“Wait,” Lydia Hart said, her voice catching against the raw log wall. “You’re putting that inside me?”
The black strip of linen steamed in Caleb Rusk’s hand.
It was not large.

It was not sharp.
But it frightened her more than the bone-handled knife in his other fist.
The one-room cabin smelled of burned pine, rendered fat, whiskey, and a bitter green herb that clawed at the back of her throat.
The stove behind Caleb roared so hot that the iron belly glowed faintly red, but the window beside the bed still glittered with frost at the corners.
Cold lived in that cabin even with the fire going.
It lived in the cracks between logs.
It lived in the floorboards.
It lived in Lydia’s wet skirt, in her gloves, in the numb place above her knee where pain kept arriving in waves and then retreating, as if even pain was afraid of the mountain.
Caleb did not hurry.
That might have been what scared her most.
He was not flustered, not apologetic, not tender.
He stood at the edge of the straw mattress in old flannel and suspenders, a black beard threaded with silver, his shoulders broad enough to block the stove light behind him.
The glow threw his shadow up the wall until it bent along the ceiling beams.
For a moment, Lydia thought of the stories old women told children to keep them from wandering into the dark.
Then she looked at his hand again.
The linen was black and wet-looking, coated in a mixture that hissed softly where heat still lived inside it.
“That is tar,” she whispered.
“Pine pitch,” he said. “Rendered fat. Yarrow. Charcoal.”
He said each word as if naming flour, salt, and water.
“Hot enough to burn the rot out.”
Lydia tried to swallow.
Her mouth had gone dry.
“Burn the—”
The words broke apart before she could finish them.
Her eyes dropped to her thigh.
Her traveling skirt had been cut all the way up to her hip.
The fabric lay open in a ruined fan, wool darkened by snowmelt, mud, and blood.
Above her knee, a ragged puncture wound gaped in pale flesh, not clean enough to comfort her and not bleeding hard enough to distract her from what it meant.
The blood around it had gone dark.
Cold had thickened it.
Shock had made the edges of the world too bright.
“You are not a doctor,” she said.
“No.”
“You are not even kind.”
“No.”
“Then why should I let you do this?”
For the first time since he had dragged her through the cabin door and laid her on the mattress, Caleb Rusk looked at her face instead of the wound.
His eyes were pale gray.
Not gentle. Not cruel. Worse than either, perhaps. Practical.
“Because if I don’t,” he said, “you’ll be dead before your wedding dress dries.”
Lydia stopped breathing for one heartbeat.
Then another.
The wedding dress was in her trunk.
It had not yet been worn.
It had crossed half a country with her, folded in brown paper beneath a spare chemise, a packet of needles, a cracked comb, and the last Philadelphia letter she had not had the courage to burn.
It was supposed to mean a beginning.
In Caleb Rusk’s cabin, with a smoking strip of black linen held over her body, it looked more like proof that she had traveled all that way to be buried in something white.
It was not a wedding night.
It was a warning.
Six hours earlier, Lydia had believed the worst danger waiting in Colorado was humiliation.
She had been wrong about many things in her life, but rarely so quickly.
The stagecoach had left her at a way station outside Leadville under a sky the color of pewter gone dull with age.
The snow had not fully committed to falling yet.
It hissed in the wind, thin and needling, appearing sideways rather than down.
Pine branches leaned over the clearing with dark arms.
Mud lay deep where wheels had cut it apart and frozen again at the edges.
The station itself was hardly a station at all.
A rough shelter. A post. A sagging rail.
A place where a man might leave a passenger and feel no shame about it because the mountain had already done most of the cruelty for him.
Lydia’s trunk hit the mud with a dull, wet thump.
The driver, Harlan Greaves, did not apologize.
He jumped down from the box with the loose movements of a man who had been cold for so long that meanness had become his way of keeping warm.
His teeth were tobacco-yellow.
His eyes were narrow and busy.
They moved over Lydia in the way men’s eyes often did, inventorying before judging.
“End of the line for you,” he said.
Lydia looked at the trunk.
The brass latch had broken somewhere west of Omaha, and she had tied it closed with rope in the dark while the other passengers pretended not to watch.
The trunk contained very little.
A woman could pack her whole life into a box when enough people had spent years teaching her not to take up space.
A dress. A coat. A Bible with her father’s name on the flyleaf. A paper packet of thread. Three letters. One wedding dress.
She had left Philadelphia with less than she had once imagined leaving with, but more honesty than anyone in that city had ever rewarded.
Harlan Greaves spat tobacco into the mud close enough to her boot that the sour smell reached her.
“Caleb Rusk’ll come for you if he ain’t froze solid,” he said. “Man lives higher than good sense.”
“Then I suppose I shall wait,” Lydia replied.
Her voice came out low and steady.
She was proud of that.
Pride had not fed her.
It had not bought her ticket.
But it had kept her spine straight in rooms where people expected her to fold herself smaller.
Greaves glanced down at her boots.
They were men’s boots, bought secondhand from a widow with sons because women’s boots had always pinched Lydia’s feet.
