But as she crossed a track that bisected the field, something caught her eye—something that didn’t fit. A lump—a glimpse of blue and dark brown among the blackened stalks.
Mia reined in her horse, breathing hard. It looked like a person. Her blood quickened.
She urged her mare forward and with shock saw that the lump was a man, lying in the ditch, his hat discarded nearby. Quickly she dismounted, dropping to her knees in front of him. He appeared unconscious, face turned to the side. Blood pooled under his head.
Mia switched instantly into nurse mode and reached for his pulse. He was alive, and he was breathing. But his pulse was weak and his skin ice cold. Quickly she took in details—the man was tall, about six feet. Lean. Dark hair. Possibly in his thirties with a shadowed jaw, gaunt cheeks. His cowboy hat lay several feet away. He was dressed like a ranch hand—jacket lined with shearling, scuffed cowboy boots. Blood had dripped down the side of his face, leaking into his ear. She moved his head slightly. There was a gaping wound on his temple.
Mia ran back to her horse and fumbled to unhitch the first-aid kit she always carried. Returning to the victim’s side she opened the kit and quickly snapped on latex gloves. She pressed a wad of gauze to the man’s wound. With her free hand she reached for the radio on her belt. As staff first responder, she carried it always.
She keyed the radio. “Dr. Colton, calling Dr, Colton!” Mia released the key and cleared her throat.
Silence crackled.
It was early. Maybe Levi Colton was still cuddled up in bed with Kate—the pastry chef he’d already fallen in love with since his arrival on the ranch. A pang of unbidden jealousy sparked through Mia, but urgency pressed back.
“Mia for Dr. Colton—come in please, Dr. Colton, this is an emergency!”
As she spoke she noticed the deeply-scuffed and flattened earth around the victim. Hoof marks everywhere. And the burned grass around the man had been trampled to ash. Had he been thrown from a horse? Then she caught sight of an empty hip holster beneath his open jacket.
Where was his pistol?
She glanced up. There was no gear lying near him, either. Had he been attacked, robbed? Her pulse began to race—please, not another tragedy on this farm. What on earth was going on?
The radio crackled to life. “Mia, it’s Levi—what is it?”
Relief washed through her. She keyed the radio. “There’s a man unconscious on the back field beyond the employee gate. He’s bleeding from a head wound. Breathing is steady but his pulse is weak and hypothermia is probable—I don’t know how long he’s been out here but he’s wet from frost.” She took in the length of his obviously toned body. “No other injuries immediately apparent—we need to get him to the infirmary stat, Levi.”
Any other emergency help was at least fifteen miles away in the tiny rural town of Dead River and rudimentary at best. The infirmary, right now, was this man’s best bet.
“Stand by—I’m on my way.” She heard the sudden seriousness in Levi’s tone.
“Bring a spine board. I don’t want to risk moving him without it. He might have been thrown from a horse.”
Sheathing her radio on her belt, she tore open a pouch from the kit and quickly unfolded a silver emergency blanket. She tucked it around the stranger before shrugging out of her own down jacket and draping that over him, too. Cold air struck her body immediately.
Mia cleaned blood and dirt away from his wound to get a better sense of the damage. Then, using butterfly sutures from her emergency kit, she pulled the edges of the gash together as a temporary measure. She placed a soft gauze bandage over the top. As she worked, Mia saw a cloud of dirt rising in the distance, catching the low angled rays of the early sun—transport was coming.
“Hey, there,” she said softly, cupping the victim’s face. “Can you hear me? What’s your name? Is there someone we can call?”
He gave a soft moan and stirred. Relief washed through her— He was responsive.
“Help is on its way. Try not to move, okay? We’re going to get you warm. Safe.”
She heard the engine now, purring in the distance as it bumped over the farm track.
“Hang in there, big guy,” she whispered, taking his hand in hers. His skin was cold, roughened. No ring. Mia swore softly to herself for even noticing.
But she had. And it gave her a niggling little feeling that maybe she wasn’t quite over being abandoned at the altar. Yet.
“My name is Mia,” she said softly. “Dr. Levi Colton is on his way.”
He moaned again, in pain.
Keep talking. Keep him with you....
“You got any ID on you? Can we call someone?”
He groaned, moving his head. And his eyes flickered open. He stared at her. His eyes were a startling smoky blue, his pupils wide, dark. Fear crossed his features.
“Shhh, it’s okay. Don’t move. Can you tell me your name?”
Confusion creased his brow, then he winced as the muscles pulled at his wound. Blood seeped afresh into the gauze.
He closed his eyes, sifting out of consciousness again.
Mia felt inside his jacket pockets, searching for a wallet, a phone, anything that could help ID him. Her fingers came into contact with what felt like stiff paper. She pulled out a photo and sucked in a sharp breath of surprise. It was the same photograph that Jethro Colton had framed in his sitting room—the image of a woman cradling a tiny infant swaddled in a blue blanket.
Cole Colton and his mother, Brittany.
Mia turned the photo over. On the back was written simply the name, “Cole.”
Her gaze shot to the stranger’s face. No. That was ridiculous. It couldn’t be him.
But he was the right age and build and coloring.
Mia felt inside the left-hand pocket of his jacket and touched something soft. Pulling it out, she found herself staring at a strip of baby-blue flannel. On it was embroidered with the name “Cole.” It looked as if it had come from the same blanket swaddling the baby in the photograph—the blanket little Cole Colton had been kidnapped in.
Her chest tightened.
“Cole?” she said quietly.
He moaned, his eyes moving behind his lids.
Could it be possible? Had the Colton sisters’ televised appeal brought this man here, their missing half brother, Jethro’s first-born son?
The farm truck pulled up behind her, doors opening.
“Over here!” Mia called out as one of the ranch hands came running with a spine board, Levi right behind.
“I’ve stopped the bleeding,” she told Levi. “He came round for a few minutes, but he’s lapsed into unconsciousness again.” She moved aside as Levi dropped to his knees.
“He’s not one of the farm hands, is he?” Levi said.
Mia was silent.
Levi glanced up, met her eyes.
“I think he might be Cole,” she said quietly. “Cole Colton.”
ISBN: 9781460318713
Copyright © 2013 by Marie Rydzynski-Ferrarella
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