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Sold at 18 to a Lonely Mountain Man — But His Twin Kids Loved Her Before He Did

She expected them to run from her, to be as cold and guarded as their father. Instead, little Josie took a hesitant step forward, her eyes locked on Elara’s face. “Are you the new mama?” Josie whispered, her voice a raspy little bird’s chirp. Elara’s heart broke instantly. She knelt in the dirt, regardless of her dress, putting herself at eye level with the twins.

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“I’m Elara,” she said softly. “And I’m going to take care of you.” Wyatt, the braver of the two, stepped up beside his sister. He reached out a small, incredibly dirty hand and touched the sleeve of Elara’s dress as if making sure she was real. Then, without a word of warning, both children surged forward, throwing their small arms around Elara’s neck, burying their faces in her shoulders.

They smelled of woodsmoke, pine needles, and profound neglect. They were starved for a woman’s touch, for a mother’s embrace. In that single, dusty moment in the fading light, Elara realized she hadn’t been brought here to be a wife to a monster. She had been brought here to be a savior to his cubs. And they loved her before he ever could.

The first month on the mountain was a grueling test of endurance. Cassian was a ghost in his own home. He rose before dawn, disappearing into the timber to hunt and check his trap lines, returning long after dark. He rarely spoke, communicating mostly in grunts and short, gruff commands. He slept on a bedroll near the stone hearth, giving Elara the large bedroom at the back of the cabin.

Elara threw herself into the work. She scrubbed the cabin until her knuckles bled, washing away months of accumulated grime. She baked fresh sourdough bread, mended the twins’ tattered clothes, and introduced them to the concept of daily baths, a battle she won with the strategic use of wild mint and sheer stubbornness.

Wyatt and Josie became her shadows. They followed her to the chicken coop, to the creek for water, and sat at her feet while she knitted by the fire. They were bright, fiercely loyal children who blossomed under her care. Elara taught them their letters using charcoal on split logs. And at night, she read to them from her mother’s Bible until they fell asleep, tangled together in a pile of quilts.

Cassian watched all of this from the periphery. Elara would catch him sometimes lingering in the doorway as she sang Josie to sleep, a strange, unreadable expression on his scarred face. But the moment she looked at him, the walls would slam back up and he would turn away, disappearing into the cold night. The turning point came in late November on a day when the sky turned the color of bruised iron.

Cassian had gone tracking an elk, taking his horse, Ranger, deep into the northern pass. By mid-afternoon, the temperature plummeted with terrifying speed. The wind began to shriek, tearing at the cabin’s roof, and the snow fell so thick and fast, it created a blinding whiteout. A mountain blizzard had arrived weeks early.

Elara barred the heavy doors and stoked the fire, keeping the twins distracted with stories. But as the hours dragged on and darkness fell, panic began to claw at her throat. Cassian had not returned. By 8:00, the wind was howling like a dying animal, shaking the very foundations of the cabin. “Papa’s out there,” Wyatt said softly, staring at the door, his little face pale.

“He knows the mountain, Wyatt,” Elara reassured him, though her own heart was hammering. “He’ll find shelter.” But by midnight, Elara knew that if Cassian was caught in this without a fire, he would freeze to death. She wrapped the twins in every blanket they owned, ordered them to stay by the hearth, and put on Cassian’s heavy spare coat and snowshoes.

Armed with a lantern and a coil of rope, she tied one end to the heavy porch pillar and stepped out into the roaring white void. The cold hit her like a physical blow, stealing the breath from her lungs. She could see nothing, but she knew the path to the main trail. She waded through waist-deep drifts, swinging the lantern, screaming Cassian’s name into the wind, though the sound was snatched away instantly.

She fought the storm for what felt like hours, her fingers turning numb, her eyelashes freezing shut. Just as she was about to turn back, her foot struck something solid buried in a snowdrift. She cleared the snow frantically. It was Cassian. He was unconscious, a massive gash on his forehead where he had seemingly been thrown from his horse and struck a rock.

Adrenaline surged through Elara’s veins. She was a slight girl, but desperation granted her unnatural strength. She managed to drag his massive frame onto a makeshift sled she fashioned from a fallen pine bough. Inch by agonizing inch, pulling against the storm, she dragged the mountain man back to the cabin.

When she finally breached the doorway, collapsing onto the floor with Cassian, the twins rushed forward. For the next 3 days, the blizzard raged outside, while Elara fought a war for Cassian’s life inside. She packed his wounds with a poultice of dried yarrow she’d found in his supplies, forced hot broth past his lips, and stayed awake for 72 hours, continuously stoking the fire to keep the fever chills at bay.

On the fourth morning, the storm broke, leaving a blindingly bright, silent world behind. Elara was asleep in a chair beside the bed, her head resting on the mattress near his arm. Cassian slowly opened his eyes. The cabin was warm. He could smell fresh coffee and baking bread. He turned his head and saw Elara, exhausted, pale, and deeply asleep.

He remembered the blinding snow, the fall, the darkness, and then, an angel in a heavy coat screaming his name, pulling him from the jaws of death. He slowly reached out, his massive, calloused hand gently brushing a stray lock of hair from her cheek. Elara stirred and woke, her eyes widening as she saw him looking at her.

“You’re awake,” she breathed, sitting up quickly. “How do you feel?” Cassian didn’t answer about his health. He stared at her, the thick ice surrounding his heart finally cracking. “You came out into the whiteout.” His voice was a raspy whisper. “You could have died. You could have left me, taken the horse when the weather cleared, and rode back to civilization a free woman.

” Elara met his gaze evenly. “And leave Wyatt and Josie without a father? I wouldn’t do that. Besides,” she looked down at her hands, “Red Dog isn’t civilization, and I am not a girl who runs.” From that day forward, the dynamic in the cabin shifted entirely. The monstrous mountain man vanished, replaced by a quiet, fiercely protective guardian.

Cassian began bringing her small tokens from the forest, a perfectly bluejay feather, a cluster of rare winter berries, a carved wooden comb he’d whittled by the fire. He started eating at the table with them, his booming laugh occasionally escaping when Wyatt told a joke. He began to look at Elara not as a servant, but as a woman.

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