The Starving Rancher Who Moved a Fallen Tree With Bare Hands-felicia

Arizona Territory had a way of making a man feel small before breakfast.

By noon, it made him feel punished.

By dusk, if he was still standing, it made him wonder whether stubbornness was a virtue or just another kind of fever.

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Ethan Cole had asked himself that question more than once in July of 1876.

His cabin stood alone where the dust ran in sheets across the ground and the wind could find every crack between the boards.

The roof held because he kept mending it.

The door shut because he leaned his shoulder into it when the frame swelled.

The little place was not much of a ranch anymore, not in the way men in town used the word, but it was the last thing in the world that still knew his name.

His parents had died of fever when the air in the cabin smelled of sweat, boiled cloth, and herbs that had done no good.

His brother had gone away to war and never come back to sit at the table, never come back to laugh at the bad coffee, never come back to help mend fence or split wood or curse the drought like it was a neighbor who would not leave.

After that, Ethan learned the shape of loneliness.

It was not always dramatic.

Sometimes it was one cup on a shelf.

Sometimes it was one chair pulled close to the stove.

Sometimes it was the silence after a man coughed and realized nobody would ask if he was all right.

The drought took what grief had left.

It took the first harvest, then the second, then the patience of men who had once slapped Ethan on the back and promised the weather would turn.

One by one, the neighbors left.

Wagons rolled away in the hard light of morning, carrying mattresses, tools, wives, children, sacks of flour, and all the little objects that proved a life had once been rooted there.

By the end, the empty ranches looked like broken teeth scattered across the territory.

Ethan stayed.

Town merchants had stopped pretending not to notice his pockets were empty.

The feed man would look over Ethan’s shoulder when he came in, as if a paying customer might be waiting behind him.

The flour sacks seemed heavier every month, even when he could only buy a small amount.

His horse had grown thin in the lean-to, not mistreated, not forgotten, just caught in the same hard season as its owner.

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