She Fell to Her Death in the Snow After Her Mate’s Rejection – A Enigmatic Black Wolf Curled Protectively Around Her
The Poison in the Grain
The moment shattered. Nate was on his feet in an instant, already moving toward the door.
Clara followed, her heart still racing from what he’d almost said. But the horses couldn’t wait; the words couldn’t wait either.
They’d keep—they’d have to. The barn was chaos when they arrived.
Old Jake stood in the center aisle, lantern held high, his weathered face tight with worry. Two of the horses were down—the bay mare and the old draft horse that pulled the wagon.
Both were thrashing, foam flecking their mouths, eyes rolling white with pain.
“Started about 20 minutes ago,” Jake said as Nate pushed past him.
“They was fine at the evening feeding, then this.”
Nate dropped to his knees beside the mare. His hands moved over her belly, her legs, checking for injury.
“What did they eat?”
“Same as always. Oats from the new barrel, hay from the loft.”
“The new barrel?”
Clara’s voice was sharp.
“When did that come in?”
“2 days ago. Cornelius Wade’s man brought it over. Said Wade wanted to make peace, settled the dispute about the water rights.”
Nate’s head snapped up.
“You accepted a gift from Wade?”
“I didn’t know it was poison!” Jake’s voice cracked.
“I thought maybe things was finally calming down between you two.”
Clara was already moving toward the feed room. She found the barrel in the corner, half empty now, and scooped a handful of oats into her palm.
Even in the dim light, she could see it—a grayish powder coating the grain, barely visible unless you were looking for it.
“Nate.”
Her voice cut through the barn.
“Come look at this.”
He was beside her in seconds. She showed him the oats, watched his expression shift from confusion to recognition to cold, hard fury.
“Arsenic,” he said.
“That son of a—”
“How much did they eat?”
“Enough,” Nate’s jaw was tight.
“Maybe too much.”
They worked through the night. Clara boiled water and mixed charcoal paste while Nate forced it down the horses’ throats.
Old Jake kept the other animals calm, moving them to the far paddock away from the tainted feed. Ruth appeared sometime after midnight, her hair loose and her feet bare, and wordlessly took over the water boiling so Clara could help hold the thrashing mare.
By dawn, the draft horse was dead. The mare survived, but barely.
She lay on her side, breathing in shallow gasps, her once-glossy coat dull with sweat. Nate sat beside her, his back against the stall door, his hands covered in blood and foam and defeat.
He hadn’t spoken in hours. Clara brought him coffee, sat beside him.
“This isn’t over,” she said quietly.
“I know. Wade did this. He’ll try again.”
“I know that too.”
Nate’s voice was hollow.
“But what am I supposed to do? I can’t prove anything. Can’t go to the sheriff—Wade owns him. Can’t fight back without risking the girls.”
“So you just let him win?”
Nate turned to look at her. His eyes were red-rimmed, exhausted, but beneath the exhaustion was something else—something dangerous.
“I didn’t say that.”
The Marshall Arrives
Ruth appeared in the barn doorway.
“Papa, there’s a rider coming.”
Clara’s stomach clenched.
“Wade?”
“No,” Ruth’s voice was strange.
“It’s a woman.”
They watched from the porch as the rider approached. She was young, maybe 25, with dark hair pinned under a practical bonnet and a rifle strapped across her back.
Her horse was a sturdy paint, and she handled it like someone who’d been born in the saddle. She pulled up at the gate and dismounted in one fluid motion.
“Nathaniel Dawson?”
Nate stepped forward.
“Who’s asking?”
“Name’s Rebecca Cole. I’m a US Marshall out of Helena.”
She reached into her saddle bag and produced a badge, holding it up for inspection.
“I’ve been tracking Cornelius Wade for 6 months. Heard he’s been causing trouble in these parts.”
Clara felt something loosen in her chest.
“A Marshall?”
“Don’t look so surprised,” Rebecca’s smile was sharp.
