The Cabin Shot That Made Three Raiders Regret Hunting Two Sisters-lbsuong

The first thing I remember about that evening is the sound of the wind pressing against my cabin like a hand looking for a weak board.

It had been snowing since before dawn, the kind of hard prairie snow that does not fall so much as travel sideways.

By late afternoon, the yard was almost erased.

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The fence line had become a row of dark humps.

The barn roof looked lower than it was.

Even the trail from the woodpile to the porch had filled in behind me each time I crossed it.

That was why I noticed the shape near the creek.

At first I thought it was a fallen branch.

Then the branch moved.

I set down the armload of wood, took my rifle from beside the door, and walked into the storm with my coat collar cutting into my jaw.

I found Talia first.

She was curled on her side, her lips gone pale from cold, one hand buried under her coat like she had been trying to hold herself together by force.

Her sister, Naira, was twenty steps beyond her, half-kneeling in the snow, still trying to crawl.

That is what stayed with me later.

Not that they were frightened.

Not that they were freezing.

That one sister had kept trying to move after her body had already started quitting.

I carried Talia first because she was the one who did not answer when I spoke.

Naira fought me for half a second until she understood I was not dragging her back toward whoever had left them there.

Then she grabbed my sleeve so hard her fingers locked in the wool.

“Her first,” she said through teeth that would not stop chattering.

That was how I knew what kind of woman she was.

I got them both inside.

I put Talia nearest the stove and Naira at the table, wrapped in every blanket I owned that did not smell too much like horse, smoke, or old grief.

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