Little Boy Begged A Cowboy To Carry His Mama Through The Snow-felicia

Mama can’t walk anymore, the little boy whispered. Mama can’t walk anymore. The cowboy carried them both into his cabin.

By late afternoon, the road outside the frontier town had almost vanished under snow.

The ruts were still there if a person knew where to look, dark seams under a white crust, but the wind kept dragging loose powder across them until earth and sky seemed stitched together in gray.

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Nell Hawthorne walked with a flour sack across her back and her son beside her.

She was not yet thirty, though that winter had done its best to make her look older.

Snow clung to the dark hair along her cheeks.

Her breath came in tight little clouds.

Every few steps, her left boot landed wrong.

Caleb noticed.

He noticed everything, because children who have lost comfort early learn to read the world before the world speaks.

His coat was too thin for that weather, and his mittens had worn soft at the fingertips.

Still, he did not complain.

He stayed close to his mother and glanced up whenever her breathing hitched.

The flour sack rode low against Nell’s shoulders.

The strap had rubbed a dark line into the wool of her dress.

She had shifted it twice already, pretending she only wanted a better hold, not that her hands were shaking.

The town lay behind them with its closed doors, its smoke, its hard windows.

Ahead stood a narrow cabin beyond a crooked fence and a line of bare trees.

Smoke curled from its chimney.

Nell fixed her eyes on that smoke.

Smoke meant a hearth.

A hearth meant heat.

Heat meant she might rest her leg without Caleb seeing how bad it had become.

“Mama,” Caleb asked softly, “does your leg hurt?”

She looked down at him and gave him what was left of a smile.

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