A Wounded Cowboy Reached Her Cabin With A Bullet Still Inside-felicia

The first shot from the Winchester missed Zayn Tucker clean.

The second did not.

It tore through his shoulder on a scorching July afternoon in 1875 and left him bent over his saddle beneath a Texas sun that did not care whether a man lived or died.

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There was no one nearby to call his name.

No doctor.

No friend.

No clean water except what remained warm in his canteen.

Only dust, heat, pain, and the loyal paint horse beneath him.

Thunder kept walking long after Zayn stopped giving him clear direction.

The horse’s ears flicked at every sound in the scrub, as though he understood that danger had not ended with the gunshot.

Zayn had been riding for three days straight by then.

Three days through harsh West Texas ground, across stone, sand, dry washes, and narrow trails that offered too many hiding places for a man with a rifle.

Every mile had pulled more strength out of him.

Every hour had driven the bullet deeper into his thoughts.

He could feel it there.

Not in the neat way a man could name a pain and set it aside.

This pain had weight.

It burned below his collarbone, settled somewhere inside the muscle, and spread heat down his arm and across his chest.

The shirt around the wound had gone stiff with blood.

His fingers stuck to the reins.

Sometimes he woke up from a feverish drift and realized Thunder had chosen the path without him.

Sometimes he tried to sit straighter, only to feel his vision fold black at the edges.

He had not seen the shooter.

That was what gnawed at him almost as badly as the wound.

One moment, he had been passing through a narrow canyon, listening to the scrape of hooves on stone and the dry whisper of brush against his legs.

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