A Child Bride Ran Fifteen Miles So Her Son Could Belong To Himself-thuyhien

Fourteen-year-old Sarah Louise Bennett gave birth before dawn on February 11, 1915, in a small wooden farmhouse where nobody was awake to help her.

The stove had burned low by then, leaving only a weak orange glow over the floorboards.

Smoke clung to the room.

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Cold came up through the cracks in the floor and settled into the old quilt she had dragged beside the stove.

In another room near the front of the house, her husband, Jacob Bennett, slept through it.

He was fifty-eight years old.

Sarah had been in labor since late afternoon the day before.

At first, she told herself she could endure it because enduring was what she had been taught to do.

By evening, the pain was no longer something she could hide from.

It bent her over the table.

It made her bite her own sleeve.

It made her whisper prayers she did not fully know how to finish.

Twice, she tried to wake Jacob.

The first time, she called him from the doorway with one hand pressed to the wall.

“Jacob,” she said, and even that one word cost her breath.

He stirred, muttered something she could not make out, and told her to be quiet.

The second time came after midnight.

The farmhouse had gone still except for the scrape of wind against the walls and the uneven sound of her breathing.

Sarah stumbled back to the doorway and tried again.

“Please,” she whispered.

Jacob rolled onto his other side.

That was the answer.

So Sarah went back to the stove.

She was fourteen years old, with no mother to call for and no woman nearby who had been summoned to sit with her.

Her mother had died years before, taking with her all the ordinary knowledge girls were supposed to receive before life became too much for them.

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