A $10 Train Depot Hid a Secret That Saved Jessica Morgan’s Future-eirian

Jessica Morgan had owned nothing big enough to put a key into when she bought Whitlock Junction.

Not a room.

Not a car.

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Not even a locker she could trust overnight.

At twenty, her entire life fit inside one canvas duffel bag with a broken zipper and a strap that had rubbed a raw red line across her shoulder.

The abandoned depot cost ten dollars, which was less than a motel room, less than a bus ticket out of the county, less than the amount her stepfather had once spent on beer while telling her she was too expensive to keep.

It should have been a joke.

To Jessica, it was shelter.

The deed was stamped by the township out in Penn Forest, folded once, and tucked inside the inner pocket of a coat that smelled faintly of fryer grease from Maggie’s Diner.

She had earned the cash washing plates behind that diner, her sleeves wet to the elbows, while the radio crackled over the sink and somebody announced that an old Pennsylvania Railroad depot would be sold for ten dollars before demolition.

People in the diner laughed.

Jessica kept her hands in the dishwater and listened.

She had grown up in a family that did not laugh at railroads.

Her father had known the sound of loose spikes by ear and bad bridge timber by touch.

He could walk a stretch of track and tell where water had softened the ground, where rust had eaten deeper than it looked, where a careless man could die because a careful one had been ignored.

That was exactly how he died.

He had warned that a bridge was unsafe, and then he died beneath it.

Fourteen months later, her grandfather died with his old railroad watch stopped beside him, and the rhythm of Jessica’s childhood seemed to stop with it.

Her mother remarried after that.

The man she married did not like railroad stories, railroad photographs, railroad watches, or children who carried grief like a second coat.

He called Jessica dramatic when she kept her grandfather’s chronometer under her pillow.

He called her ungrateful when she asked where her father’s work boots had gone.

He called her grown when she turned twenty.

Then he changed the locks.

There had been no fight big enough to explain it to outsiders.

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