They Mocked Her Cabin Trees—Then Begged For Shelter In A Blizzard-felicia

“Laugh Harder, Boys” They Laughed as She Planted Trees Around Her Cabin—Until Winter Turned It Into a Fortress… And “My ‘Useless Trees’ Are the Only Reason You’ll Survive Tonight”

Nora Whitcomb heard Beck Turner before she saw him.

His voice came through the blizzard in broken pieces, torn apart by wind and slammed against her cabin door with the snow.

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“Nora!”

The stove gave a dull red glow behind her.

The oil lamp trembled on the wall peg, throwing weak light over the table, the iron poker, the folded quilt, and the north wall that used to be the coldest place in her world.

Nora did not run to the door.

She stood very still with her hand around the poker and listened to the man outside call her name like he had the right.

Once, Beck Turner’s voice might have moved her faster.

Once, she might have heard worry in it before she heard memory.

But some memories had teeth.

She could still see him from the previous spring, standing in the rutted road with his hat low, watching her kneel in wet dirt with sapling roots in both hands.

The wind had been kinder then.

The ground had been black with thaw, and her skirt hem had dragged through mud while she pressed willow slips into a line along the north side of the cabin.

Men from the road had laughed first.

Beck had not started it.

That was what had made the hurt harder to name.

He had only let it happen.

He had only stood there with that crooked half-smile while Cal Rusk asked if she meant to grow a forest before supper.

Another man called the saplings broom handles.

Somebody from the wagon said a widow with no husband had no business farming shade.

At Boone’s Feed later, the joke had followed her through the door.

Men leaned on barrels and flour sacks and spoke loud enough for her to hear.

They called it her widow’s orchard.

They wondered if she planned to sell fruit to the snow.

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