Hungry Girl Asked A Rancher For Leftovers—Then He Saw Her Mama-felicia

008-year-old Emma Whitmore pressed her trembling hand against her little brother’s mouth to muffle his hungry cries.

They were under a merchant’s wagon, folded into the dust where nobody wanted to look.

For two days, Emma had listened to boots pass within inches of her face.

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Fine boots, muddy boots, work boots with spurs that chimed like tiny bells.

Every pair belonged to somebody who had somewhere to go and enough strength to get there.

Emma and Tommy had neither.

Their mama lay behind the livery stable, fevered and weak, hidden on a bed of ruined blankets near old hay bales that smelled of mold and horses.

The town of Dusty Creek moved around them like a machine that had no place for hungry children.

Wagon wheels creaked.

A coffee pot rattled at the food stall.

Men argued over feed and tack while women held cloth up to the light and decided what they could afford.

Emma had learned something awful in those three days.

A town could be full of people and still leave you alone.

Tommy whimpered beneath her hand.

She pressed her lips close to his hair.

“Hush now,” she whispered. “Just a little longer.”

His small body trembled against her side.

“You said that before.”

Emma closed her eyes.

She had.

She had said it yesterday when his stomach cramped so hard he curled up like a puppy.

She had said it that morning when the sun came over the rooftops and lit the wagon slats above their heads.

She had said it because a big sister had to put words where food ought to be.

Their mama had always told them not to beg.

Clara Whitmore believed pride was the last clean thing poor folks could keep.

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