Yes, you’re the baker. Yes, I heard about your husband in the spring. And then he glanced down at her at the soft heaviness of her, the body that the town read as failure, and that he perhaps was reading differently. And then the baby. I heard about the baby, too. Clara did not trust herself to speak. She nodded.
I’m sorry for your losses, Mrs. Whitmore. Thank you, sir. He nodded. He started to turn away. Then he stopped and he turned back and he set his hat on her table upside down the way a man sets down a thing he has decided to bargain with. How much for what’s left? He said for what? For all of it? He gestured at her table.
The ry loaves, the white, the remaining rolls, the cookies. All of it. How much? Mr. Boon, you don’t Mrs. Whitmore. My daughter just ate the first solid food she has eaten in 3 months. I’ve been trying to feed her broth with a spoon like she was a kitten. I want every cookie on that tray and every loaf on that table and I will pay whatever you ask.
Clara looked at him. He looked back at her. He was not flirting with her. She knew the difference even now, even rusty as she was. He was bargaining with the only currency he had left, which was money because he had run out of every other kind. $2.40. 40 she said for all of it. That’s not enough. That’s what it costs. It’s not enough. Mr.
Boon, $3, he said, and I will load it into my wagon myself. He paid her in silvers. He stacked her bread into the bed of his small buckboard with a care that was almost funny in a man his size. Placing each loaf as if it were a sleeping infant. He wrapped the cookie tray in her muslin and set it on the seat beside where Maisie would sit.
The child had not moved from the bench. She still held the remaining half of her star. She was eating it in slow, deliberate bites, the way a person eats who has forgotten how, and is teaching themselves over again from the beginning. When he had finished loading, Elias Boon came back to Clare’s table. Mrs. Whitmore.
Sir, I would like to ask you something, and I want you to know before I ask it that I will not be offended if you say no, and I will not I will not think anything of you for it either way. All right. He turned the hat in his hands. My ranch is about 11 mi north of here, up past the second ridge, where the country opens out toward the river.
I have a hired man, Tully, who lives in the bunk house and helps with the cattle. There’s a cookhouse and a main house and a little garden that’s mostly weeds since since last year. I don’t know how to feed my daughter, ma’am. I have tried. I have prayed. I have begged. Today is the first day in 6 months I have seen her swallow food and look at another human being’s face.
And the thing she swallowed was your cookie. And the face she looked at was yours. Clara waited. She did not trust her voice. I would like to hire you, he said, to come out to the ranch, to cook, to bake, to to be in the house with her, in whatever way you think might help. I will pay you fairly. I will build whatever you need built.
There is a small bedroom off the kitchen that was meant for a cook. My wife had it set up that way before she Anyway, it has a door that locks from the inside. You would have your privacy. You would have your own room in your own time, and I would not be in it unless you asked me to be. Mr. Boon, please.
He said, I know what this town will say. I know what they will say about you. I have heard what they already say about you, and they are wrong, and I am sorry. But my daughter is dying, Mrs. Whitmore. I am watching my daughter die in slow motion in my own house, and I do not know what else to try. Clara looked across the street.
The three women were still there. Edna Pel, Annie Krauss, Lahy Vain. They had been joined now by a fourth, the wife of the postmaster, whose name Clara could never remember. Four women on a boardwalk watching a widow be propositioned in broad daylight by a grieving rancher. And Clara could see their faces from across the street, and she could see what was already being decided about her, what story was already being written, and what role she was being cast into.
She thought, “If I say yes, that is the end of me in this town.” She thought, “I am already at the end of me in this town.” she thought on the bench of a little girl eating a cookie. Mr. Boon. Yes, ma’am. I have a kitchen in town. I have a cabin. I have an oven. If I leave, I will lose my custom here. The bread I sell on Saturdays is most of what I live on.
I will pay you what you would have made in a year, and we will call that the first month. That’s too much. It is not enough either. She looked at him. She looked at the child on the bench who was holding the last bite of cookie in her small fingers and was no longer eating it but was simply looking at it the way a person looks at a small wonderful thing they are not yet sure they are allowed to keep.
I’ll come said on a trial 2 weeks if it works we’ll talk about longer if it doesn’t you bring me back and we shake hands and no harm done. Two weeks. Two weeks. When? Tomorrow. I’ll need to close up the cabin and pack a trunk. I’ll come for you at dawn. Don’t come at dawn. Come at 9:00. I’ll have the trunk ready. And the chickens given to the Pritchards. 9:00.
- He put his hat on. He looked for a moment as if he might say something else. Thank you, perhaps, or God bless you. Though Clara did not believe in either of those phrases anymore, and the second one would have made her angry. But he didn’t say either. He nodded once formally, the way a man nods at a transaction completed.
