Sarah’s heart warmed with hope and joy, knowing that Briggs still wanted to be with her. He wasn’t giving up. “That sounds wonderful.”
They sat in silence for a moment, staring up at the thick, heavy cloud-cover. Then Sarah couldn’t help herself. She closed her eyes and said a silent prayer that her past would not catch up with her—ever—and that this new life on the prairie, with the most incredible, beautiful man she ever imagined to exist, would not turn out to be only a temporary respite from the nightmare.
It frightened her sometimes, that out here on the prairie, so far from the rest of the world, this new life she’d stumbled into felt more like a dream than anything real.
“Let’s unload the wagon,” Briggs said, feeling replenished after eating his lunch and watering the horses. He had to admit his wife had been right in forcing him to take a break and eat something. The horses had needed the rest, too.
Sarah helped him unload the cooking utensils, the kettle, the spider skillet, and the boxes of butter and eggs she’d brought to trade for blankets. Briggs removed his shovel and shot gun. “I’m going to dig us out of this hole and use the shovel handle as leverage to lift the wheel. You can lead the horses out.”
For the next half hour, he forced the shovel into the tough ground, thick with tangled, grassy roots. Then at last the time had come to try again.
Sarah walked to the team and took hold of the harness. “I’m ready whenever you are.”
Briggs speared the shovel into the dirt to lift the wheel. It came up an inch or two. “Start pulling!” he yelled, throwing his full weight upon the handle of the shovel to lift the wheel, and feeling it cut into his palms. Sluggishly the wagon moved. “Pull them harder!”
The horses strained against the impossible weight, stumbling and groaning. The wagon creaked like an old ship, then soon shifted and rolled up the slope, picking up speed.
Then Briggs heard a scream. He scrambled out from behind but saw no sign of Sarah. “Whoa!” he yelled. The team came to a sudden halt. “Sarah!” Dropping to his knees, he crawled under the wagon where Sarah lay on her side, clutching her wrist. “Are you all right?”
“It’s my arm. Gem lost her footing and stepped on it.”
“Is it broken?”
“I don’t know.”
“Let me see.” He tried gently to peel her hand away. A muddy hoofprint dirtied her long sleeve.
Why had he let her do this? Why hadn’t he just done it himself? “Can you move it?”
“No.”
Leaning up on his elbow beside her, watching her face go pale, Briggs carefully rolled up her sleeve. His hands shook as he closed his fingers around her tiny, wounded wrist, feeling for broken bones. “Am I hurting you?”
Stiffening, she stared straight up at the bottom of the wagon and nodded. “Yes. I think it must be broken. I’m sorry, Briggs. That was so careless of me, to lose my footing.”
Clenching her teeth together, Sarah tried to sit up.
“It’s not your fault. It’s mine,” Briggs said. “And we’ll go straight to Doc Green’s office when we reach town.”
After helping Sarah out from under the wagon, Briggs swept her into his arms like a new bride and set her gently onto the wagon seat. By now, her color was pasty gray. He tried to appear calm, but his heart was battering his ribcage. What if something worse had happened to her? What if the horses had crushed her? Or a wheel had rolled over her body? She could have died right there in his arms, all because he was too impatient to wait on posting that damn letter.
An image flashed in his brain suddenly, like a lightning bolt—his youngest sister, June, cradled in his arms.
He remembered the exact moment she had taken her last breath, and how he had watched—sobbing uncontrollably, tears streaming down his face—as she quietly slipped away.
Sweet, darling June.
She had been only seven. But so strong, for she had held on the longest. She was the last one to go.
As Briggs flicked the reins and took it slow over the rutted road, he glanced at Sarah beside him, and felt almost sick to his stomach.
By the time they rolled into Dodge, it was nearly dusk, and the pain in Sarah’s arm was severe and unyielding. Every time they’d hit a bump along the way, fresh spasms of agony shot through her body, and it took every ounce of self-control she possessed not to break down into a fit of weeping. Instead, she’d forced herself to withstand it. When she wanted to cry out, she focused on breathing steadily, in and out.
