Lena’s lips parted. “Most people stopped using it after my father died.”
The babies cried again. She turned by instinct, reached for the crib rail, then winced so hard her knees dipped.
I moved a chair behind her before she could fall.
She didn’t thank me. She didn’t have the strength to waste on words.
What she had strength for was the girls.
In the nights since I’d found them, I’d seen enough to understand what fear does after the danger passes.
Lena never fully slept. A floorboard settling would make her shoulders lock.
If I crossed the room too fast, her eyes flew to the babies first and only then to my hands.
She drank broth in little swallows as if her throat had forgotten the shape of safety.
When I brought warm water, she washed the girls before she washed her own face.
Twice I saw her wake from dreams with both palms over their tiny ribs, counting breaths in the dark.
There were scabs at the inside of her wrists, a bite mark high on one shoulder, and bruises on her thighs she tried to hide by keeping the blanket pulled low over her knees.
She never named them. She just kept moving around the pain like naming it would give it weight enough to crush the room.
That night, with the sheriff watching and my cabin too small to hold lies, she finally spoke.
“I was in labor most of the day before,” she said.
“At Silas’s place. Mrs. Harlan came first, then Everett.”
Keene frowned. “Everett Pike?”
She nodded.
I knew that name too.
Everett Pike was handsome in the lazy way that fools women before they learn the difference between easy smiles and steady hands.
He broke horses well enough, drank too much, and owed money all over three counties.
Lena stared at the medallion while she talked, as if the words were easier if she aimed them somewhere smaller than a man’s face.
“Everett said he’d marry me back in March.
Said once the babies came, we’d leave Silas’s place and take the lower pasture cabin.
Then Silas got papers from Red Fork Rail.
They wanted the creek strip for a siding and water access.
Thirty-two hundred dollars. I heard them talking through the pantry door.”
Sheriff Keene’s expression flattened.
“My father’s will,” Lena said.
“Silas told everyone there wasn’t one.
But there was. Mrs. Harlan heard him drunk one night.
Daddy left the creek parcel to me.
If I had children, it passed to us together.
Silas couldn’t sell anything clean if the girls were born alive.”
The lantern snapped softly. Outside, a loose shutter banged once in the wind.
“He told Everett to say they came dead,” she said.
“To bury them before dawn and tell town I’d lost my mind from fever.”
“Did Mrs. Harlan hear that too?” the sheriff asked.
Lena swallowed. “She heard enough.
She tucked the medallion back into my dress when nobody was looking.
My brother made it out of scrap tin when he was eleven.
My daddy scratched our last name inside because Micah said his drawing looked so bad nobody would know who we were.”
Keene held out his hand.
I gave him the medallion.
He turned it toward the lantern.
On one side were the pencil scratches of a boy’s hand, nearly worn away: a girl and a smaller boy under a crooked roof.
On the other inner rim, faint but still there, were the words TOM PARKER’S KIDS — LENA & MICAH.
The sheriff blew out through his nose.
“Tom showed me this the summer your brother made it,” he said quietly.
“He was proud of that ugly thing.”
Lena made a sound then.
Not a laugh. Something smaller, scraped thin.
A knock came behind Keene, quick this time, and one of the deputies stepped in from the porch.
“Silas Parker’s riding up now,” he said.
“Preacher Cross with him.”
Of course he was.
Silas entered my cabin like he was walking into a room he meant to own.
Tall, coat buttoned to the throat, beard trimmed neat, eyes cool as a locked drawer.
Preacher Abel Cross came in after him smelling of wool and peppermint, carrying concern on his face the way some men carry a Bible when they want to be seen with one.
Silas looked at Lena once, then at the babies, then at the sheriff.
“There you are,” he said, calm as a banker.
“This has gone on long enough.”
Lena gripped the crib rail so hard her knuckles turned the color of ash.
Sheriff Keene did not put his hat back on.
“Has it?”
Silas gave him a patient smile.
“The girl is confused. She was feverish.
Everett went after her when she wandered.
The babies were born too early and didn’t make it.
We were trying to spare her.”
From the crib came a thin, angry cry.
Nobody moved.
Silas’s eyes shifted to the sound for one fatal second.
Keene said, “Dead babies cry now?”
Preacher Cross opened his mouth, thought better of it, then tried again.
“Sheriff, grief can make people—”
“Be careful, Abel,” Keene said, not raising his voice.
“I’m listening hard.”
Silas folded his hands behind his back.
“You’re going to choose the word of a half-conscious girl over mine?”
I saw the exact moment he made the mistake.
He still thought the room belonged to him.
Lena’s voice came out cracked but steady.
“Tell him how much the rail men offered you.”
Silas looked at her for the first time like she had surprised him.
“No one asked you to speak,” he said.
I took one step forward.
The floorboard under my boot groaned.
Silas’s eyes flicked to me and stayed there long enough to measure that I was not moving aside.
Sheriff Keene held up the medallion.
“Tom Parker asked me, years ago, to look in on his children if anything ever smelled wrong after his death.
I should have done it sooner.”
Silas’s face didn’t change, but the skin around his mouth tightened.
