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Lost on the Frontier, a Young Girl Finds an Unexpected Protector in a Comanche Warrior

They walked for what felt like hours, the silence broken only by the whisper of grass against their legs and the occasional nightbirds call. Hannah’s mind, desperate for distraction from her physical discomfort, turned to practical concerns. “Where exactly are we going?” she asked. “Three days northeast,”I replied.

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“The winter camp lies where Buffalo Creek meets the Stone Cliffs. My people gather there when the cold comes. Your people, the tower. I’ve never heard of them. Few white men have, he said. It is why we survive. Better to be forgotten than remembered by those who would destroy us. Anna absorbed this, connecting it to whispered conversations she’d overheard between her parents years ago.

Her mother argued against moving further west, citing the government’s broken treaties and violent campaigns against native peoples. Her father dismissed these concerns as women’s sentimentality. Are there others like me there? Other She searched for the right word, outsiders. Ehawi was quiet for so long that Hannah thought he might not answer.

When he finally spoke, his voice carried a weight she hadn’t heard before. Two children, a boy taken from a burned wagon train five summers ago, a girl found wandering after soldiers attacked her village three winters passed. “She’s Indian,” Hannah asked, surprised. “Porny,” Howie confirmed, “Enemy to my people once. Now she is just neater, who helps the elders and sings to make the babies laugh.

” The revelation shifted something in Hannah’s understanding. a porny child living among the Tao Vaya. Perhaps this strange new path wasn’t as unprecedented as she’d thought. By the time they reached the ridge, Eihawi had indicated the eastern sky was lightning to a pearly gray. Anna’s legs finally gave out as they entered a small grove of scrub oak that offered concealment from the plains below.

She sank to the ground, muscles trembling, feet bloody within her ruined shoes. Ihawi surveyed their position, his keen eyes scanning the vast prairie they’d crossed. Seemingly satisfied, he lowered himself to a crouch beside Hannah and gestured for her to remove her shoes. “Let me see,” he said, embarrassed by the state of her feet, but too exhausted to protest.

” Hannah peeled away the tattered remains of her and sturdy shoes. Her stockings were torn and bloodstained, her feet covered in blisters. some already burst and oozing. Without comment, Ahawari withdrew a small pouch from inside his buckskin vest. He opened it to reveal a greenish paste that smelled strongly of herbs and pine.

With surprisingly gentle hands for such a formidable man, he applied the salve to her ravaged feet. “What is that?” Hannah asked, wincing at the initial sting before. A cooling sensation brought unexpected relief. pine resin. Yaro comfrey, he listed. Old medicine. Thank you, she murmured, overcome by the simple kindness after so many months of her father’s casual cruelty.

Ahawi merely nodded, finishing his ministrations before retrieving a bundle from his pack. He unwrapped it to reveal strips of dried buffalo meat and what looked like small, dark cakes of some unfamiliar substance. Eat,” he instructed, handing her a portion. “Then rest. We move again when sun begins falling.” Hannah accepted the food gratefully.

The meat was tough but flavorful, requiring careful chewing. The dark cakes turned out to be a mixture of dried berries and nuts, pressed together with what might have been honey or tree sap. The combination was hearty and surprisingly satisfying. Exhaustion overtook her. Hannah realized she should be more afraid. Alone in the wilderness with a strange man from a culture she’d been taught to fear.

Yet something about Ehawi’s quiet competence inspired trust rather than dread. He could have left her to die by the creek, could have killed her easily. Instead, he’d shared his food, treated her wounds, and offered a path to survival. “Why did you help me?” she asked sleepily. The question that had been nagging at her since their first encounter, Ihawi, who had been keeping watch at the edge of the grove, turned to regard her thoughtfully.

“I had a daughter once,” he said finally, his voice so low. She almost didn’t hear it. “Yellow fever took her four summers ago. She would be your age now.” The admission hung in the air between them, heavy with unspoken grief. Anna wanted to offer condolences, but I had already turned away, ending the conversation. Sleep, he said. Your body needs healing.

Despite her racing thoughts, Hannah’s exhaustion won out. She curled up at the base of a gnarled oak, using her thin shawl as a pillow, and fell into a dreamless sleep. She woke to Awi’s hand on her shoulder and the golden light of late afternoon filtering through the trees. For a moment, disorientation gripped her.

Where was the cabin? Why wasn’t her father yelling for his dinner before reality crashed? Back like a physical blow, abandoned, rescued, following a Ta man to his winter camp. “We move now,” Ahari said, already gathering his few possessions. Hannah sat up, surprised to find her feet significantly less painful than they had been that morning.

The slave had worked minor miracles on her blisters. Still, she dreaded putting weight on them again. Noticing her concern, Ehari produced a bundle of buckskin and began fashioning it into simple moccasins, showing her how to wrap and tie them securely around her feet. “These protect better than white man’s shoes on the prairie,” he explained.

“But you must learn to walk differently. Step soft like deer, not hard like buffalo. Hannah nodded, absorbing the instruction with the same diligence she’d once applied to her mother’s lessons in penmanship and arithmetic. Learning to walk like a deer seemed a fair exchange for survival. They set out as the sun began its descent, keeping to higher ground where possible.

Ihawi set a challenging pace, but not the punishing one of the previous night. Occasionally he would stop to point out landmarks or signs Hannah would have missed entirely. A distant smudge of smoke that marked a set’s cabin to avoid tracks in soft earth that told of a deer herd passing recently. A certain configuration of rocks that indicate good water nearby.

You must learn to read the land, he told her. It speaks constantly to those who listen. Hannah tried to absorb everything, storing away each lesson like the precious resource it was. If she was to survive in this new reality, she would need skills her Boston upbringing and even her frontier experience hadn’t provided.

As dusk settled fully around them, Ahawi led them to a small ravine where a spring bubbled up among rocks. The depression offered protection from both wind and prying eyes, while the fresh water was a welcome discovery after hours of travel. While Hannah refilled the water skin he’d given her, Ehawi constructed a small, nearly smokeless fire using techniques that fascinated her.

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