She had polished them twice before leaving Philadelphia.
The mud of Colorado had undone that kindness in minutes.
Greaves smiled without warmth.
“Well,” he said, “Rusk asked for strong.”
Lydia looked him full in the face.
“Then perhaps one of us will not be disappointed.”
The smile slipped off him.
It was a small victory.
Too small to matter.
Large enough to warm her for half a second.
Harlan climbed back onto the coach and gathered the reins.
The horses lunged.
Mud sucked at the wheels and released them with a thick sound that made Lydia think of something being pulled from a grave.
She stood where he had left her and watched the coach turn into a black shape between the trees.
Then it was gone.
The silence that followed was not empty.
It was full of weather.
Full of pine.
Full of the distant groan of timber shifting under frost.
Back east, weather announced itself through glass.
Rain tapped. Snow settled. Wind rattled a sash and gave a woman time to complain before it found her bones.
Here, weather had teeth.
It came up under Lydia’s skirts and found the damp at her hem.
It slipped inside her collar.
It bit her wrists through her gloves.
She wanted to wrap her arms around herself, but she did not.
She had been watched all her life.
At boardinghouse tables.
In dress shops.
On church steps.
In the mirror behind her mother’s tired face.
Every gesture of discomfort had become evidence against her, every appetite a charge, every inch of her body a conversation other people felt entitled to hold.
So Lydia stood still.
Her hands remained at her sides.
The cold made her cheeks ache.
The trunk sat beside her like a coffin.
Philadelphia had not pushed her west with one single shove.
It had done it slowly.
Her father’s death first.
Then her mother’s remarriage.
Then the breakfast table where her stepfather’s silence was somehow worse than his remarks.
He never had to say much.
A glance at a second slice of bread.
A sigh when she came down the stairs.
A joke about how a girl built like Lydia ought to earn her keep in a warehouse.
Her mother pretended not to hear.
That had hurt in a different way.
Open cruelty leaves a mark. Cowardice leaves a draft.
The matrimonial paper had arrived folded inside another woman’s mending.
A seamstress at the boardinghouse had slipped it under Lydia’s elbow and whispered that not every man wanted a doll.
Lydia had laughed at that because laughing was safer than hoping.
Then she had seen the advertisement.
Colorado mountain man seeks wife. Must be strong, steady, willing to work, not afraid of snow or silence. Beauty not required. Lies not tolerated.
Beauty not required.
She had read those words once.
Then again.
Then enough times that the paper softened where her thumb held it.
They should have insulted her.
Instead, they struck some hidden bruise so gently that she nearly cried.
Not because she wanted to be told beauty did not matter.
Because she was tired of living in a world where people said it mattered least while proving every day that it mattered first.
She wrote the letter at the boardinghouse table after everyone else had gone to bed.
The lamp smoked.
A drunk man sang badly in the alley.
Her hand shook only once, at the beginning.
Dear Mr. Rusk, she wrote.
Then she stopped pretending.
She told him the truth.
She was large.
She was twenty-four.
She could cook plain food.
She could sew badly but persistently.
She could lift more than most men expected.
She did not faint when insulted.
She had no dowry.
She would not pretend to be delicate.
She sealed the letter before pride could talk her out of honesty.
Three weeks later, money arrived for a ticket west.
One-way.
No warm proposal.
No pressed flower.
No promise that he would adore her.
Only enough money to cross the country and a brief note telling her where the coach would leave her.
That should have made her suspicious.
It did.
But suspicion did not change the fact that Philadelphia no longer had a place for her that did not feel like a shrinking box.
So she went.
The first week west smelled of coal smoke and damp wool.
The second smelled of sweat, leather, and too many bodies packed together on hard benches.
By the time the coach passed Omaha, Lydia had learned how to sleep sitting up while holding her reticule under one elbow.
She had learned which passengers could be answered and which ones should be ignored.
She had learned that the country was larger than any map had made it seem.
She had learned that leaving was not the same as arriving.
At the Leadville way station, with the coach gone and the mountain wind rising, that lesson settled over her heavier than her coat.
The first ten minutes passed slowly.
The next ten passed slower.
She counted them by breath.
By the ache in her fingers.
By the small flakes of snow gathering on the rope around her trunk.
No one came from the shelter.
No woman opened a door.
No clerk called her inside.
The whole place seemed to exist only so that she could be abandoned beside it.
Then she heard hooves.
Not the quick rhythm of horses.
Something slower.
More stubborn.
The sound came down through the timber with the scrape of iron on stone and the wet pull of mud.
Lydia turned toward the trail.
A mule appeared first, dark and long-faced, ears angled back as if offended by the world.
The man riding it leaned forward against the weather and let the animal choose its footing.
A second mule followed behind, empty except for a patched saddle blanket.
The rider wore a buffalo coat that made him look broader than any man Lydia had ever seen in a city street.
His hat brim hid his face.
He did not wave.
He did not call out.
He simply came on through the snow, slow as judgment.
Lydia’s first foolish thought was that she should smooth her coat.
Her second was that no amount of smoothing would change what he saw.
