Question is whether it’ll matter, whether people will come, whether they’ll pay, whether this becomes a real medical practice or just an expensive building we can’t afford.

He didn’t have to wait long for an answer.

The next morning, a wagon rolled into the ranchard carrying a man with a leg broken so badly the bone had torn through the skin.

His brother, who’ driven him 15 mi from a neighboring ranch, was nearly as pale as the patient.

“Heard you got a nurse here,” the brother said.

Doc in town wanted $50 cash to set it.

“We don’t have $50.

” Eliza took one look at the compound fracture and her stomach dropped.

This was beyond anything she’d attempted before.

This required precision, strength, and luck.

But the alternative was amputation or death from infection.

And she wasn’t going to let either happen without a fight.

Get him inside, she told Caleb.

I need boiling water, all the clean bandages we have, and whiskey.

Lots of whiskey.

Tom Blackwood appeared as if summoned.

I’ve set horse legs.

This is the same principle, just smaller bones.

Have you ever set a compound fracture? No, but I’ve seen it done badly.

Can’t be worse than that.

Together, they worked through the most brutal two hours of Eliza’s medical career.

The patient, a young rancher named Michael Chen, no relation to Mrs.

Chen, screamed himself unconscious when they pulled the bone back into alignment.

The flesh was torn and dirty, requiring extensive cleaning with carbolic acid that made Eliza’s eyes water.

The bone fragments had to be fitted together like a puzzle held in place while Tom fashioned a splint from wood and leather.

By the time they finished, Eliza was covered in blood, and Michael was breathing shallowly, dosed with enough ludum to fell a horse, but his leg was straight.

The wound was clean and stitched, and the splint was secure.

“He’ll need to stay here for at least 2 weeks,” Eliza told Michael’s brother.

“The wound has to be monitored daily for infection.

If it goes bad, we’ll have to amputate to save his life.

How much? Eliza hesitated.

She’d never actually set prices for her services.

The thought of charging people who had nothing felt wrong.

But Caleb had been clear.

The clinic had to support itself or it would drag the ranch down.

$15 for the setting and stitching, she said finally.

$2 per day for care and monitoring.

$29 total if he stays 2 weeks.

The brother’s face fell.

We don’t have that kind of money.

Then pay what you can when you can.

A dollar now, the rest over time.

Or pay in trade, livestock, labor, whatever you have.

Eliza was making this up as she went, but it felt right.

I’m not going to turn away someone who needs help because they can’t pay immediately.

The brother paid $2 in silver coins, promised five more by month’s end, and said he’d send a cow in spring to cover the rest.

It wasn’t a fortune, but it was a start.

Michael Chen became the clinic’s first real patient.

He occupied one of the recovery beds, and Eliza checked on him every few hours, watching for the signs of infection that could turn a survivable injury into a death sentence.

The wound stayed clean.

The swelling began to decrease.

After 5 days, Michael was sitting up and complaining about the food, which Eliza took as a positive sign.

Word spread faster than she’d imagined possible.

Within a week, people were arriving from ranches 20 and 30 m away.

A woman 8 months pregnant with twins who’d been told by the town doctor that she’d probably die in childbirth.

A child with a fever that wouldn’t break.

A ranch hand with an infected tooth that needed extracting.

A woman who’d been coughing blood for months.

Eliza treated them all.

She charged what she thought was fair, accepted payment in cash or trade or promises, and kept meticulous records in a ledger Caleb provided.

By the end of the first month, the clinic had earned $43 in cash, received six chickens, three bushels of potatoes, a side of bacon, and promises of future payment totaling another $100.

It wasn’t enough to make the ranch wealthy, but it was enough to prove the concept worked.

The pregnant women became Eliza’s special focus.

Mary Peterson was now 5 months along and showing.

Eliza examined her weekly, monitoring for the warning signs of premature labor.

She taught Mary to recognize contractions to understand the difference between normal discomfort and dangerous symptoms to trust her own body’s signals.

The woman with twins, Margaret Wilson, was a harder case.

She was tall and strong, but her blood pressure ran dangerously high, and the twins were positioned poorly.

Eliza prescribed bed rest, monitored her daily, and privately worried that she was watching a disaster unfold in slow motion.

“What happens if the babies come wrong?” Margaret asked during one examination.

