The Girl In The Well Knew Winter Was Coming. Nobody Believed Her – olive

Kicked out of her home at 14, the girl dug a cave in the well; when spring came, she was the only one left alive.

Emma was fourteen when she learned that being right could be lonelier than being wrong.

She had worn-out sneakers, a gray coat that never quite kept out the cold, and the kind of quiet face adults mistook for obedience.

Image

For weeks, she had watched the mountain change.

The creek had started pulling back from its banks too early.

The ants behind the shed abandoned their old trails and moved in frantic black lines toward higher ground.

The rabbits left the low brush before the frost touched it.

The birds vanished from the pines while the afternoons were still bright enough to fool people who only looked at the sky.

Emma did not only look at the sky.

Her mother had taught her better.

Before she died, Emma’s mother had shown her how to read a season by the smallest things.

The way a dog tucked its nose under its tail before cold weather.

The way a creek sounded hollow before a hard freeze.

The way birds left in silence when the world was preparing to close.

Her mother used to write those signs in a small notebook with a blue cover.

Planting dates.

Frost warnings.

First snow.

Last thaw.

The year the peach tree bloomed too soon and then lost every flower in one terrible night.

Emma kept that notebook tucked under a loose floorboard after her mother was gone.

It was the only thing in the house that still felt like instruction instead of memory.

David, her father, never asked about it.

He had stopped asking about anything useful two years earlier, after the funeral.

He came home with liquor on his breath, work dirt on his boots, and anger looking for a place to land.

Sometimes it landed on the cabinets.

Sometimes it landed in the silence between them.

Too often, it landed on Emma.

He did not always hit her.

That was part of what made the house hard to explain.

People think cruelty needs noise to be real.

It does not.

Sometimes cruelty is a man eating the last biscuit without looking at his daughter.

Sometimes it is a coat left hanging by the door while a child shivers in last year’s sleeves.

Sometimes it is saying her mother’s name like an insult because grief has made you too weak to say your own.

Read More