“We’re almost there,” Briggs said, steering onto Front Street. “You look cold.”
“I’m fine.” But her teeth were chattering.
Briggs shrugged out of his buckskin coat and draped it over her shoulders. As she wrapped it around herself, fresh pain shot up her side, but at least the coat was warm...thank heavens for that.
They pulled up in front of the doctor’s home on the main street, but all the windows were dark. “Wouldn’t you know it,” Briggs whispered. “He’s not here.”
They sat in the wagon for a moment while Briggs decided what to do. Sarah pulled the coat tighter around her shoulders.
“I’m going to drive you to George’s place,” he said, “and get you settled. Then I’ll track down the doctor and bring him over.” Briggs slapped the reins and drove to his brother’s house. Thankfully, a lantern was flickering in the front window. Briggs leaped out of the wagon, ran up the steps, and pounded on the front door.
Almost immediately, it creaked open and George stepped into view. “Briggs! What are you doing here?” He glanced over Briggs’s shoulder toward the wagon. “Is Sarah with you?”
“Yes. We came in for supplies and got stuck on the prairie. She’s hurt and we need the doctor.”
George’s eyes widened with shock. “Bring her in!”
Briggs ran back to the wagon to fetch her. Feeling weak and sick, Sarah leaned on his shoulder to step down. Before she knew what was happening, he had swept her into his arms. She buried her face in his neck, wanting to disappear into a deep sleep there, but knowing it would be impossible to ignore the pain long enough to slip away. He carried her inside, his strides smooth and fluid.
“Take her upstairs to the spare room,” George instructed, following. “I’ll light the lamp.”
In a matter of minutes, Sarah was set down on a soft mattress, and her husband drew a quilt up over her. He touched her forehead with the back of his hand. “You’ll be alright until I get back?”
“Yes.”
Briggs turned to his brother. “George, look after her. I’m going to find the doctor.”
Sarah listened to the sound of her husband’s boots tapping lightly down the stairs and the squeaking of the screen door as it burst open and snapped shut. She lay in the bed, staring up at the white painted ceiling.
George approached the bed. “How did it happen?”
Sarah hadn’t even realized he was in the room. She’d been concentrating on fighting the pain.
“The wagon got stuck in a deep rut,” she answered. “I was leading the horses out, but Gem slipped, and I fell. I should have been more careful.”
“Nonsense. Accidents happen. Where was Briggs?”
“Behind the back wheel.” She paused to breathe. “He was in such a hurry to get to town....”
George frowned. “Is everything all right between you two?”
Confused and disoriented, Sarah tried to sit up.
“No, lie still.” George hurried to the bedside and pulled the covers up to her chin again. “I know about the situation. You mustn’t worry.”
She tried again to sit up. “What situation? Do you mean the locusts?”
He backed away, bumping into the rocking chair and stumbling slightly.
“George, what’s going on?”
“Nothing. You should rest.”
&n
bsp; Her agitation caused another spasm of pain. She clutched at her arm and dropped back down. “Don’t tell me to rest. I’ll rest when you tell me what’s going on.”
George pushed his spectacles up the bridge of his nose. “It’s nothing to be concerned about.”
“Please tell me,” she said, her tone softening as she tried to sit up. “If you don’t, I’ll lie here imagining all sorts of things, probably far worse than whatever it is you’re trying to hide from me.”
George let out a sigh of defeat. “Like I said, it’s nothing to worry about. It’s just that an old...” He paused. “An old friend of Briggs’s is at the center of a scandal.”
“A scandal?” Sarah’s thoughts slowly came into focus. “An old friend? Do you mean Isabelle?”
George relaxed slightly. “So, you know about her.”
“Of course. He told me everything. Eventually. What’s happening?”
George let out a breath. “Evidently, her husband has abandoned her. That certainly didn’t last long,” he added, under his breath.
