Maeve was traded for two draft mules before breakfast.
That was how the day began, with October wind hissing under the floorboards of the Red Creek mercantile and the smell of flour dust sticking to the back of her throat.
She stood a few feet from the counter in a thin cotton dress that had already been mended twice at the shoulder.

The cold found every seam.
Uncle Amos never once looked at her.
He looked at the stranger instead.
He looked at the coin pouch.
He looked at the account shelf behind the counter as if a girl could be tallied there with salt, nails, and kerosene.
“She’s useful,” Amos said.
Maeve heard the word and felt her stomach turn.
Useful meant she could scrub a floor.
Useful meant she could mend a shirt.
Useful meant she ate less than a hired hand and complained less than a wife.
“She’s good with chores,” Amos added, and his fingers kept twitching near the pouch as if he was afraid the bargain might walk away.
Maeve was eighteen years old.
She had no father left to stand between her and hunger.
Her mother had been gone long enough that grief had turned from a wound into a possession, something Maeve kept folded away in small objects because nobody wanted to hear about it anymore.
In her satchel were two patched shifts, ruined stockings, and her mother’s cracked comb.
That was all she owned.
Not land.
Not a dowry.
Not a promise.
Just cloth, bone, and a memory with half its teeth missing.
The stranger’s name was Gideon Reed.
He stood near the door, broad enough to block the gray morning behind him, wearing a canvas coat darkened at the cuffs and shoulders.
He smelled of pine tar, wood smoke, and raw meat.
His beard was dark, his eyes colder than the mountain road, and his face had the exhausted set of a man who had forgotten what comfort was for.
He did not haggle loudly.
He did not flatter.
He did not ask Maeve if she agreed.
No one did.
That was the part she understood best.
A sale does not ask the sold thing for permission.
The bargain was made before the mercantile stove had thrown any real heat.
Two draft mules.
A few muttered words.
A girl removed from one life and placed into another.
Gideon finally looked at her only long enough to say, “Wagon’s out front.”
There was no softness in it.
There was no cruelty either, not the kind that spent extra time enjoying itself.
That almost made it worse.
Maeve could have hated a man who sneered.
She did not know what to do with a man who simply treated the whole thing as weather.
She followed him outside because Amos had already turned away, and a person learns young when a door has closed behind her.
The wagon waited in the mud with sacks of flour, salt, rifle cartridges, and kerosene loaded in the back.
Those things mattered.
They had weight.
They had names.
They had been chosen for a winter that everyone seemed to care about more than they cared about Maeve.
She climbed up beside Gideon and held her satchel in her lap.
Red Creek receded behind them with its muddy street, plank walks, and mercantile window dull with dust.
Maeve did not look back.
Neither did Gideon.
The mountain road did not welcome anyone.
It rose hard and mean, cutting between pines that leaned close as if listening.
The wheels struck stones.
The wagon boards jolted under Maeve until her spine ached.
Wind moved through the trees with a dry, needling sound, and the higher they went, the thinner the air became.
Maeve’s teeth began to chatter.
She clenched her jaw.
She would not ask him for anything.
That was all the pride she had left, and pride is a poor blanket, but sometimes it is the only one a person can wrap around herself.
Gideon reached behind the seat without turning.
A moth-eaten wool blanket landed in her lap.
“Wrap up,” he grunted.
Maeve stared at it.
“Ain’t hauling a frozen corpse up the ridge,” he said.
She pulled the blanket around her shoulders.
It smelled of smoke and old animal grease.
It was scratchy at her neck.
It was still warmth.
She hated that she needed it and held it tighter anyway.
Kindness sometimes comes without manners.
Sometimes it comes so rough it can almost be mistaken for insult.
The cabin sat on a rocky shelf above a drop so steep the valley seemed to vanish below it.
It was smaller than Maeve expected.
Meaner too.
A shelter, not a home.
The roof sagged on one side.
The door scraped the threshold.
The small window had been filmed over by dirt and smoke until daylight entered as a weak gray blur.
Inside, the smell struck her first.
Old grease.
Dirty bedding.
Stale urine.
Smoke soaked into rafters and cloth.
The hearth had nearly died, its coals low and sullen under ash.
Maeve stood still just inside the door and understood that no woman had been keeping this place.
No steady hand had washed bowls and beaten bedding and opened windows.
No one had made a table into a table instead of another flat place to drop need.
Then something shifted beneath that table.
Maeve stopped breathing.
Two pairs of eyes watched her from the dark.
Children.
For one long second, she did not understand what she was seeing.
They were too quiet.
Too small for the suspicion in their faces.
The boy came first, stepping out just enough to place his body in front of the girl.
His hair was matted.
His feet were bare.
His fists were clenched like a man’s, though his hands were still soft and little.
The girl hid behind him with her thumb in her mouth.
Her face was smeared with soot.
Her silence was not shyness.
It was defense.
“Toby,” Gideon said.
The boy did not turn.
“Tess,” Gideon said, and the girl pulled back farther into the shadow.
Gideon pointed at Maeve as if introducing a tool he had brought home.