Then he walked back to his wagon and lifted his daughter into the seat beside the cookie tray, climbed up himself, and clucked to the buckskin mayor, and they pulled away up the street toward the north road. Clara watched them go. When the wagon was the size of a postage stamp at the far end of the street, she turned around to fold up her table and she found that Edna Pel had crossed the street.
Edna was standing about 4 ft from Clara’s table, her arms folded across her chest, her chin lifted. Mrs. Whitmore, Mrs. Pel. That looked like quite a conversation. He bought my bread. He bought more than bread. He bought my bread. Mrs. El honey. Ednapel smiled. It was the smile of a woman who has been waiting all morning for an excuse and has just been handed one with both hands.
I have lived in this town for 31 years. I have seen widowers and I have seen widows and I have seen what happens when the two get in a room together. And I am telling you this as a Christian woman speaking to another Christian woman that you would do well to stay on this side of the ridge. I’m not on either side of the ridge, Mrs. Pel.
You will be. I’m folding my table. He has a child. I know he has a child. That child has lost her mother. That child does not need a a stranger coming in and confusing her with cookies and pretending to Clara set down the leg of the table. She did not raise her voice. She had not raised her voice in 4 months, and she was not going to start now.
But she looked at Edna Pel straight on, the way she had not looked at her in all the times Edna had stood on a boardwalk and laughed at the way her dress fit. And she said very quietly, “That child ate today, Mrs. Pel, for the first time in 3 months. She ate a cookie. I gave her the cookie. And while she was eating it, you stood across the street and called it embarrassing.
I heard you. The whole market heard you. So before you tell me what that child needs, I would like you to take a moment and consider whether you are in fact the person who ought to be telling anyone what a hurting child needs. Edna Pel’s mouth opened. It closed. It opened again. Well, she said, “Well, I see. Good day, Mrs. Pel.
You will regret this, Mrs. Whitmore. I have regretted most things, Mrs. Pel. I’ll add it to the list.” She folded up the table. She loaded the empty wagon. She walked the 11 blocks back to her cabin with the wind at her back and her bonnet strings cutting into her chin. And she did not look behind her once, and she did not cry, and she did not let her hands tremble.
Not even when she got inside and shut the door and leaned against it. She made it as far as the kitchen table. Then she sat down in her husband’s chair, the one she had not been able to bring herself to sit in since March, and she put her face in her hands, and she shook for a long time without making any sound at all, because the cabin was small, and the walls were thin, and she did not, even now, trust the town not to hear her.
When she could breathe again, she got up and put water on for tea, and began methodically to pack a trunk. She packed her two good dresses, and her one work dress, and her aprons. She packed her wooden spoons, which had been her mother’s, and her rolling pin, which had been her grandmother’s. She packed the small tin, where she kept her recipe cards, written in her own slanted hand.
She packed a wool shaw Tom had given her the first winter they were married, and after she packed it, she took it out again and held it for a minute, and then she packed it back in. She did not pack Samuel’s blanket. The blanket Hattie had wrapped him in for those 41 minutes. The blanket she still kept folded in the bottom drawer of the bureau where she could not see it, but where she knew every minute of every day exactly where it was. She left that where it was.
She would come back for it, or she wouldn’t. She would decide later. She walked next door at dusk and asked Mrs. Pritchard if she could leave the chickens with her for 2 weeks. Mrs. Pritchard, who was a small, fierce woman with a long gray braid, listened to Clara’s careful explanation and then said only, “I’ll feed your chickens, child. You go on.
” “You won’t ask where I’m going.” “I heard where you’re going. The whole town heard where you’re going.” “Mrs. Pritchard.” Clara Whitmore. The old woman put a hand on Clara’s wrist. Her grip was surprisingly strong. I have lived 81 years on this earth. I have seen people get talked about for doing wicked things.
And I’ve seen people get talked about for doing kind things. And I’ll tell you a secret. The talk sounds the same. You can’t tell from the talk which is which. The only way to know is to look at the thing being done. So you go do the thing and you let the talk be talk. It’s only wind. Clara felt her eyes sting. Thank you. Don’t thank me.
Feed that child and eat a little yourself while you’re at it, honey. You’ve gone thin in the face. I’m not thin anywhere else. No, you’re not, and there is not a thing wrong with you for it. Now, go home and sleep if you can. She went home. She did not sleep. Not really. She lay in the bed she had shared with Tom, and she stared at the dark ceiling, and she thought about a little girl on a bench eating a cookie one careful bite at a time.
And she thought about a man in a hat with riverstone eyes asking her in front of a whole town to please, please come help him save his child. At some point before dawn she did sleep a little. And in the sleep she did not dream of Samuel for the first time in 4 months. And when she woke up she was not sure if that was a kindness or a betrayal and she lay there in the gray light trying to decide and could not.