Sarah felt a wave of uneasiness spread through her body. “Where did you hear that? Maybe it’s just gossip.”
“It’s quite true.”
“How can you be sure?”
He stared at her, directly. “Because she came home to her father’s house last week, and she called on me the other day to ask about Briggs.”
Chapter 21
Briggs burst through George’s front door with Doc Green trailing a few paces behind him. “She’s up here.”
They quickly climbed the stairs. When they walked into the bedroom, Sarah looked at first as if she’d fallen asleep, but her eyelids fluttered open immediately upon their approach.
George was sitting in the rocking chair, watching over her.
The doctor pushed passed Briggs. “Good evening, Mrs. Brigman. I’m Doctor Green. Your husband tells me you were trampled today.”
“Yes,” she replied. “I think my wrist is broken.”
The doctor approached, set his leather bag down on the bed, and touched her forehead. “No temperature. That’s a good thing.” He pulled the covers back. “Which arm is it? Ah, this one.”
Briggs stepped forward. Sarah’s hand had turned black and blue. It was swelled up the size of a turnip.
Dr. Green attempted to roll up her sleeve, but it was too tight. “I’m going to have to cut this.” He darted a glance at George in the rocker.
“I’ll wait downstairs.” George rose and took Briggs by the arm. “Why don’t you come too? I should talk to you about something.”
Briggs glanced down at his brother’s firm grip. “I’ll come later.”
“I’ll need his help here,” the doctor firmly mentioned.
George hesitated briefly, then left the room and closed the door behind him.
The doctor withdrew scissors from his bag and cut Sarah’s sleeve from wrist to elbow. “I’m going to examine you now, my dear. I warn you, it might smart a bit.”
Briggs approached the bed and took hold of her other hand.
The doctor touched her wrist. “Does this hurt?”
“Yes.”
The doctor’s grip inched up a little. “How about this?”
Sarah’s whole body wrenched. “Yes!” she replied through clenched teeth.
The doctor felt around a bit more, then glanced up at Briggs. “It’s broken, all right. Judging by the look of her hand, I need to set the bone right now. There’s no circulation.”
“What about something for the pain?” Briggs asked.
“No time to wait for it to take effect. She could lose her hand. Grab her arm, right here.”
Sarah steeled herself while Briggs moved around the bed and took hold.
The doctor gripped her wrist and felt around with his fingers. “This is going to hurt, Mrs. Brigman, but I’ll do it as quickly as I can.”
Suddenly, he yanked. Sarah cried out. Briggs held onto her arm, biting back the urge to shove the doctor away. He was pushing and pulling and twisting her arm with all his might. Sarah writhed in agony on the bed. Briggs had to hold her down.
“Please stop!” Sarah cried. “I can’t take it!”
The doctor let go and stepped back, wiped his forehead with his sleeve. Sarah squirmed on the bed, grimacing in pain.
“Did you do it?” Briggs asked.
The doctor shook his head, his brows drawn together with concern. “I couldn’t set it in place. There’s a lot of swelling. I’ll give her a break, then I’ll have to try again.” The doctor went to the door and called down the stairs. “George! Do you have any whiskey?”
Briggs leaned over Sarah and brushed her hair off her forehead. She was lying still now, a thin film of moisture covering her face.
George hurried into the room with a bottle. “Is everything all right?”
“I’m still setting the bone,” the doctor replied, taking the whiskey from George. He tipped it over Sarah’s mouth, and she gulped down as much as she could. “Very good. Let’s try again.” He handed the bottle back to George.
“Please, not yet,” Sarah said.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Brigman. But your hand....” He nodded at Briggs to take her arm again and hold it steady. “Courage, now.”
Briggs’s gut turned over at the sight of her, gritting her teeth and squeezing her eyes shut. Tears spilled onto her cheeks as she prepared herself.
The doctor yanked against Briggs’s hold. Sarah cried out and contorted in pain. Horrified at the degree of physical strength he had to use against the doctor’s twisting and pulling, Briggs prayed for it to be over quickly.
