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He Wouldn’t Let Go of His Little Sister During the Flood — Then a Cowboy Rode In To Save Them

He stayed in the back with one hand on the cooler lid, watching through the windshield as Jack walked around to the driver’s side, and got in without ceremony. He didn’t check his phone. He didn’t radio anyone. He started the truck, pulled back onto the road, and drove. For a few miles, neither of them spoke. Then Noah said, “What happened to the person you were reminded of?” Jack’s hands stay to where they were on the wheel.

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His voice didn’t change in register, but something in it shifted. I told you it doesn’t matter. It does to me, Noah said. If you’re going to take us somewhere, I need to know who you are, not your name. I don’t care about your name. I need to know what happened to you so I know if I can trust you. Silence stretched in the cab.

My wife, Jack said finally. and my daughter, she was about 7 months old. He said it the same way Noah had said his own truth flat, even carefully contained. Four years ago, there was a hospital, a blackout complications. I didn’t get there in time. He paused. I’ve been running that ranch alone since. Noah sat with that.

He looked down at Lily, still breathing in shallow little poles. “What was her name?” he said. your daughter. Another long pause. Grace, Jack said. That’s a pretty name. Yeah, Jack said. It was. The truck moved east through the flat burned country. The AC blew cold and steady. Lily’s breathing slowly gradually began to even out as the temperature in the cab dropped.

Noah felt it happen. And the relief that moved through him was so immense, it nearly made him dizzy. Not joy, not yet, just the loosening of a 3-day terror that had been locked so tight around his chest, he’d almost forgotten what it felt like to breathe without it. He didn’t let go of the cooler lid, but he stopped gripping it quite so hard.

She started crying around noon on the second day, Noah said. Not her regular cry, different like she was asking me something. like she was asking me where mama was and I didn’t know what to tell her. I kept saying I kept saying mama’s coming. I know mama’s coming. And she’d quiet down for a little bit and then she’d start again. He swallowed.

I ran out of things to say after a while. So I just I just held her. I held her and I sang the song Mama used to sing her. I don’t even know if I remembered all the words right. Didn’t matter if you got the words right. Jack said she knew your voice. Noah hadn’t thought about it that way before. He thought about it now.

Our daddy owed money, he said. A lot of money. I don’t understand all of it, but I heard him and mama talking at night when they thought I was asleep. Something about the bank and the house and a man named Greer who was going to take everything if daddy didn’t pay. That’s where we were going when the accident happened.

We were driving to my aunt’s place in Midland. Mama had a sister there. I’ve never met her. His voice had lost its careful flatness. Now the words coming quicker. I don’t know if she even knows about us. I don’t know if she’d want us. Mama and her aunt didn’t talk much. Daddy said there was a falling out a long time ago, but mama said family was family and when you had no one else, you went back to family. Your mama was right about that.

Jack said. But what if her sister doesn’t want us? Noah said. What if she says no? What do they do with kids who’ve got no one? Do they really separate them brothers and sisters? Jack’s jaw worked for a moment. It happens, he said. When there’s not enough room in one place, when the system gets backed up.

It happens sometimes. That can’t happen, Noah said. It came out fierce, almost angry. I won’t let that happen. I don’t care what I have to do. I don’t care if I have to run. I’m not letting anyone take Lily somewhere I can’t follow. Jack glanced in the rear view mirror. His eyes met Noah’s. I hear you, he said.

Do you? Or are you just saying that? I hear you, Jack said again. I’m not just saying it. Noah held his gaze in the mirror for a moment, measuring him. Then he looked back down at Lily. She’s got three teeth coming in, he said. Top two, and one on the bottom. Mama said she’d be chewing solid food by fall.

She loves mashed sweet potato. She hates peas. She laughs every time you blow on her stomach. His voice had gone quiet again. Careful and even like he was reciting important information someone needed to write down. She’s scared of the dark, but if you leave a light on low, she sleeps fine. She likes being rocked on the left side, not the right.

She always grabs for your hair with her right hand first. He paused. I know all of this. I know everything about her. I’ve been the one watching her since mama got sick during the last couple of months. Daddy worked the early shift at the mill and mama couldn’t always get up, so I’d get Lily in the morning and I’d get her dressed and fed, and I’d sit with her till mama felt well enough to take over.

I know how to care for her. I don’t need anybody else to do it. Jack said nothing for a long moment. You know, he said finally. You’re about the most capable 8-year-old I’ve ever met. I’m not trying to be capable, Noah said. I’m just trying to not lose her. Jack drove. The ranch road turned off the highway about a mile before Carol Bradock’s property.

And Jack slowed at the turnoff and looked out at the flat brown land stretching in every direction and said nothing at all for a while. Then he said, “I want you to know something before we get to Carol’s.” What? Whatever happens next, whatever the system tries to do, I’m going to tell Carol what you told me about keeping you two together.

Carol knows people. She’s been in this county her whole life. She knows the right people and the wrong people, and she knows how to make noise in the right places. He paused. I ain’t making you any promises, son. I don’t have the right to make promises I can’t keep. But I’m not going to just drop you off and drive away.

You understand? Noah looked at the back of his head, the dark hat, the steady hands on the wheel. Why not? He said, “What do you mean? Why wouldn’t you just drop us off? You don’t know us. You don’t owe us anything. You already gave us water and food and a ride. That’s more than anybody else did in 3 days.

” His voice was very quiet. Why wouldn’t you just drop us off? Jack didn’t answer right away. The truck slowed as they turned down a dirt road and dust lifted up around the tires and the late afternoon light went long and red across the flat country. “Because your mama was right,” Jack said.

“Family is family, and when you’ve got no one left, you don’t just keep driving.” He pulled up in front of a white frame house and stopped the truck. Noah stayed where he was a moment, his hand on the cooler lid, his eyes on the back of Jack Reynolds’s head. Then he looked down at Lily, who had finally truly drifted into real sleep, her small face slack and soft and trusting.

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