Eight Starving Children Chewed Grass Until One Stranger Stopped-felicia

The first thing Maren Voss saw was not the broken fence.

It was not the dry creek bed either, though the creek lay open in the earth like an old scar, cracked white under the late afternoon sun.

It was the grass moving in eight small hands.

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For a moment, her mind tried to make it ordinary.

Children gathered by a fence line.

Children pulling weeds.

Children crouched low because they had found something in the dust.

Then one of them lifted a fistful of yellow grass to his mouth and began to chew, and the world became something Maren could not ride past.

She pulled the mule so sharply the animal snorted and threw its head against the bit.

Dust moved over the flats in thin pale sheets.

The wind had that dry scrape to it, the kind that got under a collar and into the corners of a person’s eyes, and it carried no smell of supper smoke, no sound of livestock being called in, no human voice from any house nearby.

Only grass tearing.

Only small jaws moving.

Maren stayed in the saddle longer than she meant to.

Not because she did not care.

Because caring, all at once, can freeze a body as surely as fear.

She had seen hunger before.

She had seen widows water soup until the pot looked ashamed of itself.

She had seen men pretend not to notice when their wives gave the larger portion to the children.

But this was different.

This was not hunger waiting at a table.

This was hunger down on its knees in the dirt, teaching children to chew what a horse would hardly bother with.

There were eight of them.

The youngest could not have been more than three years old, with one fist pressed against the ground and the other around a pale stem.

The oldest was a boy with a narrow, watchful face and eyes that had learned to measure danger before they measured kindness.

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