Keene went on. “Now I’ve got a woman fresh from labor with bruises on her body, two living children you say were dead, and a riverbank full of disturbed earth.
So here’s what happens next.
Deputy Warren goes to fetch Doc Hensley.
Deputy Boone rides to the Parker place and seals every desk, trunk, and ledger until I say otherwise.”
“You can’t do that on the word of—”
“On suspicion of fraud, assault, and attempted murder?” Keene said.
“Watch me.”
Silas took a breath through his nose.
“Everett won’t back this story.”
From behind him, quiet as a nail driven straight, Lena said, “Then why did he run barefoot?”
Preacher Cross looked at Silas.
It was small, that look, but it carried distance in it.
Doc Hensley arrived forty minutes later with his bag and his winter cough.
He examined Lena behind the blanket hung from my bed frame, then checked both girls at the stove where the light was better.
His face got harder with every minute.
When he came out, he spoke to the sheriff, not to the room.
“She delivered within the last forty-eight hours,” he said.
“Those babies were exposed to cold and soil after birth, not stillborn.
The mother has blood loss and bruising consistent with force.”
Silas said, “That proves nothing about me.”
But by then Sheriff Keene was already writing.
At dawn, Deputy Boone rode back with a lockbox, three ledgers, and one folded document from the false bottom of Silas Parker’s desk.
The paper was stained with lamp oil and signed by a county clerk twelve years earlier.
Tom Parker’s will. Keene read it standing at my table while the girls slept wrapped in flannel near the stove.
The creek parcel, the lower pasture cabin, and all water rights along that bend belonged to Lena Parker.
In the event of her death without issue, they passed to her brother Micah.
In the event of living children, the property would remain in trust for Lena and her heirs jointly.
Silas had no power to sell any of it.
Attached to the back was an unsigned agreement with Red Fork Rail for $3,200, and tucked inside the same box was a promissory note to Everett Pike for $200, payable upon completion of burial and removal of complications.
Keene folded the note once.
By noon, Everett was found at Miller’s ferry barn with no boots, mud still under his nails, and Silas’s two hundred dollars sewn into the hem of his coat.
Town moved the way towns always do when they learn they’ve backed the wrong voice.
Quiet first. Then fast. The same clerk who had stared at Lena in the general store brought cloth on credit and wouldn’t meet her eyes.
Mrs. Forl sent over broth and a loaf wrapped in a towel.
Preacher Cross did not come back.
Silas was taken to county holding in the sheriff’s wagon with his wrists tied low and his coat collar turned up against the cold.
He kept his chin high until they passed his own gate and saw neighbors watching.
That was when it dropped.
The next day a carpenter from town came to measure the lower pasture cabin so repairs could start before snow.
Keene set a deputy to ride past twice a day until the hearing.
He told Lena she did not have to return to Silas’s house for a single button if she didn’t want to.
I watched her absorb that like a woman touching warm water after a winter too long.
That night, after the girls had finally gone down at the same time, I found her sitting on the floor beside the crib with the medallion in her lap.
The room was lit only by coals and the stub of one candle, enough to catch the red in her eyes and the clean line of her braid over one shoulder.
She had washed the medallion with a rag and a drop of lamp oil.
The rust was still there, but the little drawing showed more clearly now.
“I used to think my brother made me too tall,” she said without looking up.
I sat in the chair by the stove.
“He ever write you back?” I asked.
She ran her thumb over the scratched roof in the picture.
“Not lately. But Sheriff Keene wired the rail office in Cheyenne today.
They answered before sundown. Micah’s alive.”
One of the babies stirred.
Lena leaned over the crib on instinct, laid two fingers lightly against the small chest, and waited until the breathing evened again.
“I haven’t named them out loud yet,” she said.
I looked at the two small faces in the cedar box.
“You should when you’re ready.”
She was quiet a long time.
Then she said, “Iris and June.
My mother’s flowers.”
The names settled into the room soft as ash.
I went out to the barn after that because the air in the cabin had grown too full for my own chest.
Mae’s saddle still hung where I’d left it.
Her currycomb sat in the same nail-shadow by the door.
I stood there with my hand on the worn leather, listening to the horse shift in the stall and the night wind move through the cracks, and for the first time since my wife died, the silence around me did not feel empty.
It felt changed.
On Sunday afternoon, I carried the old dresser drawer out behind the cabin.
It had served its purpose, but the girls had already begun to kick like they meant to argue with boards.
I split the drawer apart for kindling and brought the cedar crib closer to the stove.
Lena hung the medallion from one corner with a strip of blue ribbon she found in Mae’s sewing tin.
She asked first. I said yes.
That night the wind pushed cold against the window, but the cabin held.
The babies slept on their backs beneath a quilt too big for them, one tiny hand thrown open, the other tucked under a cheek.
Above them, the rusted medallion turned gently whenever the draft found it, catching the firelight on a boy’s crooked drawing and two names scratched by a father who had tried, in his small way, to leave something behind that could still say who belonged to whom.
On the mantel sat the folded copy of Tom Parker’s will beside my wife’s blue cup.
Through the cracked window, dawn began whitening the ridge, and from the porch I could hear Lena inside, whispering Iris and June into the half-light until the room learned them.