The cowboy pulled Marian from the flood, but the mine owner’s lie threatened every ranch below Pine Ridge-felicia

Caleb Rawlins did not remember deciding to jump from the bank.

He only remembered the color of the water.

It was not creek water anymore, not the clear mountain run that once slipped over stones and carried trout beneath willow shade. It was brown and thick and full of torn roots, ripped planks, and splintered pine. Rain hammered his hat brim. Mud sucked at his boots. Somewhere behind him, one of Galton’s men was coughing like a broken bellows, but Caleb heard only the rush of the flood and the thin, choking sound Marian made before the current dragged her under.

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He went in after her.

The cold struck through his shirt and stole half his breath. A limb caught his shoulder. Something hard glanced against his thigh. He kept one hand on an exposed root and reached with the other until his fingers closed on wool, then collar, then the soaked weight of her coat. Marian surfaced once, hair plastered to her cheek, eyes open but unfixed.

‘Hold,’ he said, though she could not hear him.

The creek tried to take her back.

Caleb wrapped his arm around her ribs and pulled with everything the ranch had ever taught his body to endure. The root tore bark into his palm. His boots slid. For one terrible instant he thought both of them would go, and the thought that crossed him was not of his cattle or his mother or the miles of fence waiting in the rain.

It was of Emily.

His sister’s hand, fever-hot in his. Her voice asking whether the spring columbines had bloomed yet. The stillness after.

‘Not again,’ he said through his teeth.

A ranch hand named Jake threw him a rope. Caleb looped it once around his wrist and hauled Marian high enough for Foster to seize her under the arms from the bank. Together they dragged her clear of the water and onto the mud, where she lay white as washed linen beneath the rain.

She did not cough.

Caleb dropped beside her, pressed the heel of his hand below her breastbone, and turned her head so the muddy water could spill from her mouth. Once. Twice. Again. The world narrowed to his hand, her lips, the awful silence in between.

Then Marian’s body jerked.

She coughed so hard it folded her nearly in half. Brown water spilled over her chin, and air scraped back into her lungs with a sound Caleb knew he would carry all his days.

‘There,’ Jake breathed. ‘She’s breathing.’

Caleb took off his coat and wrapped it around her though it was already soaked through. Her lashes trembled. She looked up at him as if from a great distance.

‘Caleb?’

He wanted to ask why she had come. He wanted to ask why his warning had weighed less than Galton’s polished card. He wanted to ask whether she understood that a mountain did not care for pride, that water did not bow to education, that the West did not forgive ignorance simply because it had been dressed in good intentions.

Instead he lifted her.

‘Save your breath.’

His wagon waited twenty yards down the slope, the team stamping and tossing their heads in the storm. He carried Marian there while rain ran from his jaw and down the hollow of his throat. She was shaking so hard the blanket jerked beneath his hand. Her left temple had a bruise rising dark as storm plum, and every breath seemed to catch sharp in her side.

Galton was gone.

That was the first thing Caleb noticed after he laid Marian on the wagon bed. The mine owner’s fine coat, his shiny boots, his careful city hat—gone down the mountain before the worst of the slide had settled. His two foremen remained, bruised and bleeding, one with a cut over his eye, the other holding his arm against his chest.

‘Where is he?’ Caleb asked.

Foster spat mud from his mouth. ‘Rode off when the hill gave. Left us to it.’

Caleb looked once toward the trail, where hoofprints filled with rain as fast as they were made.

‘Then we know the measure of him.’

The ride back to Pine Ridge took more than an hour and felt longer than winter. Caleb drove with one hand on the reins and the other braced near Marian’s shoulder so the wagon’s jolts would not throw her. Each time the wheels struck a rut, her face tightened. She did not complain.

Once, near the bend where the pine road met the lower meadow, she opened her eyes.

‘I should have listened.’

The words were hardly more than breath.

Caleb kept his gaze on the horses. ‘You were free to choose.’

‘Not wisely.’

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