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“There’s Nothing Left…” She Whispered — Then a Cowboy’s Courage Changed Everything

Here you go, son. Chew slow now. Noah chewed, swallowed, opened his mouth like a baby bird for the next bite. He ain’t much of a talker, Clara explained. He’s shy. That’s all right. I ain’t much of one either. Might be the two of us won’t wear each other out. Clara almost smiled again, bigger this time, a whole quarter of a smile.

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He fed them slow and careful. Clara ate like she was trying to be polite about it and failing stuffing bites in as fast as her small mouth would take them. Noah kept falling asleep with his fork halfway up. “All right, mister,” Caleb said gently, catching the fork before it fell. bed for you, “Mama,” Noah mumbled.

“I know, son. I know.” He carried the boy to his own bed, the one he had not shared with the soul since his wife died, and laid him down on the quilt, pulled off his little boots, drew the blanket up to his chin. “Clara, you sleep right here next to your brother. I’ll take the floor by the stove.

You’re too big for the floor, Caleb. I’ve slept on harder ground than my own floor plenty of times, honey. Caleb. Yes, ma’am. She was standing at the foot of the bed, her small hand resting on Noah’s ankle through the quilt, anchoring him, maybe. Or maybe anchoring herself. Could I ask you something? Anything, Clara? Did you really mean it? What you said at the grave about staying? Caleb Reed knelt down at the foot of the bed.

So, he was eye to eyee with the 8-year-old girl who had survived three days in a dead wagon alongside her little brother. Miss Clara, he said quiet. I have not meant anything more in my life. Cross your heart. Cross my heart and hope to die and hope to die. She considered him long and careful the way a person does when they have learned early that grown men lie and the world breaks promises.

Then she climbed up onto the bed next to Noah, pulled the quilt up over both of them, laid her cheek on the pillow, and closed her eyes. “Good night, Caleb. Good night, Miss Clara. Good night, Mama,” she whispered quieter still. Caleb Reed stood in his own doorway a long time after the children fell asleep, watching the rise and fall of two small breaths under his quilt, and the hard shell he had been living inside of for 6 years, began very slowly to crack.

Caleb didn’t sleep that first night. He couldn’t. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw that wagon again, the vultures, the girl’s face. He sat on the floor by the stove with his back against the wall and his Winchester across his knees, and he watched the door like a man waiting for the devil himself to knock.

Somewhere past midnight, he heard small feet on the plank floor. Caleb, I’m right here, Miss Clara. Noah had a bad dream. He cry. He don’t cry no more. He just shakes. Caleb was on his feet before she finished the sentence. He followed her back to the bed. The little boy was curled in a ball, trembling head to foot.

His eyes squeezed shut so tight it looked painful. “Noah,” Caleb said soft as he could make his rough voice go. “Noah, son, it’s Caleb. You’re safe, boy.” The boy didn’t answer. “He don’t talk when he gets like this,” Clara whispered. “It lasts a while.” “How long a while, honey?” “Sometimes till morning.” Caleb sat down on the edge of the bed. didn’t touch the child.

Just sat there so the boy could feel the weight of a grown man beside him without the shock of a hand. “All right, son. I ain’t going nowhere. You shake it out. Take all the time you need.” He hummed a tune then. No words to it. Just an old thing his own mama used to hum back in Missouri when he was the one having bad dreams.

He hadn’t thought of it in 30 years. Didn’t know he still remembered. Slow as molasses, the shaking in the little boy’s body eased up. After a long while, Noah’s small hand crept out from under the quilt and found Caleb’s thumb, closed around it like a man grabbing a rope over deep water. Caleb’s throat pulled tight. “That’s right, son. You hold on.

You hold on tight as you need to.” Clara climbed up on the bed beside her brother. She looked at Caleb across the little boy’s dark head. “Mr. Read Caleb. Honey, you’re real good at this. Ain’t nothing to it, Clara. Yes, there is. She said very matterof fact. There’s people who sit with you in the dark, and there’s people who don’t.

You’re a sitting kind. Caleb didn’t trust himself to answer that. By the time the first gray light came through the oil cloth window, Noah was finally sleeping deep, his small fist still wrapped around Caleb’s thumb. Clara had fallen asleep, too. Her hand flung out across her brother’s back like a little guard.

Caleb sat still as a stone for another hour, just so he wouldn’t wake them. When the sun was full up, he eased his thumb loose and stood on legs that had gone to pins and needles. He pulled the quilt higher over the two of them. And then he remembered something. The mother’s things. He had left them in the wagon.

Hadn’t had the heart to go through them yesterday with the children watching. But he needed to know. If there was a shadow man coming, he needed to know everything he could. He stepped outside and walked to where he had tied the horse. The saddle bag on the offside was still bulging. He’d grabbed what little there was from under the wagon seat before they rode out.

a carpet bag, a small tin box, a leather wrapped bundle. He carried them back inside and set them on the plank table. Poured himself a cup of yesterday’s coffee reheated black on the stove, sat down. The carpet bag held clothes, a woman’s good dress, folded careful, two small shirts for Noah, a pinn for Clara, a hairbrush with dark hair still tangled in it. He set that aside gentle.

The tin box held money. He counted it twice. $1742. Not a fortune, but not nothing. The leather bundle was the one that changed everything. He untied the cord. Inside was a journal bound in calf skin and a folded piece of heavy paper sealed with red wax and something hard wrapped in an oil cloth rag.

He unwrapped the rag first, a claim marker, silver, about the size of his palm, stamped with a number and a date and a county seal. His breath went out slow. Lord have mercy. He had seen a silver claim marker exactly once in his life. A fellow up in Deadwood had flashed one in a saloon and been dead in an alley by sunrise.

A claim like this wasn’t a man’s life. It was a family’s a small empire if it paid out even half of what the markers promised. He turned it over. There was a name engraved on the back. E. Whitfield Elizabeth the mother. Caleb set the marker down careful as a man sets down a rattlesnake. Then he picked up the journal.

He opened to the last pages first. A dying woman writes at the end. That’s where a man finds what he needs to know. The handwriting was spidery, sickness in every line of it. But the words were clear enough. If anyone reads this who is not the shadow the woman had written, please know my children’s names. Clara is 8.

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