The Mountain Man Begged to Die. Nora Found What the Town Buried-thuyhien

“Don’t touch me,” Gideon Mercer rasped, his voice tearing through the white silence like a saw dragged across bone.

“Nora, listen to me. Let me die.”

Nora Bell Whitaker froze with both knees sunk in the snow and one hand still reaching toward the blood-soaked blanket wrapped around his ruined leg.

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The ravine was so cold it felt alive.

Wind hissed through the Bitterroot pines, ice cracked overhead, and the whole mountain smelled of sap, old smoke, and copper.

For four days, Nora had followed rumors.

Four days of broken branches, old boot prints, and blood smears half-hidden under fresh powder.

Four days of men telling her to stop embarrassing herself.

Four days of women pretending concern while stepping out of her way like courage might be catching.

Now she had found him.

And he was begging her to leave.

Gideon Mercer, the loner Iron Creek called Mad Gid, lay wedged beneath the roots of a fallen pine.

His body was wrapped in a bear hide stiff with frost.

His beard was matted with ice.

His left side was torn open in three long wounds that Nora first mistook for claw marks.

Then she looked closer.

One wound was too straight.

Another had a dark puncture at the edge, like a blade had gone in and dragged out wrong.

His leg had been splinted with bark and strips of his own shirt.

The cloth had frozen, thawed, and frozen again until it looked like part of him.

“You’re coming home,” Nora said.

Her teeth were chattering so hard the sentence nearly broke apart.

Gideon’s fever-bright eyes widened.

It was not relief she saw there.

It was terror.

“No.” He grabbed her wrist with shocking strength. “You don’t understand what’s waiting down there.”

Six months before that day, Nora had stood at the well in Iron Creek with blood running down her arm while three young men from Helena laughed from their horses.

The August air had been hot and dusty.

A fly kept circling the rim of her empty water bucket.

One of the young men lifted another pebble between his fingers and grinned.

“Come on, sweetheart,” he called. “We’re just seeing if you can feel it through all that padding.”

The others roared.

Nora did not cry at first.

That was the part nobody ever knew.

She stood with her chin raised, her empty bucket pressed against her hip, and tried to look like their words could not reach her.

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