She Saved A Wounded Warrior, Then Riders Came For Her-felicia

She Nursed Injured Modoc Warrior Without Knowing His Rank — His Tribe Returns With Marriage Demands

The rain began before dawn and never truly stopped.

It blew across the Oregon Territory in long gray sheets, dragging the smell of wet pine, cold earth, and distant gunpowder through the valleys of the Cascade Range.

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Rebecca Caldwell stood inside her father’s cabin and watched the forest blur beyond the window until the trees looked less like trees than dark shapes trembling behind glass.

Three months earlier, that same view had seemed like a beginning.

Her father, Edward Caldwell, had brought her west from Illinois with two trunks, a few tools, a stack of account books, and a dream he spoke of as if it were already built.

There was timber here.

Old pine.

Good pine.

Enough, he believed, to make a small living if he could survive the first winter, cut in spring, and find buyers in the settlements once the roads opened again.

Rebecca had wanted to believe him.

She had watched him raise the cabin log by log, sleeves rolled high, beard full of sawdust, hands split from work he was too proud to call hard.

He had spoken of a woodlot, a shed, maybe a proper stove before the next winter came.

He had said they would keep accounts the way they once had in Illinois, only this time the ledger would belong to them alone.

Then a pine fell the wrong way.

It happened behind the cabin, where Edward had been clearing a patch of land before the storms set in.

Rebecca heard the crack first.

Then his cry.

By the time she reached him, the huge tree had already done what no doctor, prayer, or daughter’s hands could undo.

Her father lay crushed beneath the trunk he had meant to harvest.

He was still warm when she found him, but already past saving.

Rebecca buried him herself because there was no one else to call.

She cut a cross from the pine that had killed him and pushed it into the soaked ground at the head of his grave.

The shape of that cruelty stayed with her.

A man could travel half a continent chasing a future, and the future could fall on him before winter.

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