Mail-Order Bride Faced The Black Linen And His Terrible Warning-heuh

A Mail-Order Bride Froze at the Black Linen — Then the Mountain Man Said, “It Goes In”

“Wait,” Lydia Hart said, though the word came out thin and broken. “You are putting that inside me?”

The strip of black linen steamed in Caleb Rusk’s hand.

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It was not merely warm.

It smoked.

The smell of it filled the cabin until Lydia could taste it on the back of her tongue: pine pitch, burnt fat, whiskey, charcoal, and some bitter crushed plant that made her eyes sting before fear did.

The stove behind Caleb roared like a thing alive.

Its heat turned the one-room cabin amber, throwing his great shadow up along the rafters and over the raw log wall where Lydia had pressed herself as flat as she could go.

He stood between her and the door.

In his other hand was a knife with a bone handle.

He had wiped the blade clean, but a brown-red stain clung stubbornly close to the hilt.

His knuckles were muddy.

They were also dark with Lydia’s blood.

Her skirt had been cut away high above the knee, not with ceremony, not with apology, but with the same rough efficiency Caleb seemed to bring to everything.

The wound in her thigh was small enough to be almost insulting and deep enough to frighten her worse than any wide cut might have done.

It kept bleeding.

Slowly.

Stubbornly.

Into the straw mattress beneath her.

Caleb did not blink.

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