The Bear Cub That Found Clara Before Mercy Ridge Could Bury Her-felicia

The rope did not creak like it did in dime novels.

It scraped.

It rasped against the crooked cottonwood at the frozen edge of Mercy Ridge while Clara Bell Whitcomb hung in the white morning with her wrists bound behind her back.

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Her boots touched just enough snow to lie to her.

If she pushed with her toes, she could almost believe she was standing.

If she fought for one more breath, she could almost believe her own body had not already begun to leave her.

Above her head, a rough plank had been nailed into the pale bark with two rusted spikes.

The plank was not just any scrap of wood.

It had been ripped from the door of her father’s stable, the same door Clara had painted three summers before with a brush too stiff and a bucket of whitewash gone thin at the bottom.

Someone had painted two words across it in black lamp soot.

INDIAN LOVER.

The letters ran down the grain in crooked tears.

At first, Clara had screamed.

She screamed until the cold turned her breath sharp and her throat raw.

Then she cursed them.

She cursed her father, Silas Whitcomb, for standing there with his hands folded over his belt like a man watching weather.

She cursed her half brothers for tying knots without looking her in the face.

She cursed Sheriff Dobbs’s nephew for pretending his badge pin gave him courage when all it gave him was cover.

She cursed the two miners who helped because they wanted approval more than they wanted a clean conscience.

Nobody answered.

The ridge swallowed everything but the wind.

They had not hanged her properly, and that was the point.

A quick death would have required a terrible kind of mercy.

Silas Whitcomb had never been a merciful man when humiliation could do the work slower.

They looped the rope under Clara’s arms and around her ribs so she would stay upright in the cold until her strength failed by inches.

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