Five Orphans Ran to His Fence Before Winter, and the County Came-felicia

The children came out of the dust like ghosts.

Silas Thorne was bent over his mare’s hoof when the sound reached him.

It was thin at first, stretched by wind and distance until it almost sounded like a hawk crying over the red Oklahoma trail.

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He had one hand under the mare’s fetlock and the other wrapped around a hammer he had owned longer than he had owned the house.

The shoe was bent.

The nail heads were worn.

A better man, or at least a richer one, would have thrown the whole thing away and bought a new set before the first hard freeze came.

Silas did not have that kind of money.

He had a mare, a roof, a little flour, a stove that smoked when the wind came from the north, and enough grief in the rooms behind him to make the whole house feel occupied by absence.

Then the cry came again.

This time, it was not a hawk.

Silas lifted his head.

Five children were coming down the trail.

Not walking.

Running badly.

Stumbling.

Falling forward and catching themselves because whatever waited behind them was worse than the pain under their feet.

The oldest was a girl, twelve at most, thin as a fence rail and too serious in the face to be as young as she was.

She carried a baby wrapped in a faded blanket, one arm under the little body and one hand pressed to the back of the baby’s head.

Behind her came a barefoot boy with blood marking the dust where he stepped.

A smaller girl ran with both hands knotted in her own skirt.

The last boy cried so hard his mouth stayed open even when no sound came out.

The baby did not cry at all.

That silence reached Silas before the children did.

It struck him in a place he had kept boarded shut for three years.

He had known the sounds children made.

His house had once held them.

Little feet on plank floors.

Tin cups being set down too hard.

A whispered argument over who got the warmer blanket.

His wife laughing from the stove while the girls tried to help and spilled more flour than they used.

Then fever came through before winter, and one by one those sounds disappeared.

First his wife’s voice went thin.

Then his oldest girl stopped asking for water.

Then the baby of his own house, not much bigger than the bundle in that strange child’s arms, went still before dawn.

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