Widow Given 72 Hours to Leave Finds a Door No One Else Could Open-felicia

Martha Bell was on her knees outside the Custer County courthouse when the town finally finished throwing her away.

The porch boards were warm beneath her hands.

Not comforting warm.

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Cruel warm.

The kind of heat old wood carried after a long afternoon sun, rough enough to bite the skin and leave splinters if a person pressed down too hard.

Martha had pressed down too hard.

She had needed something solid under her palms because the paper in her hand had made the whole street tilt.

Seventy-two hours.

That was what the notice said.

Seventy-two hours to leave the little white house on Cottonwood Street.

Three days to carry away what she could lift.

Three days to abandon what she could not.

Three days to disappear from a town that had smiled politely at her every Sunday while quietly waiting for her to lose the last thing Nathaniel Bell had left behind.

A wagon rolled past in the street, its wheels groaning through the dust.

From the livery came the sour smell of horse sweat, old hay, and leather oil.

Somewhere nearby, a hammer struck wood, steady and indifferent.

Life went on loudly when a woman’s life had just been split in two.

A man stepped around her skirts without slowing.

A woman lifted her hem so it would not brush Martha’s shoulder.

Somebody behind her muttered, “Lord, she takes up the whole walk.”

Martha heard it.

Heavy women heard every whisper because people always assumed shame made them deaf.

She did not cry.

She had already done enough crying for one lifetime.

Nathaniel had been dead eleven months.

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