The Widow Given A Cave Found Its Secret When The Blizzard Came-felicia

They gave Silas Marsh’s widow a cave and called it mercy.

That was the word Walter Marsh used because it sounded cleaner than what he had actually done.

Mercy.

It looked respectable when folded into a deed and carried up a Pennsylvania ridge in the hands of a man wearing his good coat.

It sounded reasonable when spoken beside a brother’s widow, especially with a farmhouse glowing below and neighbors close enough to hear rumors but not close enough to see the cold.

Eleanor Marsh stood in the mud halfway up the ridge and watched Walter unfold the paper.

Her black mourning dress was already ruined at the hem.

The clay had climbed it in streaks, and the wind kept pulling at the loose hair beneath her bonnet.

She was not yet used to wearing black.

She was not yet used to being called widow.

Only six weeks earlier, Silas had still been alive in the lower room of the farmhouse, fever-bright and stubborn, promising her that Walter would do right if the worst came.

“He is family,” Silas had whispered, as if the word itself could bind a man.

Eleanor had believed him because she had crossed an ocean believing him.

Silas had brought her from England with his name, his laugh, and a promise that Pennsylvania would be hard but honest.

He had shown her the barns first, proud as a boy.

He had shown her the kitchen garden, the springhouse, the old table where his mother used to knead bread, and the upstairs room where he said morning light came in soft.

“This will be home,” he told her.

For almost a year, it was.

Then fever took him so quickly that even the house seemed startled.

One week he was walking the fence line.

The next, he was sweating through sheets while Eleanor held a tin cup to his mouth and listened to Walter downstairs speaking in low, practical tones with Agnes.

After the burial, the practical tones grew colder.

Her chair at supper moved farther from the stove.

The good pieces of meat no longer found her plate.

Agnes began to sigh when Eleanor entered the pantry.

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