boiled linen over the leg, and bound it fast enough to hold warmth but loose enough to drain. Resin, honey, rot, cedar smoke, hot iron, man-sweat—everything mixed until the cabin smelled like a forest trying to keep a grave shut. The old man sagged back against the pillow. For three beats nobody moved.

Then the breathing changed.

The rattle thinned. Not gone. Thinned.

Sylvan heard it before I did. His eyes cut to mine.

“What did you do?”

“I gave the fever something else to fight.”

Pike barked a short laugh that cracked halfway through. “Witchery in a log box. If he lives till sunrise, it will be despite you.”

I wiped the lancet and set it aside. “If he lives till sunrise, doctor, it will be because you arrived polished and left empty-handed.”

He came around the table so fast the lamp flame shook. “You insolent—”

Sylvan rose.

The bed ropes creaked behind him. He did not shove Pike. He did not need to. He simply stood between us, broad enough to turn the room into two smaller rooms, and looked down until the doctor’s words dried up in his own throat.

“Out,” Sylvan said.

Pike glanced at the door, then at the crates on my table, then at Jedediah’s leg. Calculation moved across his face like a cloud shadow crossing snow. “Not before I collect the rest.”

Sylvan’s voice went flat. “The rest of what?”

Pike dabbed the corner of his mouth with a clean handkerchief, as if restoring himself. “My fee. Your father’s care has already cost time, instruments, and travel. Fifty-two dollars remains due.”

I watched Sylvan’s head tilt the smallest degree.

“At dawn,” Pike added, “I also expect your signature on the timber authorization Fletcher Boone prepared. He was generous enough to delay the filing on account of your father’s condition.”

The room cooled though the stove door stood hot and red.

Sylvan turned halfway. “What authorization?”

Pike’s eyes flicked once to his leather case near the chair. A mistake. Only once, but enough.

I had seen that look before in men who sold patent tonics and counted on widows to stay ignorant. I crossed the floor before he guessed why. The floorboards bit cold through my boots. My fingers closed around the case handle just as his hand snapped out for it.

He caught only air.

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