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They Threw Her Out in Labor — The Cowboy Who Heard Stepped In and Changed Everything

But that didn’t matter. What mattered was the voice in the storm. Garrett pushed smoke harder than he should have, harder than was safe. The snow came up to the hor’s chest in places, threatening to trap them. The wind tried to push them back, to turn them around. But Garrett had lived in these mountains for 39 years. He knew how to fight weather.

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The screams came again, closer now. He was on the right track. Then he saw the tree, a massive cottonwood rising out of the white, and the shape huddled at its base. Garrett was off his horse before it fully stopped. His boot sank deep into the drift, but he waited through, his eyes fixed on the figure against the tree.

small, curled in on itself, not moving. He dropped to his knees beside her and his breath caught. A woman, young, mid20s, maybe, soaked through and shaking so hard it looked like seizures. Her lips had gone blue, her skin pale as the snow around her. Her eyes were closed, her breathing shallow and rapid. And her belly, God, above her belly was huge, round and tight, under a thin dress that clung to her like a second skin.

She was pregnant, far along, maybe even. Her eyes flew open. For a moment, she just stared at him, wild with pain and terror, like she couldn’t believe he was real. Then her whole body went rigid. Her back arched off the tree. A scream tore from her throat, raw and primal. And Garrett’s blood went cold. Labor.

She was in labor right here, right now, in the middle of a blizzard that wanted them both dead. His mind went blank for half a second. Pure shock. Then training kicked in. 20 years of birthing cabs and FO, of handling emergencies alone in the mountains. Hesitation killed. Action saved. He stripped off his coat and wrapped it around her shoulders. “Ma’am.

Ma’am, can you hear me?” She tried to speak, but only a broken sound came out. Her hands clutched at his shirt like she was drowning. “My name’s Garrett Dawson. I’m going to help you. Understand? I’m going to get you out of this.” My My son. Her voice was barely a whisper. They took my son. What? Eli, they they have Eli.

Please, you have to. You have to. Another contraction hit her, cutting off whatever she’d been trying to say. She screamed again, her grip on his shirt tightening until he thought the fabric might tear. Garrett made a decision. Questions could wait. Survival couldn’t. He slid his arms under her knees and back and lifted her in one smooth motion.

She was light, too light for a woman this far along. She’d been starving. Whoever had done this to her, they’d been killing her long before the storm. “I’ve got you,” he said, his voice rough and loud against the wind. “Stay with me. I’ve got you.” She didn’t respond. maybe couldn’t, but she curled into his chest like a child seeking warmth, and something in Garrett’s chest cracked open.

Seven years ago, he’d held his daughter like this. Lily had been 3 years old, burning up with fever, and he’d carried her through the night while Sarah tried to cool her down with wet cloths. It hadn’t been enough. Nothing had been enough. He’d buried them both that spring, his wife and his little girl. And he’d sworn he’d never let himself care about anything that much again.

But this woman was dying in his arms, and her baby was coming. And somewhere out there, a boy named Eli was waiting for his mother to come back. Garrett couldn’t save his own family, but maybe, just maybe, he could save hers. He laid the woman across his saddle and grabbed the res, keeping one hand on her back to steady her.

“The cabin,” he told Smoke. “The old trapper’s cabin. You know the way.” The horse did know. Smoke had carried Garrett through these mountains in every kind of weather. The animal turned north without prompting, picking a path through the drifts. The woman moaned with every step, her contractions coming faster and faster. Garrett talked to her the whole way.

Nonsense mostly. Just sounds to keep her anchored. Almost there. You’re doing good. Just hold on. Just a little longer. He found the cabin more by instinct than sight. The small structure appeared out of the white like a miracle, and Garrett kicked the door open without slowing down.

He carried the woman inside and laid her down near the cold fireplace. The cabin was dark and freezing, wind whistling through gaps in the logs. But it was shelter. It was something. Garrett moved fast. Fire first. He had flint and steel in his saddle bags. Tinder he always carried. And within a minute, flames were catching, spreading, filling the small space with light and warmth.

Then he turned back to the woman. She was curled on her side, arms wrapped around her belly, shaking with cold and pain. Ice crusted her hair. Her dress was frozen to her skin in places. Ma’am. Garrett knelt beside her, putting a hand on her shoulder. I need you to tell me your name. Clara. The word came out through chattering teeth.

Clara May Hullbrook. Clara. That’s good. That’s real good. He grabbed the saddle blanket and spread it over her, then added his coat again. I’m going to help you, Clara. The baby’s coming. I can see that. I need you to stay with me. Can you do that? She looked at him with those gray blue eyes, and he saw the terror there.

But he saw something else, too. Something fierce and stubborn. My son, she said again. They have my son, the Caldwells. You have to You have to get him back. I will. I promise. But first, we have to get you and this baby through the night. You understand?” Clara nodded slowly, tears spilling down her cheeks. “They threw me out.

I was I was in labor and they threw me out into the snow. They took Eli and they threw me out.” Garrett felt something cold and hard settle in his chest. Something that had nothing to do with the weather. Who are the Caldwells? My husband’s family. Henry died 4 months ago. His mother, she said I wasn’t really his wife.

Said the children belong to them. Said I was. Clara broke off as another contraction hit her. When it passed, she was gasping. They took my shoes, my coat, everything. And they took Eli. He’s only four. He must be so scared. Garrett’s hands had stopped shaking. A different kind of cold had taken over. The kind that didn’t freeze you, the kind that burned.

Listen to me, Clara. His voice was steady as stone. I’m going to deliver this baby. Then I’m going to get you somewhere safe. And then we’re going to get your boy back. You have my word. Why? The question came out broken, desperate. Why would you help me? You don’t know me. Because it’s right. Because no one deserves what they did to you.

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