“This is Maeve. She’s staying. She cooks. She cleans. You listen to her.”
The words hung there.
Maeve waited for him to add something human.
He did not.
He turned back out the door.
The latch fell behind him.
For a moment, the only sounds were the low scrape of wind against the cabin wall and the thin settling crackle from the hearth.
Maeve was alone with them.
She looked at the two children beneath the table.
They looked back at her as if they had already survived too many adults.
She took one step toward the hearth.
Toby flew at her.
He was quick with hunger and panic.
His teeth closed around her wrist before she could pull back.
Pain shot up her arm, bright and shocking.
Maeve cried out.
Her free hand lifted by instinct.
For one breath, she could have struck him.
The motion was there in her shoulder.
The anger was there too, hot and humiliated and scared.
Then she saw his face.
Toby’s eyes were wide and wet with terror.
His whole body trembled.
His mouth was clamped around her wrist not because he wanted to hurt her, but because he believed hurt was the only language grown people understood.
Maeve lowered her hand.
Slowly.
Carefully.
She did not hit him.
That was the first thing she gave those children.
Not food.
Not fire.
Restraint.
Toby let go and backed away, breathing hard.
The bite had not broken her open, but blood rose under the skin in a dark crescent.
Maeve pressed her sleeve over it and went outside.
She made it three steps before she bent over and dry-heaved against the cabin wall.
Nothing came up.
She had not eaten enough for that.
When the sickness passed, she wiped her mouth with the back of her good hand and looked at the woodpile.
The pile was poor.
Half the sticks were damp.
She gathered what she could anyway.
Inside, Toby and Tess had retreated beneath the table again.
Maeve did not speak to them.
She set kindling under the old coals and worked until flame caught.
Her fingers shook from cold and pain.
Smoke stung her eyes.
The cabin slowly began to change.
Not much at first.
A little heat.
A little light.
A small crack in the misery of the room.
Maeve found bacon that had gone bad at the edges and cut the mold away.
She found cornmeal and a pot with a blackened bottom.
She scrubbed what she could with sand and water until her hands were raw.
She did not sing.
She did not coax.
Hungry children know when food is meant for them.
By nightfall, cornmeal mush steamed in chipped bowls on the rough table.
Maeve placed two bowls there and carried her own to the hearth.
Then she sat with her back to the children and ate slowly.
Behind her, nothing moved.
Then floorboards creaked.
A small hand snatched one bowl.
Another grabbed the second.
The twins ate with their fingers because no one had taught them that the world could wait long enough for a spoon.
Maeve kept her eyes on the fire.
She let them have that little dignity.
Soon there was scraping.
Breathing.
Swallowing.
Tess came closer when the bowls were empty.
She did not step fully into the light.
She looked at the pot.
She looked at Maeve.
Then she pulled her thumb from her mouth.
“More?”
The word was so small that Maeve almost missed it.
Her wrist throbbed.
Her stomach was still half empty.
She looked at the pot and knew there was a little left.
She also knew starving children could make themselves sick trying to fill every empty place at once.
“Tomorrow,” Maeve said.
Tess flinched at the answer.
Maeve softened her voice.
“You’ll make yourselves sick tonight.”
Tess watched her for a long time.
Then she took her empty bowl and backed away.
It was not trust.
Not yet.
Trust does not arrive because somebody sets down one bowl.
It comes back by inches, and only when the next hurt does not happen.
Gideon returned after dark with snow on his shoulders.
The moment he stepped inside, he stopped.
Maeve saw him take in the room.
The swept floor.
The fire alive instead of sulking under ash.
The clean pot turned upside down near the hearth.
The two children with scrubbed streaks across their soot-dark faces.
He looked last at Maeve.
She was asleep near the hearth under his old blanket, one wrist tucked against her chest.
The cabin had not become a home in a single evening.
But it had stopped feeling abandoned.
Gideon said nothing.
He closed the door softly.
For three weeks, life on the ridge moved in hard, narrow lines.
Gideon came and went from the trapline.
He brought meat when he had it.
He split wood when the weather allowed.
He spoke in short, practical pieces, as if words cost more than flour.
Maeve learned the cabin faster than she learned him.
She learned which floorboard near the bed would pinch a toe.
She learned where the roof leaked first when rain turned to sleet.
She learned that the window could be scraped clean if she used the dull side of the old knife.
She learned that Tess would not eat while being watched.
She learned that Toby would place himself between Tess and anyone who entered the room, even if that person carried supper.
Toby did not apologize for biting her.
Maeve did not ask him to.
Some apologies are too large for children who are still waiting to find out if they will survive the next adult.
Instead, she gave him chores small enough not to feel like orders.
“Bring two sticks,” she would say.
He would bring one.
She would nod as if one was what she meant.
The next day, he brought two.
With Tess, Maeve moved more carefully.
She set the cracked comb on her lap one afternoon and pulled it through her own hair where Tess could see.
Tess watched from beneath the table.
The next day, she sat a little closer.
The day after that, she let Maeve comb one small tangle from the end of her hair before she darted away.
