Widow With Five Girls Meets a Lonely Rancher by a Broken Wagon-felicia

A Widow With Five Daughters Sat Crying by a Broken Wagon — Then a Lonely Rancher Said “Then I Have Six Reasons to Smile” and Changed All Their Lives

The dust had not yet settled when Benjamin Quincy heard the crying.

It came thin across the fence line, carried by spring wind and the dry scrape of grass against grass.

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He had been hauling a fence post on his shoulder, his shirt stuck to his back, his gloves dark with old sweat and fresh dirt.

At first he thought it was the wagon itself making that sound.

A cracked wheel could complain like a living thing when the weight above it shifted wrong.

Then the sound rose again.

A woman.

Benjamin lowered the post until one end struck the ground with a hollow thud.

Out on a ranch, a man learned to know what belonged and what did not.

Wind belonged.

Cattle lowing beyond the rise belonged.

Leather creaking, horses stamping, boards shrinking in the sun, all of it belonged.

But a woman crying near a broken wagon did not belong to any ordinary afternoon.

He took off his hat and wiped his forehead with his sleeve.

The trail ran near his property line, rutted deep from wagons that had cut through after rain and baked there under hard weather.

He could see the white bow of a covered wagon first.

Then the crooked lean of it.

Then the wheel.

It sat wrong in the dust, twisted out like an ankle gone bad.

The left side of the wagon sagged low, and beneath it the axle had split where the wood had finally given up.

Beside the ruined wheel sat a woman with both hands over her face.

Her shoulders moved once, then again, not in loud weeping but in the kind of sound a person makes when they have tried not to cry for too long.

Five little girls stood around her.

Benjamin slowed.

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