I SAVED A GIANT APACHE GIRL — THE NEXT DAY, HER CHIEFS CAME TO MY HOUSE WITH A SHOCKING DECISION.-thuyhien

I SAVED A GIANT APACHE GIRL — THE NEXT DAY, HER CHIEFS CAME TO MY HOUSE WITH A SHOCKING DECISION.

Caleb Ward expected nothing from that ride except distance.

The winter trail had gone pale and hard beneath his horse, the grass flattened by old frost, the sky already losing color over the plains. It was the sort of evening that made a man think only of a fire, a tin cup of coffee, and the comfort of reaching his own door before darkness deepened.

He was almost home when he saw her.

At first he thought she was a fallen branch or a dead mule left in the clay beside the dry riverbed. Then his horse shied, nostrils flaring, and the shape moved.

A woman.

No — a girl, maybe not much older than twenty.

Apache.

And larger than any woman Caleb had ever seen.

She lay half-curled on her side, one long arm trapped awkwardly beneath her, her deerhide dress torn across the shoulder and chest. Her legs were scraped raw from the knees down, as if she had run through brush and rock without once slowing to protect herself.

Her breath came fast.

Too fast.

Sharp little pulls, the kind of breathing that belongs to pain, fever, or someone losing the fight to remain conscious.

Caleb dismounted slowly.

He had lived long enough on the frontier to know that stepping toward a wounded stranger could be mistaken for mercy or attack depending on what had already happened to them. So he kept his hands where she could see them and lowered himself to one knee a careful distance away.

Her eyes opened.

Dark.

Fierce.

Clouded by exhaustion, but still bright with the old animal instinct that asks a question before it trusts an answer: Are you danger?

“You’re hurt,” Caleb said quietly.

“I’m not going to touch you unless you want me to.”

For one second, he thought she would try to crawl away.

Then her fingers twitched.

Barely.

A permission so small another man might have missed it.

Caleb did not miss it.

He moved closer and slid one arm beneath her shoulders, the other under her knees. The first thing that struck him was not her height, though that was startling enough.

It was how cold she felt.

Not simply cold from the evening.

Cold in that deep, dangerous way bodies become when they have lost too much strength to fight the weather. She was tall, heavy with muscle and bone, yet light in the wrong places, as if whatever had driven her to collapse had already started hollowing her out from within.

He lifted her carefully.

Her head tipped against his shoulder, and for one strained moment her hand gripped his sleeve with surprising force. Then even that strength loosened.

The plains were dimming fast by the time he reached his cabin.

Wind moved low over the grass, carrying dust and the smell of distant snow. Caleb walked the last stretch faster than he should have, boots slipping in the dry clay, because the cold weight in his arms no longer felt like mere injury.

It felt like time running out.

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