Progress on that mountain was not pretty.
It was a child standing one step less far from fear.
It was a boy eating at the table instead of under it.
It was Gideon pausing outside the door before entering, as if he had begun to understand that slamming it might cost more than noise.
He did not become gentle.
Not suddenly.
Men like Gideon did not turn soft because a girl swept a floor.
But he watched.
He noticed the bowls.
He noticed the smoke leaving the chimney earlier in the morning.
He noticed Tess with her face a little cleaner and Toby with both hands open at his sides instead of balled into fists.
Once, Maeve caught him looking at the bite mark on her wrist.
She pulled her sleeve down.
He looked away.
“Boy shouldn’t have done that,” he muttered.
Maeve stirred the pot.
“No,” she said.
Gideon waited.
Maeve did not defend Toby exactly.
She only said, “He thought he had to.”
Those words did something to the room.
Gideon did not answer.
But later he left an extra piece of meat near the pot and pretended he had forgotten it.
That was the closest he came to apology.
Then the fever came.
It started in the night while Gideon was gone on the trapline.
Maeve woke because Tess was standing beside her pallet, breathing in quick, sharp little pulls.
The fire had burned low.
Cold pressed against the walls.
For a moment, Maeve did not know where she was.
Then Tess grabbed her sleeve.
“Toby,” she whispered.
One word, and all the sleep left Maeve.
Toby lay curled under the blanket, his face too bright in the dim light.
When Maeve touched his forehead, heat shocked her palm.
It was not the warmth of sleep.
It was deep and wrong.
Maeve looked toward the door as if Gideon might appear because need had summoned him.
The door stayed shut.
The mountain outside answered with wind.
There was no doctor.
No neighbor close enough to hear a cry.
No church bell.
No mother.
No woman with a practiced hand to say, do this first, do not do that, keep him awake, let him sleep.
There was only Maeve, eighteen years old, with a bitten wrist and a cabin full of things that were not enough.
She moved anyway.
Panic can stand in a room and scream, but work has to use its hands.
She stirred the fire back to life.
She filled the chipped pot.
She took pine needles from the bundle near the door and crushed wild mint between her fingers until the sharp green scent cut through the smoke.
She boiled what she had because it was better than holding empty air.
Tess hovered near the cot, thumb in her mouth again.
Her eyes followed every movement.
Maeve wanted to tell her everything would be fine.
She did not.
Children who have been disappointed too often can hear lies even when they are kindly meant.
Instead, Maeve said, “Bring the blanket from the peg.”
Tess froze.
“Now,” Maeve said, not sharp, only steady.
The little girl ran and dragged the blanket over, stumbling once on the hem.
Maeve tucked it around Toby’s legs.
She cooled his face with a damp cloth.
She lifted his head and tried to get a little of the bitter pine-mint water between his lips.
Most of it ran down his chin.
Some went in.
Maeve counted that as a victory because there were no other victories to count.
The fever made Toby restless.
He turned his head from side to side and muttered words Maeve could not understand.
His hand opened and closed on the blanket.
Once, he whispered Tess’s name, and the girl made a sound like something breaking in a very small room.
Maeve dragged her cot closer until it scraped against the floorboards.
The sound seemed too loud.
Everything seemed too loud now.
The fire.
The wind.
Tess’s little breaths.
The beat of Maeve’s own blood in her bitten wrist.
She began to sing because silence had become unbearable.
She did not know lullabies.
No one had sung many to her after her mother died.
What she knew were rough tavern songs that drifted through saloon doors when Amos sent her on errands in Red Creek, songs meant for men with whiskey in them and coins on the table.
She softened one as best she could.
The tune came out thin.
It cracked at the edges.
It was not pretty.
Tess came to her anyway.
The girl climbed into Maeve’s lap without asking, light as kindling, and folded herself there with both hands locked around Maeve’s injured wrist.
Maeve almost gasped from the pain.
She did not pull away.
That was the second thing she gave them.
Not medicine.
Not certainty.
The promise that fear could hold on without being punished.
Toby burned on the cot beside them.
The pot steamed weakly on the floor.
The fire threw gold over the rough walls and left the corners watching.
Maeve bent close to Toby and sang until her throat ached.
She sang past embarrassment.
She sang past memory.
She sang past the strange cruelty of being brought to a mountain as a burden and becoming, in the space of three weeks, the only person those children reached for.
Tess’s tears soaked through the front of Maeve’s dress.
Maeve held her and kept the cloth moving over Toby’s neck.
Somewhere beyond the door, Gideon was still on the trapline.
Somewhere below the ridge, Red Creek slept with its mercantile shelves and wagon ruts and men who could trade a girl without meeting her eyes.
In the cabin, there was only the fire, the fever, the bitter smell of pine and mint, and a young woman no one had thought to protect.
The mountain had taken every easy choice from her.
So Maeve made the hard one.
She stayed.
She kept singing.
And when Toby’s hand finally moved across the blanket and caught the edge of her sleeve, Maeve leaned down, trembling, to hear whatever word his fever had dragged up from the dark.