The Woman Caldwell Mocked Carried a Telegram Rimrock Couldn’t Ignore-felicia

The road east of Caldwell scraped under Lydia Bauer’s borrowed handcart with a sound that made every step feel counted.

The wheel had a bad drag in it.

Not broken enough to stop her.

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Just broken enough to complain the whole way.

Dust lifted from the road and clung to the hem of her work dress.

The August heat came down flat and bright, the kind of Kansas heat that did not wrap around a body so much as strike it.

It hit from above.

It rose from below.

It pressed sweat beneath Lydia’s collar until the cloth stuck to her back, and still she kept both hands around the cart handle and walked.

She had not asked anyone in Caldwell for a ride.

She had not asked for sympathy.

She had not asked Mrs. Aldridge to soften her voice on the dry goods steps when she said, loud enough for half the street to hear, “Well, at least the German girl finally knows when she’s not wanted.”

Lydia heard it.

Of course she heard it.

People who made remarks like that always knew how far their voices could carry.

Lydia did not look back.

That was one thing she had gotten good at.

She had learned it young in Stuttgart, when children found the easiest word for her body and repeated it until it became a game.

She had learned it again in St. Louis, where women in boardinghouses smiled with their mouths and measured her with their eyes.

She had learned it in Wichita, and then in Caldwell, where every closed door seemed to come with the same quiet look.

Too much.

Too large.

Too visible.

Too hard to make polite.

By twenty-four, Lydia Bauer knew how to keep her face still while people decided she did not belong.

What she had never mastered was keeping her hands steady afterward.

They trembled now on the wooden handle, not because she was afraid of the four miles between town and Rimrock Ranch, but because anger had filled her arms with a strange, useless strength.

Anger was difficult for a woman alone.

It had no safe place to go.

If she showed it, people called her bitter.

If she swallowed it, they called her calm.

Lydia had swallowed enough of it to know the difference.

Inside the pocket of her dress was a folded telegram.

She had read it so many times that the creases were soft.

Harvest help needed.

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