Her third was that she was suddenly furious with herself for caring.
The mule stopped a few yards away.
The clearing held quiet around them.
Snow ticked against Lydia’s hat brim.
The rider looked down.
Not at her face first.
At the trunk.
At the rope.
At the mud around her boots.
At the way she stood with her hands at her sides instead of folded against the cold.
Then one gloved hand moved inside his coat.
Lydia stiffened.
The hand came back with a folded letter.
Her letter.
She recognized the crease before she recognized the paper.
He had carried it.
Not tucked away in a saddlebag with bills and spare nails, but close enough to reach without looking.
The fact should have comforted her.
It did not.
Caleb Rusk unfolded the paper with care that seemed at odds with the rest of him.
His beard was black, though silver threaded through it in rough lines.
His hair curled under the back of his hat as if he had cut it himself and badly.
His face was not old, exactly, but it had been weathered into something older than his years.
A man did not live that high in the mountains and remain smooth.
He read without speaking for a moment.
Lydia felt each second as a touch she had not agreed to.
“I am large,” he said at last.
Her stomach tightened.
“I can cook plain food,” he continued. “Sew badly but persistently. Lift more than most men expect.”
His eyes lifted.
Pale gray.
Clear as ice under creek water.
“And I do not faint when insulted.”
Lydia’s cheeks burned.
“If you rode down to prove whether that last part was true, Mr. Rusk, you may consider the test unnecessary.”
The second mule snorted behind him.
Caleb folded the letter once.
Then again.
“I did not ask for small,” he said.
Lydia waited.
“I asked for honest.”
That was the first kind thing he said to her.
It did not sound kind.
Kindness often does not, when it has been starved down to its bones.
For a moment, Lydia did not know what to do with it.
She had prepared herself for disappointment.
She had prepared herself for mockery.
She had prepared herself for a man who would look at her and regret the cost of the ticket.
She had not prepared herself for a man who quoted her own shame back to her as if it were evidence in her favor.
Still, nothing about Caleb Rusk invited ease.
He swung down from the mule with a heavy movement that put both boots deep in the mud.
He stood even taller than she had guessed.
His coat smelled of weather, animal hide, smoke, and a life lived too close to hard things.
He looked at the trunk again.
“One trunk?”
“One life,” Lydia said before she could stop herself.
His mouth moved slightly.
Not a smile.
Almost less than one.
“Can you ride?”
“I can learn.”
“That wasn’t the question.”
“No,” she said. “Not well.”
He nodded as if honesty had a weight he could measure.
“No side saddle up where I live.”
“I did not expect one.”
“Good.”
Every exchange between them felt like two stones being struck together to see which one would chip.
He took the rope handle of her trunk and tested the weight.
For the first time that day, something like approval crossed his face.
Not admiration.
Not surprise.
A practical acknowledgment that the box held more than lace.
Then the wind changed.
Lydia noticed it because Caleb did.
His head turned before she heard anything.
The mules heard it too.
The first mule’s ears pinned flat.
The second lifted its head and froze with the saddle blanket shifting along its back.
Caleb’s hand left the trunk.
It dropped toward his belt.
Lydia saw the knife there for the first time.
Bone-handled.
Plain.
Used often enough that the grip had darkened where fingers held it.
“What is it?” she asked.
Caleb did not answer.
He was looking past her shoulder toward the tree line.
The man who had just quoted her letter, judged her trunk, and told her he had asked for honesty was gone from his face.
Something older had replaced him.
Something that belonged to people who survived by seeing trouble before it named itself.
Lydia turned.
The pines stood black against the gray sky.
Snow moved between them.
For one second, there was nothing.
Only weather.
Only timber.
Only the lonely way station behind her and the mountain above it.
Then something cracked under the trees.
A branch, perhaps.
A footstep.
A sound too small for certainty and too sharp for comfort.
Caleb’s voice came low beside her.
“Don’t move.”
Lydia’s body wanted to obey him before her pride decided whether it should.
That angered her.
Fear has a way of choosing masters before the mind can object.
She stood still anyway.
Caleb took one step forward, putting himself half between Lydia and the timber.
Not fully.
Not gallantly.
There was nothing polished in it.
He simply moved where he needed to move.
His hand closed around the knife.
The black trees held their breath.
Lydia could feel the wet cold crawling through the seams of her boots, but her attention narrowed to the space between Caleb’s shoulder and the pines.
She thought of Philadelphia.
Of the breakfast table.
Of the matrimonial paper.
Of beauty not required.
Of lies not tolerated.
She thought of the wedding dress folded in the trunk, still dry then, still white, still foolish enough to mean hope.
Six hours later, that dress would be damp in Caleb Rusk’s cabin.
Her skirt would be cut to the hip.
His knuckles would be dark with mud and her blood.
A strip of black linen would steam in his hand while the wood stove painted the logs orange.
But standing at the way station, Lydia did not know any of that yet.
All she knew was that the man who had bought her one-way ticket had gone perfectly still.
And whatever waited in the timber had made even Caleb Rusk reach for steel.