Widow Cast Out for Twin Girls Until a Mountain Man Signed-felicia

The first time Hannah Whitcomb heard her daughters cry, she thought God had answered her.

She had not yet understood that the men downstairs had been waiting for a different answer.

Snow beat the windows of the upstairs room until the glass trembled in its frame, and every gust pushed cold through the seams of the old stone house.

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The oil lamp beside the bed burned low and smoky.

Pine smoke from the lower hearth crept into the room, mixed with the sharp iron smell of childbirth and the sour wool of blankets that had been warmed too many times and not washed enough.

Hannah had been in labor since before dawn.

By nightfall, her voice was nearly gone.

Her husband Samuel had been dead long enough for the town to stop lowering its voice when it passed her, but not long enough for Hannah to forget the shape of his hand around hers.

He had once told her that if anything happened to him, his father would see she was kept safe.

She had believed him because wives believe the best of dead men, especially when believing is the only roof left over their heads.

The Whitcomb house sat above Iron Hollow, Montana, with its stone face turned toward the mine like a ruler watching his own kingdom.

Down below, miners crowded close to bunkhouse stoves and drank bitter coffee while the blizzard thickened.

Some prayed the north shaft would hold until morning.

Hannah prayed only that her child would draw breath.

When Mrs. Bell lifted the first baby into the lamplight, the child let out a cry so fierce and thin it seemed impossible such a little body could hold it.

Hannah tried to smile.

Mrs. Bell did not.

The midwife’s face changed as the light touched the baby’s damp hair.

Her eyes flicked to the door, then back to Hannah.

“A girl,” she whispered.

The word should have been tender.

In that house, it sounded like a warning.

Hannah closed her eyes and let the tears slip sideways into her hair.

A girl.

Her daughter.

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