I Carried a Dying Mother Into Town — Then Doc May Opened Her Locket and the Street Went Silent-QuynhTranJP

The wagon wheels screamed against the hard-packed street, and a spray of dust rolled past Doc May’s porch like smoke. The horses were lathered white at the neck. Before the wagon had fully stopped, a tall older man in a black trail coat jumped down so fast one spur struck the step and rang against the wood. Silver hair. Hard mouth. Gloves too fine for a freight driver. He looked once at the woman across my saddle, once at the baby in my arms, and every sound on that street seemed to pull tight.

Doc May still had the locket open in his hand.

The old man did not ask permission. He took one look inside, shut his eyes for half a breath, and said her name the way a man says a prayer after forgetting how.

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—Clara.

Then he looked at me. —Did you move her neck?

—No.

—Good.

That was Charles Beaumont, and every man on that street knew it. The coal-wealthy rancher who owned more grass than some counties owned roads. The man whose brand sat on freight crates, bank drafts, church windows, and election donations from here to Bismarck. He had the kind of power that did not need volume.

Doc May took the woman from the saddle with my help. Charles Beaumont reached for the baby, stopped when she cried against my coat, and let his hand fall. That one small pause told me more than his name had. Whatever else he was, he was not used to being refused by blood.

Inside the surgery, the room smelled of carbolic, boiled linen, tobacco, and old pine. A lamp hissed on the side table though daylight still fought through the curtains. Doc May sent his wife for warm water and goat’s milk. Charles stood at the foot of the bed with both gloves still on, staring at Clara’s bruised jaw like he meant to memorize its shape. Once, his fingers twitched toward her. Once. Then they clenched.

The inscription inside the locket was not a name alone. On one side was a miniature portrait of a dark-haired girl no older than sixteen standing beside a woman with the same eyes. On the other side, scratched into the silver so deep the letters had rough edges, were eight words: If found, take my baby to Charles Beaumont.

He saw me reading it and said, very evenly, —She carved that after her mother died.

The baby had gone from crying to a weak, angry flutter that sounded more like a bird than a child. Doc May’s wife, Ruth, warmed a spoon and trickled goat’s milk over the lower lip. The little mouth worked. Swallowed. Worked again. Milk ran down her chin and onto my wrist. Her fingers caught my thumb the same way they had out in the grass.

Charles watched that too.

—Her name is Lila, he said. —Six weeks old tomorrow.

He took off one glove, laid it flat on the table, then spoke to the room as if he were presenting figures at a bank instead of looking at his daughter half dead on a narrow bed. Clara Beaumont was his only living child. Her mother had died the previous winter. Eighteen months earlier, Clara had married Adrian Mercer, the man Charles had hired to organize shipping accounts and negotiate rail contracts. Polished boots. good handwriting. clean cuffs. Soft voice, Charles said, and his mouth shifted slightly on the last two words, as though cleanliness itself had turned offensive.

At first Mercer had made himself useful. He cut freight losses, charmed buyers, remembered birthdays, brought Clara books from Saint Paul and wrapped them in blue paper. When she laughed, Charles told me, the whole south porch changed color. After her mother died, he had watched that laugh go quiet and let himself believe Adrian Mercer had brought it back.

Then the baby came early during a hard storm in March. Clara bled badly. Mercer’s answer to everything after that was rest. No callers. No church visits. No long rides to the main house. He kept her out in the smaller south-line place under the excuse that the nursery there was warmer and the air easier on the child. Charles accepted that because Clara’s notes kept arriving in her own hand.

Or what he thought was her hand.

At dusk, she woke.

No sudden gasp. No dramatic wrenching upright. Her lashes trembled, her lips moved against cracked skin, and fear entered the room before her voice did. Boot steps sounded in the hall and she flinched so sharply the sheet scraped beneath her fingers. Her eyes found the baby first, then the locket on the table, then her father. When she saw him, the color in her face changed from sick-white to something smaller and more dangerous, the look of a person who had been holding herself together with splinters.

Charles took one step forward.

She whispered, —Do not let him near her.

Not hello. Not Father. Not where am I.

Just that.

Doc May dampened her lips. Ruth placed the fed baby in a willow basket lined with towels near the stove. Steam from a kettle touched the room with a thin warmth that did not reach Clara’s hands. She kept staring at the doorway, every muscle tight under the blankets.

Charles leaned down, but did not touch her. —He will not come through any door I am standing in.

Her throat worked. —He found the ledger pages.

That sentence made Charles turn his head a fraction, the way a wolf turns toward brush movement.

Clara’s gaze slid to the blue shawl, now folded near the chair. —Not all of them.

Ruth brought me a small knife. We laid the shawl across the table and opened the hem with the tip. The stitch work was neat but hurried. Out slid two folded sheets no bigger than playing cards and a narrow strip of onion-skin paper with figures written in brown ink. Even before Charles opened them, I could smell trouble on the room the same way you smell lightning before a storm.

They were cattle transfer tallies. Brand numbers. Rail shipment dates. Withdrawal amounts. Three pages’ worth of cattle sold on paper to buyers who did not exist, with payment routed through Mercer’s private drafts. Below them, in Clara’s tighter hand, was one line: Check south desk false-bottom box. Key under nursery stove brick.

Charles read without speaking. Doc May read over his shoulder. I watched their faces instead of the paper. The doctor’s brows pulled together. Charles did something stranger. He became calmer.

Clara’s words came thin and broken, but each one landed. Two weeks earlier she had gone to Mercer’s desk looking for postage stamps and found shipment ledgers with brands altered after her father had signed them. When she asked about it, Adrian smiled and told her the books were too dull for a new mother. That night, she copied what she could while Lila slept. The next morning she sewed the copies into the shawl.

Mercer noticed the desk had been touched.

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