“If they’re breached or tangled or something terrible, “Then we do everything we can to turn them, and if that doesn’t work, we manage the delivery as best we can.

” Eliza didn’t believe in lying to patients.

I won’t pretend it’s not dangerous.

Twin births always carry higher risk, but you’re strong and healthy otherwise, and we’re monitoring everything carefully.

You have better odds here with me watching over you than you would alone or with just a midwife.

Better odds isn’t a guarantee.

No, but it’s all medicine can offer.

We reduce risk.

We prepare for complications.

We fight for every life.

That’s what I’ll do for you and your babies.

Margaret nodded, accepting the truth.

That I’m trusting you.

Don’t make me regret it.

The pressure was enormous.

Every day brought new patients, new challenges, new situations where Eliza was making decisions that would determine whether people lived or died.

She treated burns and breaks, fevers and infections, difficult births and dying children.

She saved some and lost others, and each loss felt like a personal failure, even when there was nothing more she could have done.

Shaw finally recovered enough to leave the bunk house, though his breathing would never be completely right.

Davies went back to work with strict limitations, his arms still weak from the infection.

Peterson’s shoulder healed well enough for light duty, though he’d never have full strength back.

Three lives saved.

Three families kept intact.

It should have felt like victory, but Eliza was too exhausted to feel much of anything except the constant pressure of responsibility.

November brought the first real cold.

Frost covered the prairie every morning, and the mountains to the west were already white with snow.

The cattle were moved to winter pastures.

The ranch settled into the hard rhythm of cold weather survival, feeding livestock, breaking ice on water troughs, maintaining buildings against the wind.

The clinic stayed busy.

People who’d been putting off treatment all summer suddenly realized winter was coming, and they needed to handle medical issues before travel became impossible.

Eliza worked 18-hour days, sleeping in the clinic’s back room more often than in the main house.

Caleb brought her meals, made sure the stove stayed stoked, checked on patients when Eliza was too exhausted to stand.

They developed a wordless partnership.

He understood when she needed help and when she needed space, “When to push, and when to let her work through problems alone.

” “You’re going to burn out,” he told her one evening, finding her in the clinic at midnight, updating patient records by lamplight.

“I’m fine.

You’re not fine.

You’re running yourself into the ground.

And when you collapse, what happens to all these people depending on you? I won’t collapse.

Everyone collapses eventually.

Caleb took the pen from her hand, closed her record book.

Come on.

You need sleep.

I need to finish.

It’ll be here tomorrow.

Sleep now.

Eliza wanted to argue, but the exhaustion was a physical weight pressing down on her.

She let Caleb guide her back to the main house, up the stairs to the small bedroom that had become hers.

She fell into bed fully clothed and was asleep before he closed the door.

She dreamed of drowning, of being pulled under by waves made of hands, all reaching for her, needing her, demanding she save them.

She woke gasping, disoriented, to find pale winter sunlight streaming through the window.

Mrs.

Chen was in the kitchen when Eliza stumbled downstairs.

You slept 14 hours.

I checked on you three times to make sure you were still breathing.

The patients are fine.

Caleb handled the morning rounds.

Mr.

Chen is resting comfortably.

Mrs.

Wilson’s blood pressure is stable, and the Hendrick’s child’s fever broke during the night.

Mrs.

Chen poured coffee, pressed the cup into Eliza’s hands.

The world doesn’t end when you sleep, but it felt like it might.

Eliza had become the lynchpin holding everything together, and the weight of that responsibility was crushing.

Every decision mattered.

Every patient was someone’s mother, father, child.

Every failure meant grief radiating outward like ripples from a stone thrown into still water.

She was halfway through breakfast when Tom Blackwood burst in, his face gray with fear.

It’s Margaret Wilson.

Something’s wrong.

She’s bleeding and the babies are coming too early.

Eliza ran.

Margaret’s cabin was chaos.

The woman lay on her bed, pale and sweating, her night gown soaked with blood.

Too much blood.

Her husband, Frank, stood frozen against the wall, useless with terror.

Get out, Eliza told him.

Get Caleb and Mrs.

Chen.

Now Frank fled.

Eliza examined Margaret quickly, her hands steady, even as her mind raced through worst case scenarios.

The babies were coming.

She could feel the contractions, strong and regular, but they were only 7 months along, too small, too early, and the bleeding suggested something had torn inside.

