The Ragged Bride At His Cabin Door Made Christmas Hurt Again-felicia

Christmas Eve, 1887, came down over the Wyoming Territory with a heaviness that made even familiar things look strange.

The fence line disappeared first.

Then the wagon ruts.

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Then the road.

By midmorning, the world beyond Eli Mercer’s cabin had turned white enough that a man could almost believe nothing existed past his own porch.

Inside, the fire snapped low in the hearth, the window glass wore a skin of frost, and the air smelled of woodsmoke, pine sap, and the weak coffee Eli had boiled twice because he did not know what else to do with his hands.

His daughter, Hannah, sat at the rough-hewn table arranging pine cones into a row.

She was six years old.

She had Sarah’s eyes when she concentrated and Sarah’s habit of humming without realizing she was doing it.

That morning, she was humming the Christmas carol her mother used to sing while kneading dough near the stove.

Eli kept his back turned because some sounds still had edges.

Two years had passed since fever took Sarah.

Two winters.

Two Christmases that had come to the cabin like unwelcome callers and found him doing only what had to be done.

He fed the stove.

He repaired the roof.

He kept the animals sheltered, the flour dry, the creek path open when weather allowed.

He brushed Hannah’s hair with hands meant for an ax handle and tried not to pull too hard.

He told himself that was love.

Maybe it was.

It was also all he had left.

“Papa,” Hannah said.

Eli did not answer right away.

He was watching the road through the frost, though there was not much road left to see.

“Papa, do you think she’ll come today?”

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