Cursed Woman, Silent Baby, And The Cowboy’s Impossible Choice-felicia

“Don’t Let the Cursed Woman Touch My Baby”—Then the Cowboy Begged Her to Stay

The storm had already made Mercy Bend feel smaller than it was.

Rain came sideways against the clinic windows, rattling the glass in its tired wooden frames and pushing cold air through every crack Doc Harlan had promised to mend before winter.

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Inside, the room smelled of lamp oil, boiled cloth, wet pine kindling, and medicine sharp enough to sit bitter on the tongue.

Nora Bell lay on the cot behind the partition with a shawl pulled to her chin.

She had not meant to sleep.

Pain had dragged her under in pieces, one feverish breath at a time, until even grief had gone blurry around the edges.

Then the front door burst open.

Wind rushed in first, hard and wet.

After that came the sound of boots slipping on the boards.

Then came a man’s voice, torn open by panic.

“Doc! For God’s sake, Doc!”

Nora opened her eyes.

At first, she thought the thunder had shaken her awake.

Then she heard the worse thing.

Nothing.

No newborn cry.

No angry wail.

No thin little complaint against the cold.

Only a silence so deep it seemed to steal warmth from the room.

She pushed herself up on one elbow, and pain went through her chest like hot wire.

The bandage beneath her dress pulled tight against swollen skin.

She bit down on a sound and turned her face toward the opening in the partition.

Silas Reed stood in the clinic doorway with rain falling from the brim of his hat.

Mud covered his boots to the knee.

His coat was soaked black at the shoulders.

In his arms, pressed close to his chest, was a small bundle wrapped in a damp blanket.

He looked like a man who had ridden straight through the edge of the world and found no help waiting there.

Doc Harlan came from the medicine shelf with his spectacles low on his nose.

“Silas,” he said, already reaching. “Bring her here.”

Silas did not move at once.

He held the child tighter, as if the act of handing her over might admit how bad it was.

“Grace won’t take anything,” he said. “Not milk. Not broth. Not the bottle. She just—she just stopped crying.”

The last words were almost too soft to hear.

Nora heard them anyway.

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