Maybe the placenta separating from the uterus.

Maybe something worse.

I’m scared, Margaret whispered.

I know, but I’m here and I’m going to do everything I can.

Eliza washed her hands in the basin by the bed, carbolic acid stinging her skin.

I need you to trust me and do exactly what I say.

Can you do that? Yes.

Caleb and Mrs.

Chen arrived at a run.

Eliza set them to work.

Caleb holding Margaret steady, Mrs.

Chen preparing hot water and clean linens.

The cabin was too small, too dark, too cold.

But there was no time to move Margaret to the clinic.

The babies were coming whether anyone was ready or not.

The first twin arrived blue and silent, so small he fit in Eliza’s one hand.

She cleared his airway, rubbed his chest, breathed into his tiny mouth.

Nothing.

She tried again, refusing to accept the stillness.

“Come on,” she thought.

“Fight, breathe.

Live!” The baby gasped, a sound so small it was barely audible.

Then he cried, a thin, reedy whale.

That was the most beautiful sound Eliza had ever heard.

Mrs.

Chen, take him.

Keep him warm.

Eliza handed the infant to the housekeeper, who wrapped him in flannel and held him close to her body for warmth.

The second twin came 10 minutes later, bigger than the first, but tangled in the umbilical cord.

Eliza worked frantically to free him, her hands slick with blood.

When he finally came loose, he wasn’t breathing.

She repeated the process.

Clear airway, stimulate, breathe.

The second stretched into eternity.

Caleb held Margaret, who was crying and calling for her babies.

Mrs.

Chen stood with the first twin, watching with an expression that held no hope.

Eliza breathed into the baby’s mouth again.

“Come on, please just breathe.

” The baby choked, coughed, and started to cry.

But Margaret was still bleeding.

Eliza could see the blood pooling beneath her, soaking through the sheets.

The placenta should have delivered by now, but something was wrong.

She reached inside, feeling for the tissue that should be coming free, and found it still partially attached.

I have to remove it manually, Eliza said.

This is going to hurt.

I don’t care.

Margaret gasped.

Are my babies alive? Both alive.

Both breathing.

Now, let me make sure you survive, too.

What followed was brutal.

Eliza had to scrape the placenta away from the uterine wall by hand, working blind, feeling her way through tissue and blood.

Margaret screamed.

Caleb held her down.

Mrs.

Chen stood with both babies now, one in each arm, keeping them warm while their mother fought for her life.

When the placenta finally came free, the bleeding slowed.

Eliza packed Margaret’s uterus with clean cloth soaked in carbolic acid, a technique she’d read about but never performed.

It was medieval and desperate, but it was all she had.

“Stay with her,” Eliza told Caleb.

“If the bleeding doesn’t stop in the next hour, come get me immediately.

” She turned to Mrs.

Chen and the babies.

Both infants were tiny, barely 4 lb each, Eliza guessed.

Their skin was translucent, their breathing rapid and shallow.

They needed warmth, and they needed their mother’s milk, but Margaret was in no condition to nurse.

We need to keep them warm and get fluid into them somehow, Eliza said.

Sugar water, a few drops at a time until Margaret can nurse.

And they cannot get cold.

Not even for a minute.

Mrs.

Chen nodded grimly.

I’ll take them to my room.

I have a good stove and I can watch them constantly.

They moved the operation to Mrs.

Chen’s small cabin where the housekeeper set up a makeshift nursery.

The babies lay in a basket padded with flannel positioned near the stove where the heat was constant.

Eliza showed Mrs.

Chen how to feed them drops of sugar water using a clean cloth.

Not ideal, but better than nothing.

Over the next 2 days, Eliza barely slept.

She monitored Margaret for infection and hemorrhage, checked on the twins every few hours, and somehow still managed to see other patients who arrived at the clinic.

She was running on coffee and stubbornness, operating in a fog of exhaustion that made everything feel slightly unreal.

On the third day, Margaret was stable enough to try nursing.

Eliza helped position the tiny babies at their mother’s breasts, showing her how to support their fragile heads.

The first twin latched immediately, too weak to suck strongly, but getting some milk.

The second struggled, his mouth too small to grip properly.

“He’s going to die, isn’t he?” Margaret asked quietly.

“Not if I can help it.

