A Wife Was Left to Freeze After Giving Birth. Then a Mountain Man Arrived-mdue - Chainityai

A Wife Was Left to Freeze After Giving Birth. Then a Mountain Man Arrived-mdue

Jeb Ruston left his wife bleeding on frozen floorboards because the child she had just delivered was a girl.

That was the whole crime in his mind.

Not weakness.

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Not danger.

Not the blood spreading beneath her after 18 hours of labor.

A girl.

Outside, the Wyoming winter hammered the cabin like it wanted to rip it off the mountain and drag it into the dark.

Wind scraped along the log walls with a dry, clawing sound.

Snow pushed through the gaps around the door.

The iron stove gave off the tired smell of smoke, damp pine, and old ash, but the heat inside it had already begun to fade.

Cora Ruston lay on the iron bed with her hair stuck to her face, her lips cracked from screaming, and both hands twisted in the sheets.

She had stopped knowing where pain ended and her body began.

Martha Gentry, the midwife, was still working beside her with the hard focus of a woman who had seen too many births turn into funerals.

She had clean cloths stacked by the basin.

She had boiled water at 3:10 that morning.

She had checked Cora’s pulse three times in the last half hour and did not like what she felt.

But she kept her face steady because Cora needed steadiness more than fear.

Jeb Ruston was the fear in the room.

He paced near the door in a dirty wool coat, boots leaving wet marks across the boards, his breath sour with liquor.

For months he had told every man in Red Dog that Cora was carrying his son.

He had said it at the mining claim.

He had said it outside the supply store.

He had said it loud enough for men to laugh, clap him on the shoulder, and bet him drinks on it.

A boy, he kept saying.

A Ruston boy.

A son who would carry tools, work the vein, and make the claim worth something.

Cora had heard those words so often that by winter they stopped sounding like hope and started sounding like a verdict.

She had never hated the child inside her.

She had only feared the man waiting to judge it.

When the baby finally came into the world, the first cry was thin but fierce.

Cora turned her head toward the sound and made a broken little noise that was almost a laugh.

For one second, she was not Jeb’s wife.

She was not a body on a bed.

She was not a woman fighting to stay conscious in a cabin full of cold smoke.

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