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Winter Promise

Page 24

by Martha Rogers


  Just having her there gave Libby a sense of safety she needed with two men in the room. Her kind eyes, a green color that reminded Libby of the fake emeralds some of the saloon girls wore, had a tender look to them.

  The doctor listened to her chest with a funny-looking bell on something hanging from his ears. He frowned then pulled the contraption down around his neck. “I hear a lot of congestion in your lungs, young lady. How long have you been in the cold?”

  “I don’t know. I think it’s been several days. I left home in the middle of the night on Tuesday.”The days and nights had run together as she lost all track of time.

  The doctor shook his head. “This is Friday night, so you’ve been out at least three days. No wonder your lungs are so congested.” He turned to the one called Kate. “Get a bed ready for her. She’s staying the night, and maybe longer.”

  Libby tried to sit up but began coughing again. She couldn’t stay here. Pa would find her. Her destination had been to head west then south where the winter temperatures were not as severe. She’d lost all sense of direction after the first night and had no idea which way she’d come.

  Kate’s warm hands pushed her back down, gently but firmly. “Lie still, Elizabeth. The doctor is right; you have to stay here.”

  Tears welled in Libby’s eyes, and she squeezed them tight to keep them from falling. Though hard, this bed was so much better than the ground where she’d slept the past nights. Hospitals and doctors cost money. That’s why Pa wouldn’t go for the doctor until Ma was too sick to recover.

  The doctor gave her something that tasted bitter, but she swallowed it and then lay back against the pillow Kate had placed beneath her head. The low murmur of voices ran together in a blur. One of the men said he’d stay, but the other one said something about a wedding. Who was getting married? Maybe they’d forget about her.

  The tension ebbed from her body as the medication took over. Someone, most likely Cory since the doctor was an old man, picked her up and took her into another room where he laid her on the bed. She almost sighed at the cotton softness of the mattress beneath her. So much better than pine straw and hard-packed dirt.

  Kate’s voice followed behind then shooed the man from the room. “I’m going to help her get settled for the night, so she doesn’t need you. Go on back to the boardinghouse. I’m sure you’ll find Abigail has something for you to eat.”

  A few minutes later Kate had removed Libby’s still damp and dirty clothes and slipped a warm gown over her head. When Libby slid her arms into the sleeves, she realized it was her own gown. “How did you get this? It’s mine.”

  “Cory brought in the satchel you carried on your horse, and I found the gown in it. I warmed it by the wood stove in the other room.”

  That warmth along with the medication earlier eased away the pain, and Libby let her eyes drift closed. Perhaps this was the place she should stay after all. She pulled up the covers and turned on her side. She’d think about that tomorrow. Tonight she’d sleep warm and dry for the first time in too many days to count.

 

 

 


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