” Eliza took the smaller twin, showed Margaret how to express milk into a cup, then fed the baby drops from her finger.

We’ll figure it out, one hour at a time.

The storm began building on the fourth day after the twins birth.

Eliza saw it coming.

A dark wall of clouds rolling down from the mountains, the air pressure dropping, the wind picking up.

November storms in Montana were notorious, and this one felt particularly ominous.

We should prepare, Caleb said, watching the clouds.

Could be a bad one.

He didn’t know how bad.

The storm hit at midnight with a violence that shocked even people who’d lived through Montana winters.

Wind tore at the buildings like a living thing.

Rain came down in sheets so thick it was impossible to see 10 ft.

Thunder shook the ground.

Lightning turned night into day in explosive bursts.

and the half-finished roof on the clinic’s storage room, the one section they’d been planning to complete next week, tore free.

Eliza heard the crash from the main house and knew immediately what had happened.

She ran through the storm in her night gown, Caleb right behind her, both of them soaked within seconds.

The clinic door was hanging open, banging in the wind.

Water poured through the gap where the roof had been, flooding the storage room.

All her supplies, all her medicines, the carbolic acid, the ldnum, the bandages, the instruments, everything was being destroyed by water and wind.

“Help me save what we can!” Eliza shouted over the storm.

They worked in darkness, broken only by lightning flashes, grabbing bottles and boxes, carrying them to the dry part of the clinic.

The wind was so strong it nearly knocked Eliza off her feet.

Rain stung like needles.

The temperature was dropping fast.

This was going to turn to sleep, maybe snow.

Tom Blackwood appeared with his sons carrying canvas tarps.

They managed to get one stretched over the hole in the roof, but the wind tore it free almost immediately.

A second attempt failed.

A third.

It’s no use, Tom shouted.

We have to wait out the storm.

They retreated to the main building, leaving the storage room to the mercy of the weather.

Eliza stood dripping in the treatment room watching water pool on the floor and felt something inside her crack.

Everything they’d built, everything they’d worked for, destroyed in one night by a storm they couldn’t control and couldn’t fight.

Caleb put his hand on her shoulder.

We’ll fix it with what? We don’t have money for more supplies.

We don’t have time to rebuild before winter.

We’re done.

We’re not done until we quit.

Maybe we should quit.

Maybe this was a stupid idea from the start.

Maybe I should have stayed in Boston where at least the buildings don’t fall apart.

Eliza was shaking from cold, from exhaustion, from the crushing weight of too many failures and not enough victories.

You don’t mean that, don’t I? Eliza pulled away from his touch.

I came here thinking I could make a difference, but all I’ve done is put everyone in debt building something that just got destroyed.

Those twins might still die.

Margaret might get infected and die.

Half my medical supplies are ruined, and I’m so tired I can barely stand, let alone save anyone.

The storm raged outside, and inside, Eliza felt something similar, a tempest of doubt and fear and exhaustion that threatened to sweep away everything she’d been holding together through sheer force of will.

Caleb didn’t try to comfort her or argue.

He just said quietly, “Get dry.

Get warm.

Tomorrow we’ll see what can be salvaged.

But Eliza wasn’t sure there was anything left to salvage.

She went back to the main house, changed into dry clothes, and sat by the kitchen stove as the storm destroyed everything outside.

Mrs.

Chen appeared with the twins who were crying their thin, desperate cries.

“They’re cold,” Mrs.

Chen said.

“My cabin lost half its roof, too.

Everything’s wet.

” “Of course it was.

Of course, the storm had taken even more.

” Eliza took the babies, one in each arm, holding them close to share body heat.

They were so small, so fragile, so utterly dependent on her ability to keep them alive.

And she was failing.

The clinic was ruined.

Supplies were destroyed.

Winter was coming, and she had nothing left to give.

Margaret appeared in the doorway, pale, but walking with Frank’s support.

“Are my babies all right?” They’re alive, Eliza said, because it was the only truth she had to offer.

The night stretched into eternity.

The storm continued unabated, tearing at buildings, flooding the ranchard, destroying months of work and hours.

Eliza sat with the twins, feeding them drops of milk, keeping them warm, and watching everything she’d built turned to ruins.

By dawn, the storm had passed, leaving behind devastation illuminated by cold morning light.

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