“We come in all shapes these days.”
She looked at the barn, at the dead horse being dragged out by Old Jake.
“Looks like I’m not too late after all.”
They gathered in the kitchen—Nate, Clara, Ruth, and the Marshall. The younger girls were still asleep, and Clara wanted to keep it that way.
Rebecca spread papers across the table—maps, witness statements, land deeds.
“Wade’s been running this operation for years,” she explained.
“Poison livestock, burn crops, drive small ranchers off their land. Then he buys the property for pennies and expands his empire.”
“Why hasn’t anyone stopped him?” Ruth demanded.
“Because he’s smart. Never does the dirty work himself, pays others to do it, then covers his tracks.”
Rebecca tapped one of the papers.
“But I’ve got a witness now. One of his former hands agreed to testify. Problem is Wade knows it. He’s getting desperate, which means he’s getting dangerous.”
Nate leaned forward.
“What do you need from us?”
“Evidence. Documentation of everything he’s done to you. Dates, witnesses, anything.”
Rebecca met his eyes.
“And your cooperation if this goes to trial.”
“You’ll have it.”
“There’s something else,” Rebecca’s expression grew serious.
“Wade’s not just going after land anymore. Word is he’s planning something big. Something that’ll drive everyone out of this valley for good.”
“What kind of something?”
“I don’t know yet. But I intend to find out.”
She stood, gathering her papers.
“In the meantime, watch your backs. All of you.”
Preparing for War
After Rebecca left, Nate stood at the window staring out at the mountains.
“I should have done something sooner,” he said.
“Should have fought back when he first started pushing.”
“You were protecting your family.”
“I was being a coward.”
He turned to face her.
“Margaret left because she couldn’t handle this life. The isolation, the danger, the constant struggle just to survive. I thought if I kept my head down, if I didn’t make waves, I could keep what was left of my family safe.”
Clara moved closer.
“And now?”
“Now I realize that some fights can’t be avoided. Some enemies won’t stop until you make them stop.”
His hands curled into fists at his sides.
“Wade killed my horse. He poisoned my land. And if I don’t do something, he’ll keep coming until there’s nothing left.”
“So what do we do?”
Nate looked at her, really looked—the way he had that night on the porch, the night the sheriff came with news of Margaret’s death.
“We fight,” he said.
“Together.”
The next few days were a blur of preparation. Nate and Old Jake reinforced the fences, adding extra locks to the barn and the chicken coop.
They dug a new well closer to the house so they wouldn’t have to rely on the creek that bordered Wade’s property. They stockpiled feed and supplies, enough to last through a siege if it came to that.
Clara organized the house. She taught Ruth how to load and fire the rifle that hung above the fireplace.
She made sure the girls knew the escape routes through the root cellar, across the back field to the neighbors 3 miles east.
“I don’t want to run,” Sarah protested.
“I want to fight!”
“Fighting isn’t always about guns and fists,” Clara told her.
“Sometimes it’s about surviving long enough to win.”
Sarah didn’t look convinced, but she memorized the routes anyway. The girls handled the tension differently.
Ruth threw herself into preparation, her fear transformed into fierce determination. She was her father’s daughter in that way; when backed into a corner, she came out swinging.
Naomi withdrew into her art, her drawings growing darker and more intense. Clara found her one night sketching the dead horse, every detail rendered in heartbreaking accuracy.
“Why are you drawing that?”
“So I don’t forget,” Naomi’s voice was quiet.
“So I remember what he did to us.”
Grace became hypervigilant—jumping at every sound, checking the locks three times before bed. Clara started a new routine, a nightly walk through the house with Grace, checking each door and window together, making it a shared responsibility instead of a solitary fear.
Molly blessedly remained mostly oblivious. She knew something was wrong—she was too smart not to—but Clara shielded her as much as possible.
Read her extra stories at bedtime, let her help with the baking, kept her world as small and safe as she could.
