Mountain Widower Saw A Family Building Mud Walls, Then The Wall Fell-felicia

A widowed man from the mountains stopped to watch a family of three—a mother and her two children—building a mud house… he never imagined they would change his life forever.

I had taken County Road 18 more times than I could count, and most mornings it gave me nothing but dust, heat, and the slow sound of Rust’s hooves working over hard ground.

That morning was different.

Image

The sun had already begun pressing down on the New Mexico desert, drawing a sharp smell out of the red dirt and warming the leather of my saddle until it creaked under me.

I was riding south with no special hurry, thinking about fence wire and a broken trough, when Rust lifted his head and slowed before I touched the reins.

The horse saw them before I understood what I was seeing.

A woman and two children were out in the open, trying to raise a wall from mud, straw, and crooked mesquite branches.

At first glance, it looked like a poor family making do.

At the second glance, it looked like a family running out of time.

The woman knelt in the dirt with both hands sunk in a sloppy mixture that was drying too fast under the sun.

She pressed the mud into a frame that had no business standing, packing each gap as if force alone could make it hold.

Her sleeves were rolled past the elbows, and her hands were split at the knuckles.

The boy beside her could not have been more than ten.

He had a beam balanced across his shoulder, though it dragged low enough to show the burden was winning.

He moved the way hungry children move when they are trying to look strong for someone else.

The little girl did not move at all.

She sat several feet away with her knees tight against her chest, her hair dull with dust and her face so pale beneath the grime that I felt a coldness under my ribs despite the heat.

She watched the wall as though she had already decided it would fall.

The thing leaned left.

Badly.

A man who had worked timber, fence, and old barns could see the truth from horseback.

That wall would not last the day.

Maybe not the hour.

I pulled Rust to a stop so hard he tossed his head and snapped the reins against his neck.

“Easy,” I muttered.

The word was for him, but I needed it more.

The woman looked up.

Hardship had taken its share from her before I ever came along.

Sun had cracked her lips.

Dust sat in the lines at the corners of her eyes.

Her dress was stiff with mud near the hem, and one sleeve had torn at the seam.

But her eyes were not empty.

They were tired, angry, careful eyes.

A person can be near the end and still refuse to be pitied.

I took off my hat because that was the only decent way to begin.

Read More