Abandoned in a Blizzard, She Became the Woman Who Ruled the Ridge-felicia

The wheel broke where the pass was narrowest, where the wagon road pinched between timber and stone, and where the sky had already turned the color of old iron.

Nora Whitcomb heard the sound before she understood it.

It came sharp through the Montana blizzard, a splitting crack that cut through wind, oxen, and rattling freight like a rifle shot fired too close.

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Then the wagon lurched.

The whole load shifted against its ropes and boards.

Flour sacks thudded against iron tools.

Blankets slid.

The wagon bed groaned once, hard and deep, like a thing being asked to hold more than it could bear.

“Nora!” Matthew shouted.

She turned toward her brother’s voice, but the world had already tipped.

Snow struck her face.

Her boots went out from beneath her.

For one dizzy second she saw the oxen’s backs, the white sky, the black ribs of trees along the pass, and her father’s coat whipping in the storm.

Then she hit the frozen ground.

The wagon came down after her.

The weight caught her legs and drove every thought out of her head.

Pain opened bright and brutal from her hips to her boots, so large she could not separate one hurt from another.

She clawed at the snow with both gloved hands.

Her cheek pressed into ice.

Her breath came in chopped little bursts that froze almost as soon as they left her mouth.

For a moment she did not know the wagon was on top of her.

She only knew she could not move.

She only knew the lower half of her body belonged to the cold and the broken wood.

The pass roared around her.

Wind came down through the cut in the mountains and struck the stopped wagon line sideways, carrying needles of snow that stung exposed skin and gathered in every fold of wool.

The smell was all wet canvas, horse sweat, cold iron, and the raw bite of split pine.

“Papa,” Nora gasped.

Silas Whitcomb stood three steps away.

He had stopped so still he looked less like a man than a dark post driven into the snow.

His black wool coat was buttoned to his throat.

Ice had crusted along his beard.

The brim of his hat hid his eyes until he lifted his head and looked down at her.

Nora searched his face for fear.

She searched for anger, for grief, for any sign that he saw his daughter beneath that wagon and not merely a difficulty the storm had thrown into his road.

His eyes moved instead with hard, practical speed.

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