A Hungry Girl Asked for Leftovers, and a Rancher Followed Her-felicia

The summer heat lay over Dusty Creek like a wet quilt nobody could kick off.

It pressed into the boards of the merchant wagons.

It baked the iron rims on the wheels.

Image

It turned every breath behind the livery stable into the taste of dust, horse sweat, and old hay.

Under one of those wagons, eight-year-old Emma Whitmore kept her hand pressed against her little brother’s mouth, not hard enough to hurt him, just enough to muffle the sound of his hunger.

Tommy was four years old.

At four, a child should have been worried about wooden soldiers, berry stains on his shirt, and whether his mama would scold him for tracking mud across a clean floor.

Tommy had already learned something crueler.

Crying did not fill a belly.

It only made the ache louder.

“Please,” Emma whispered, bending close so only he could hear. “Just a little longer.”

Tommy’s blue eyes looked too large in his thin face.

“You said that yesterday.”

Emma had no answer for that, because it was true.

She had said it yesterday.

She had said it the day before.

She had said it behind the livery when Mama tried to sit up and could not.

She had said it under her breath while watching people throw crumbs into the dust as if crumbs were not a treasure.

Three days had passed since Clara Whitmore collapsed with fever.

Two days had passed since Emma and Tommy had eaten anything except one stolen apple core split into pieces so small it was more memory than food.

One day had passed since Emma promised Tommy everything would be all right.

She knew she was lying.

But there are lies told for cruelty, and there are lies told because a child is standing between another child and terror.

Emma had become that wall.

She had not asked to be.

Read More