She Saved A Drowning Foal, Then The Whole Valley Came For Him-Aurelle - Chainityai

She Saved A Drowning Foal, Then The Whole Valley Came For Him-Aurelle

The river should have taken him.

That was what everyone would say later, once the story had been told so many times that children in the valley knew it by heart.

The storm was too strong.

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The water was too high.

The foal was too young.

And Layla was only a mill worker walking home with flour on her hands and the last of her weekly pay wrapped in a damp handkerchief.

But the river did not get the final word that night.

Layla heard the cry while she was crossing the low road below the pines. It was thin, almost swallowed by thunder, but it had a living edge to it. She stopped with rain running down her face and listened again.

There.

Not wind.

Not a branch.

A foal.

He was being dragged sideways through the current, all long legs and panic, his little head appearing and disappearing between branches that spun like broken hands. No lantern burned nearby. No rider called his name. The whole valley had gone inside to wait out the storm, and he was alone in the black water.

Layla went in.

The cold hit her so hard her breath left her body. The current shoved her against stones, twisted her skirt around her knees, and tried to pull her under, but she kept one hand stretched toward the foal. Once, his head vanished completely. She thought she had lost him.

Then her fingers caught his mane.

She wrapped both hands into it and fought backward one step at a time, slipping, coughing, praying in pieces because there was no room in her chest for a whole prayer. When they reached the bank, she collapsed beside him with mud in her mouth and one knee bleeding through her stocking.

The foal did not move.

Layla rolled him gently, rubbed his neck, and pressed her ear near his nose. Nothing.

She rubbed harder.

One minute.

Another.

Then his body jerked and air tore into him like a sob.

Layla laughed once, so close to crying that the sound barely knew what it was.

She brought him home in a blanket and hid him in the barn because by morning the valley had a name for him.

Thunder’s last son.

The Blackwood foal.

The horse Edward Blackwood had been breeding toward for years.

Thunder had been the county’s pride, the stallion that made men lean over fences and speak in lowered voices.

Edward Blackwood announced a reward that would have fed Layla through winter.

Then she unwrapped the foal’s front leg.

The swelling told her the truth before any doctor could. The current had battered him against rock, and the leg had taken the worst of it. A champion with a ruined leg was not a champion to men like Edward Blackwood. It was a problem to be ended neatly.

So Layla did not go to the ranch.

She boiled cloth.

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