(Part 3) He Gave Water to a Giant Apache Girl — Next Day, 300 Warriors Surrounded His Ranch… See More:

He Gave Water to a Giant Apache Girl — Part III: The Return of the Horse with No Rider

Three years passed. The land healed, but not as quickly as hearts did.

Corbin Thorne rebuilt his ranch plank by plank, the same way he rebuilt his faith in quiet mornings and long, lonesome nights. The windmill turned again. The corral held new horses. The fields, once blackened, grew sparse patches of green. From a distance, it looked as though nothing had ever happened — but up close, the scars were clear.

He still wore the blackened Apache necklace. Some nights, when the stars spread like cold fire across the desert sky, he would take it off and hold it up toward the moon, wondering if Nijoni was somewhere beneath that same light.

Then, one morning, as the sun rose blood-orange over the horizon, he saw it: a riderless horse approaching from the north.

It moved slowly, exhausted, its mane tangled with dust and its saddle torn. Corbin’s heart seized when he saw what hung from the saddle horn — a strip of beaded cloth, Apache patterning, unmistakable.

Nijoni’s colors.

He ran out to meet it, steadying the trembling animal. Its flanks were marked by burns — rifle scorch, perhaps — and its eyes were wild with fear. When he touched the beads, something inside him went cold.

The Apache had returned — but not in peace.

That evening, as twilight bled into night, Corbin packed supplies, mounted Buck, and followed the horse’s trail north. It led him through dry creek beds and narrow ravines, the path illuminated only by a thin slice of moon.

He rode for hours, until he reached a stretch of canyon where the earth still smelled faintly of smoke. There, he found them — the remains of an Apache camp. Abandoned quickly. Scattered arrows, burned wagons, footprints leading toward the mountains.

And beside a cold fire pit, carved into the stone, was a single mark: the same spiral symbol engraved on Nijoni’s necklace.

He dismounted, crouched low, and traced it with his fingers. “You were here,” he whispered.

A rustle broke the silence. He turned, revolver drawn — only to find a figure emerging from the shadows.

An old man, wrapped in a tattered blanket, one arm wounded, but eyes still sharp as obsidian.

“You should not be here, rancher,” the man said.

“I’m looking for Nijoni.”

The old man regarded him a long moment, then nodded toward the mountains. “The White Army came again. Many taken. Some dead. Nijoni went after them.”

“Alone?” Corbin asked, stunned.

“She carries her father’s spirit now. She does not wait for others to fight.”


Corbin didn’t hesitate. He spurred Buck and followed the tracks toward the foothills. The night grew colder, the terrain crueler. He heard distant gunfire echoing between the rocks, then silence.

When dawn came, he found her.

Nijoni knelt by a stream, her arm bound in leather, her bow broken beside her. She looked up when he approached — not surprised, only weary.

“I told you to stay in your world,” she said.

“And you told me the worlds can meet,” Corbin replied.

A faint smile touched her lips. “You never learn.”

They didn’t have long. Soldiers were close — he could hear them shouting across the ridge. Nijoni struggled to rise, but her leg buckled. Without thinking, Corbin lifted her onto Buck’s saddle.

“We ride together this time,” he said.

They fled through the canyons, bullets chasing dust behind them. At one narrow pass, Corbin turned and fired, shattering the rocks above the trail. The resulting landslide sealed the soldiers’ path.

When the echoes faded, they stopped by a high plateau, breathless, trembling, alive.

Nijoni looked toward the sunrise, her voice low. “My people will go farther north. Beyond this land.”

“And you?” he asked.

“I must lead them there.”

Corbin swallowed hard. “Then I’ll see you again?”

She reached out, fingers brushing the burned edge of his necklace. “If you see smoke on the horizon,” she said softly, “that means we are safe.”


Weeks later, Corbin returned to his ranch — bruised, bleeding, but alive. He watched the sky every day at dusk.

Then, one evening, as the sun sank behind the ridges, a thin column of smoke rose from the far northern hills. Not wildfire. Not accident. A single, steady signal — rising, fading, rising again.

He smiled, heart pounding with a quiet peace.

She had made it.

And somewhere out there, the girl he once gave water to was now leading her people — stronger, fiercer, free.

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