The Boarding House Promise That Gave Jane Porter a Future Again-felicia

Jane Porter arrived in the mining settlement with eleven cents in her hand and no place left to sleep.

The autumn wind followed her down the muddy street, cold enough to sting her ears and sharp enough to push coal smoke into her throat.

The wooden buildings on either side looked worn out by the same weather that had worn out the people who lived there.

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Porches sagged.

Windows rattled.

Mud clung to the wheels of wagons and to the hems of women’s skirts.

Men passed her with black dust ground into their sleeves, their collars, and the cracks around their eyes.

Jane kept walking.

She had learned that if a woman looked lost, people treated her like something loose in the road.

If she stood straight, at least some of them hesitated before stepping over her.

Her dress had not been washed in nearly two weeks.

The cuffs were gray at the edge.

The fabric had thinned where her elbows bent.

She was hungry enough that the smell of cooking from one open doorway almost made her stop, but she had nothing to offer except the little stack of coins pressed into her palm.

Eleven cents.

Not enough for a bed.

Not enough for a future.

Barely enough to remind her she was still trying.

At the far end of the street stood a boarding house with a narrow porch.

It was not grand.

It was not new.

But the boards had been swept, and the windows had been wiped clean enough to catch the pale afternoon light.

A man stood on the porch with a broom in his hand.

He was not sweeping like a man trying to look busy.

He worked the corners carefully, pushing dust out from the cracks with the patience of someone who believed small things mattered.

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