He Saved An Apache Fugitive, Then The Bell Warned Them Both-Quieen - Chainityai

He Saved An Apache Fugitive, Then The Bell Warned Them Both-Quieen

Elias Cruz saw the woman before he understood she was alive.

At first she was just a shape beside the dry creek, folded wrong against the pale stones with one arm tucked under her and her dark hair stuck to her cheek.

The noon sun had bleached the whole country into hard white light.

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Heat shimmered above the rocks.

The little water left in the creek smelled of mud, hot leaves, and animals that had passed through before dawn.

Elias stopped his horse without making a sound.

He had been alive too long in border country to trust a body in the open.

A man could be bait.

A woman could be bait.

A child crying from a clump of mesquite could be bait if the men in the brush were hungry enough or cruel enough.

He kept one hand near the carbine tied to his saddle and studied the land around her.

No hat brim behind the rocks.

No rifle barrel in the thorns.

No horse shifting where a horse should not be.

Only the woman, the creek, and a hawk circling high enough to look like a burned mark on the sky.

Then she moved.

It was hardly a movement at all, just a weak lift of her head and the smallest catch of breath.

“Snake,” she whispered.

Her voice sounded scraped raw.

“It bit me.”

Elias remained where he was for another second.

That second would have made some men call him hard.

He knew better.

Mercy that gets a man killed does not save anybody.

He swung down from the saddle, took the carbine with him, and set it on the ground close enough to reach.

Then he walked toward her slowly, his boots crunching over the creek stones.

“Where?” he asked.

The woman pointed to her ankle.

Her hand shook badly.

There were two dark marks near the bone, half-hidden by dust and dried blood.

The leather around the wound had torn.

Her dress was buckskin, travel-stained and ripped along one side as if she had forced herself through brush that did not want to let her pass.

Elias crouched.

In any cantina from Agua Prieta north, a man watching him would have said he was a fool.

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