Finally, the doctor set the bone in place and Sarah sagged against Briggs in relief.
“George, get me the splints in my bag.”
Doc Green wrapped Sarah’s arm while she rested her cheek on Brigg’s shoulder. He leaned down and kissed the top of her head. “It’s over now, love.”
She nodded weakly.
“Can you give her something now, Doc?” Briggs asked.
“Yes. I’ll give her some morphine.”
A short while later, Sarah closed her eyes and went to sleep. Briggs buried his face in his hand. God help him, if anything ever happened to her. He couldn’t go through that again.
Briggs and Dr. Green went downstairs to the kitchen where George was boiling water for tea. “Will she be alright?” George asked.
“She’ll be sore for a while,” Doc answered, “but she’ll survive, and she’ll keep her hand.”
“That’s a relief. Would you like to stay for tea, Doc?”
“No thank you. I have to get home.”
Briggs showed him to the door. “I guess you heard about the locusts,” he said quietly. Doctor Green nodded and laid a sympathetic hand on his shoulder. “We’re a bit hard up at the moment, but we’ve got butter in the wagon, if that’ll do until I can pay you what I owe.”
The doctor held up his hand. “I know you’re a man of your word, Briggs. Pay me when you can.”
Briggs nodded, appreciating the doctor’s generosity. At least he had the necklace to sell.
After the doctor drove away, Briggs went to the kitchen and sat down, his legs giving out on him suddenly. He’d been strong upstairs for Sarah, but now all he wanted to do was down some of that whiskey himself. He looked up at George. “So, what is it you wanted to talk to me about?”
George poured two cups of tea and carried them to the table. “I think you’d better sit down, because I had a visitor the other day.”
“Who was it?”
George paused. “Isabelle.”
Briggs said nothing for a moment. He simply raised the teacup to his lips, trying not to appear shaken or to reveal that the mere mention of her name made him feel angry. “What did she want?”
“Are you ready
for this?”
Briggs wasn’t sure he was, but he nodded anyway.
“Her husband ran off with a barmaid from The Comique Theatre.”
Briggs set the china cup down on the saucer and let out a breath. “Is this supposed to matter to me?”
George slumped back in his chair. “I don’t know. I thought it might, but I’m pleased to see that it doesn’t.”
Briggs frowned at him. “What did you expect?”
George shrugged. “A part of me thought you might dash out the door to let her cry on your shoulder.”
Briggs shifted in his chair. “No, because I have a wife upstairs that I care about. Very much. And why are you looking at me like that?”
George rubbed his chin. “I don’t know. I guess I’m just surprised.”
Briggs set down his cup with a clatter and stood. “I don’t care about what’s happening to Isabelle, George. I’m sorry for her. But that’s all.”
Briggs entered the quiet, dimly lit bedroom and climbed into bed next to Sarah. She was flat on her back, sleeping soundly. With that dose of morphine, the doctor said she probably wouldn’t wake until morning.
Briggs reached out and let his hand rest gently upon hers. A swell of deep regret erupted within him. If he could have traded places with her tonight, he would have, without hesitation. He would have done anything to spare her that suffering.
He leaned up on one elbow to look at her lovely face, peaceful at last, then kissed her lightly on the lips. Strange, to think he was married to Sarah because of Isabelle. He had never imagined anything good would come of her breaking their engagement, but looking back on it, it was the very thing that had forced him to place a passionless advertisement in a newspaper, that in the end had brought him Sarah.
Isabelle had been here to see George. Why? What had she said to him? Downstairs, the news had startled Briggs. He had worked hard to appear indifferent and hadn’t permitted himself to ask any questions.
He cupped his forehead with his hand and closed his eyes, dreading the possibility that he might see her again, in town. He would, of course, be polite, but there was no question that it would be awkward. On the other hand, if her visit with George was simply a courtesy, there was nothing to worry about.
Prairie Bride: (A Western Historical Romance) (Dodge City Brides Book 1) Page 16