Widow Left In Snow With Twin Girls Until A Mountain Man Appeared-felicia

They left the widow to die because she had given birth to twin girls.

Not sick girls.

Not cursed girls.

Image

Just girls.

That was enough for Don Evaristo Arriaga to order the wagon away from the road and into the dark timber above the Barranca del Silencio.

Mariana Salcedo lay where her brother-in-law had thrown her, one hand clawed into the snow, the other locked around the two newborn bundles pressed against her chest.

The storm had no mercy in it.

It came sideways through the pines, hard and fine, filling her hair, her collar, the folds of her ruined dress.

Every breath cut.

Every heartbeat seemed to spill the little strength she had left.

Behind her, the wagon lantern swung once between the trees, then twice, then became only a yellow bead moving away into the storm.

“Don Evaristo!” Mariana cried.

Her voice broke before it reached him.

“They are your granddaughters. They are Rodrigo’s blood.”

The old man sat stiff on the wagon bench, wrapped in his heavy coat, his face turned forward as if the snow and the dying young woman behind him were both only weather.

“Rodrigo is dead,” he said.

The words came back clean and cruel through the wind.

“And those creatures will not carry the Arriaga name.”

Julián laughed from beside him.

He had always laughed that way when cruelty was not his idea but he meant to enjoy it anyway.

The rifle lay across his knees, not raised, not needed, simply present as a promise.

“My father is sparing you shame,” he called. “In town, everyone will be told you died in childbirth.”

Mariana tried to push herself up.

Pain opened through her middle so suddenly she saw sparks in the dark.

Less than 1 hour earlier, she had been on a bed in the stone house by the La Dolorosa mine, sweating through labor while the wind rattled the shutters and Doña Meche whispered prayers under her breath.

Read More