A Mountain Man Found A Stranger Nursing His Starving Baby In A Snowbound Cabin-felicia

“You’re Feeding My Daughter?” Mountain Man Found Obese Stranger Nursing His Baby—Then He Pretended She Was His Bride and Found the Grave Meant for Her

Elias Crowe came home with winter hanging off him like a second hide.

Snow had packed into the seams of his coat, hardened along his beard, and turned the cuffs of his sleeves stiff as boards.

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His rifle was cold enough to bite through his glove.

His right hand ached from the split across his knuckles, though he could not remember when he had struck stone, bark, or frozen earth hard enough to bleed.

He had been gone four hours.

Four hours was not long in a man’s life, but it was too long to leave a starving baby in a cabin where the fire had to be fed and the wind never stopped looking for cracks.

He had told himself Lily would sleep.

He had told himself the storm would break.

He had told himself he would find a rabbit, a bird, anything with meat enough to turn into broth and hope.

A man could lie to himself a long while in a blizzard because the wind made it hard to hear the truth.

The truth was that his daughter was dying by ounces.

Seven months old, and already tired of fighting.

When Elias had left before dawn, Lily’s eyes had been open, but she had not cried.

That frightened him more than crying ever had.

For three days she had spent what strength she had on that thin, broken wail that followed him from the cradle to the hearth, from the hearth to the shelf where the empty tins sat, from the shelf to the door where he stood like a fool with nothing in his hands.

Then the crying had faded.

That was when fear grew teeth.

His wife, Sarah, had died bringing Lily into the world, and Elias had carried both love and guilt ever since.

He knew how to mend a roof in sleet.

He knew how to track elk over shale.

He knew where to set a trap, how to read a sky, how to sharpen a blade until it would shave a hair from his wrist.

But he did not know how to make a motherless child take nourishment when her small mouth rejected every answer he brought her.

Goat milk had soured her belly.

Powder bought from Coldwater Crossing had done almost nothing.

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