Mama can’t walk anymore, the little boy whispered-felicia

By late afternoon in the winter of 1887, the road outside the little frontier town had turned the same color as the sky.

Gray above.

No photo description available.

White below.

And a mean wind dragged snow across the ruts like flour spilled from a torn sack.

Nell Hawthorne kept walking anyway.

She was not yet thirty, but that road made her look older.

A heavy flour sack was strapped across her back, the rough cloth cutting into her shoulder through her worn coat.

Her dark hair had slipped loose and stuck damply to her cheeks, and every breath she took came out thin and white in the cold.

Beside her walked her six-year-old son, Ben.

The boy’s boots were too small.

The soles had nearly worn through.

Still, he never complained.

He simply looked up at his mother every few steps and asked the same question.

“Are we close?”

Nell always gave the same answer.

“Almost.”

The truth was she didn’t know.

They had left Red Creek two days earlier.

Her husband had died of fever in October, and the small room they rented above the general store had been taken back by the owner before Christmas.

There was no family left.

No money.

No place to stay.

Someone had told her there might be work in Mercy Crossing, a little settlement another twenty miles west.

Twenty miles sounded impossible.

But impossible was sometimes all a person had left.

By sunset, the snow had grown deeper.

Nell’s steps slowed.

Ben reached for her hand.

“Mama?”

She tried to smile.

“I’m all right.”

She wasn’t.

She had not eaten a full meal in three days.

She had given most of the bread to Ben.

Her legs trembled with every step.

Read More