Widow Crossed Blackfoot Pass With Her Son After Bandits Took Everything-felicia

The winter of 1873 did not arrive gently in the Montana Territory.

It came down from the northern peaks like something hungry.

Snow moved through the pine forests in heavy sheets, burying the wagon trails that crossed the wilderness and turning every old rut into a white scar under the storm.

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The wind had a voice in those mountains.

It pushed through Blackfoot Pass with a long, bitter howl, the kind that seemed to know every living thing by name and hate all of them equally.

Margaret Sullivan stood inside that wind with her worn wool shawl drawn close around her shoulders.

Her breath rose in little white clouds.

Her hands, once soft from tending a house back in Ohio, were cracked open from work, cold, and the frozen ground she had been clawing at since dawn.

She had just finished burying her husband.

Thomas Sullivan’s grave lay at the edge of the ruined wagon trail.

There was no proper marker.

No carved board.

No church bell.

No neighbor to take off his hat and speak kind words over the dead.

Margaret had made a cross from two broken spokes torn from their wagon wheel, binding them with a strip of cloth and forcing them down into the snow-packed earth until her fingers went numb.

The cross leaned a little.

The wood was splintered and rough.

But it was the last thing she could give him.

Her 5-year-old son stood beside her, both hands fisted in her skirt.

James’s face was pinched with cold, grief, and a child’s stubborn hope that grown-ups could still undo terrible things if asked the right way.

“Mama,” he whispered, “when is Papa coming back?”

Margaret almost folded right there in the snow.

The question went through her sharper than the wind.

She knelt and pulled James close, feeling how thin he seemed under every layer of cloth she had wrapped around him.

“Papa’s gone to heaven, sweet boy,” she said.

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