The Cowboy Who Found Lia In The Storm Had One Line Left To Say-felicia

The Texas scrubland looked almost white beneath the sun that afternoon.

Not pale.

Not gentle.

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White the way bone looks after weather has taken everything else from it.

Heat rose in thin waves from the flats, and every gust dragged grit across Lia May’s face until her eyes burned too much to cry.

The torn blue silk of her dress had once been pretty enough for someone else to admire.

Now it clung to her in muddy, blood-stiff strips and rasped against her skin whenever she moved.

She had lost her shoes three days earlier.

Maybe four.

She could not hold time properly anymore.

A day was not Monday or Tuesday.

A day was only sunup, when she had to walk, and sundown, when she had to hide.

Stopping meant Dennis.

Stopping meant Silas.

Stopping meant the sheriff whose voice had gone smooth and official while he helped cruel men turn her fear into a crime.

That was the thing Lia had learned too late.

Some men did not need to break a law to ruin you.

They only needed another man willing to call their cruelty order.

Her feet had changed shape inside the torn cloth wrapped around them.

Her palms were raw from clawing her way out of a ravine after the ground gave beneath her.

She had dug at the dirt for water and found none.

She had pushed through thornbrush until the same cuts opened again and again.

Still, she walked.

Behind her was a house where doors closed too quietly.

Behind her was a husband who had learned how to make pain sound like discipline.

Behind her were men who believed a woman alone on the road could be dragged back and nobody decent would ask why.

So Lia kept moving because the country in front of her might kill her, but the life behind her already had its hands around her throat.

Then the sky changed.

The glare softened into a sick yellow.

The horizon to the west lifted and darkened, and for one stunned heartbeat she thought the land itself was rising.

It was dust.

A wall of it.

It rolled toward her like a living thing, swallowing fence posts and mesquite and the thin line of distance between her and death.

The wind hit first.

It struck her hard enough to bend her sideways.

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