Only 06 - Winter Fire
cloth. Blood still flowed, but slowly.
âMore,â Lola said. âAinât stopped yet.â
Sarah repeated the process with a new cloth. Her teeth sank into her lower lip when he twitched and moaned.
âDonât fret,â Lola said. âHe ainât really feeling it.â
âI hope youâre right.â
âHell, gal, heâs an outlaw, not some fine, fainting lady.â
âThat doesnât mean he canât feel pain.â
âIâll mix the poulticeâ was all Lola said.
Finally the bleeding slowed enough for Sarah to finish dressing the wound. Lola handed her a jar of strong-smelling poultice.
Holding her breath, Sarah smeared the blend of herbs, oils, and moldy bread onto a clean bandage, placed it over both wounds, and waited while Lola did the same to the wound on the back of Caseâs thigh. Quickly Sarah wrapped his leg with clean ribbons of cloth that still smelled of the sunny winter day.
âThatâs it,â Lola said. âCover him, put some warming bricks in the bed, and leave him be.â
She was still talking when Sarah started pulling the top layer of bricks from the fire ring. They were hot. Breath hissed between her teeth as she wrapped the bricks in old flour sacks. She tucked the bricks at Caseâs feet and addeda few more along his legs for good measure.
âFeverish?â Lola asked.
âNot yet.â
She grunted. âItâll come.â
Sarah bit her lower lip, but didnât argue. Lolaâs experience with gunshot wounds was greater than her own.
âWill heâ¦make it?â Sarah asked.
âHope so. Shame to waste prime males. Ainât enough of them as it is.â
Sarah pulled up the covers and tucked them around Caseâs shoulders. Like everything else in the cabin, the bedclothes were as clean as hard work, hot water, and soap could make them.
Lola grunted, heaved herself to her feet, and walked to the door. With each step the folds of her flour-sack skirt swung briskly over her knee-high moccasins. Her homespun blouse was the color of unbleached muslin. The headband she wore to hold back her thick gray braids was finely woven, colorful, and spun from the hair of goats she kept for their milk, meat, and silky wool.
âCheck the rifles and shotguns,â Sarah said to her brother without looking away from Case. âIs there more fresh water?â
âIâll get it,â he said. Then, almost reluctantly, âWhat do you think? Will he be all right?â
For an instant she closed her eyes. âI donât know. If his wounds donât infectâ¦â
âYou pulled Ute through.â
âI was lucky. So was he.â
âMaybe this one will be lucky, too.â
âI hope so.â
She stood and looked around the cabin, listing things that had to be done.
âMore water from the creek,â she said, âmore firewood, a place for me to sleep next to Case, Lola will probably need help with her medicinal herbsâ¦â
âIâm gone,â Conner said.
Sarah smiled as her brother hurried out of the cabin. He was a good boy, despite a wide streak of wildness in him that kept her awake nights worrying.
Conner needs something more to look up to than outlaws , she thought. Iâve got to find that treasure. Iâve simply got to .
Case moaned softly and tried to sit up.
Instantly she was on her knees beside him, holding his shoulders down.
He swept her aside as though she was no more than straw floating on the wind. Sitting up, he shook his head, trying to clear it.
She put her hand on his thick hair and soothed him like a wounded hawk.
âCase,â she said distinctly. âCase, can you hear me?â
Slowly his eyes opened and focused on her.
An odd kind of gray-blue-green , she thought. Not really hazel. More a pale green .
Clear as winter and twice as deep. Colder, too .
âSarah?â he asked hoarsely. âSarah Kennedy?â
âThatâs me,â she agreed. âLie down, Case.â
She pressed on his shoulders again. This time she noticed the resilience of his muscles beneath her palms, the male power coiled under his naked skin.
And the heat. Not fever. Justâ¦life.
âWhat happened?â he asked thickly.
âYou were shot. Ute found you and brought you here.â
âCulpeppers?â
âReginald and Quincy.â
âGot to get up,â he muttered.
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