The buckboard came up the track at 5 minutes before 9. Elias Boon was driving it. Maisie sat beside him in a clean coat with the collar turned up against the cold. The cookie tray was no longer on the seat. The cookie tray, Clara saw as he climbed down to load her trunk, was on Maisy’s lap. It was empty except for crumbs.
The child was holding it carefully with both hands as if it were something she did not intend to give back. Elias touched his hat. Mrs. Whitmore. Mr. Boon. Drunk in the back? Please. He lifted the trunk. He lifted it easily, like it weighed nothing, though Clara had nearly broken her back, dragging it to the door.
He set it in the bed of the buckboard and lashed it down with a piece of leather cord. Then he came around and offered her his hand to help her up onto the seat. She hesitated. “Mrs. Whitmore, I’m a heavy woman, Mr. Boon. The step is high. Step?” He looked at her. Really looked for the first time, not at her face, but at her, the whole of her.
and his expression did not change. “Ma’am,” he said, “I have lifted balling calves out of mud holes that weighed three times what you do, and I have done it one-handed while holding the rope of a horse trying to kick my teeth in. With respect, you are not going to be the thing that gives me trouble today.” He held out his hand again. Clara put her hand in his.
His palm was warm and dry and rough with calluses, and it closed around her fingers like a thing meant for the purpose. She stepped up. The wagon dipped under her weight and then writed itself, and she sat down beside Maisie on the bench seat, and Maisie did not look at her, but Maisie did not look away either.
And when the wagon began to move in the cabin and the town and the boardwalk, and the women on it all began to fall behind, Clara felt something in her chest that she had not felt since the morning Tom went down to the creek. It was not happiness. She was not ready for happiness. It was the first quiet sliver of something underneath the grief, like the first faint warmth at the very back of a stove that has been cold for a long time.
And she did not name it because she was afraid that if she named it, she would lose it. She just sat with it. The wagon rolled north out of Blackthorn Ridge with a baker, a rancher, and a silent child holding an empty cookie tray, and behind them the wind came down off the ridge and rattled the shutters of the houses on Main Street.
And on the boardwalk of the boarding house, Edna Pel stood at her window in her dressing gown with a cup of coffee in her hand and watched them go. She did not say anything. She did not have to. The story was already starting to tell itself. All up and down the street, in the way stories do in small towns, passed from kitchen to kitchen like a bowl of something hot.
And by the time the wagon crested the second ridge and disappeared from view, half of Blackthornne Ridge had already decided what it meant. The other half had not yet been told. But they would be by supper time. By by supper time, every soul in town would know that the widow Whitmore had ridden out of Blackthornne Ridge in the wagon of a grieving rancher, and that she had not looked back once, and that the only witness who would say a good word for her was an old blacksmith and his wife who fed her chickens. In the wagon, 11 mi into the
rising country, Maisie Boon shifted slightly on the bench seat. Her small wool stocking knee came to rest just barely, just enough to feel against the side of Clara Whitmore’s thigh. Clara did not move. She did not move for the whole rest of the 11 miles. She sat very still, and she let the child lean, and she watched the road, and she thought about how a person can lose everything she ever loved, and then on a Saturday at a market in the worst town in the territory, kneel down in the cold beside a wagon, and offer a cookie shaped like
a star, and how a single bite of that cookie can change the direction of a whole life, and another life, and a third life that the woman taking the bite was not even sure she wanted yet to keep. The Buckskin mayor pulled them up the long slope toward the second ridge. Behind them, the town grew smaller. Ahead of them, the country opened, and Clara Witmore, 28 years old, widow, baker, heavier than any woman in Blackthornne Ridge had decided she had a right to be, rode toward the rest of her life with her hands folded in her lap
and a child’s knee resting warm against her leg and the wind in her face. And she did not even once look back. The road north out of Blackthornne Ridge climbed for the first six miles and then leveled out onto a long sage flat that ran toward the river. And on that flat the wind died down to almost nothing, and the only sound was the buckskin mayor’s hooves on the hard ground and the small, steady creek of the wagon’s right rear wheel, which Elias Boon had been meaning to grease for a month.
Clara did not speak. She had decided sometime during the first mile that she would not be the one to break the silence. Maisy’s knee was still resting against her thigh. It was a small contact, almost nothing, but Clara could feel through the wool of the child’s stocking the warmth of a small living leg, and she did not want to do anything that might make the leg pull away.
It was Elias who finally spoke. They had passed the second ridge by then. The country had opened the way he had said it would, and Clara could see far down on the river a stand of cottonwoods that had not yet given up all their leaves, and beyond them a long low rise of pasture that ran to the foot of the hills. That’s the place, he said.
The cottonwoods, the house sits just past them. It’s pretty country. It is when it isn’t trying to kill you. He said it without smiling, and Clara understood it was not a joke. He flicked the rains lightly across the mayor’s back. My wife planted the cottonwoods, he said after another long stretch. Eight of them.
The summer we married. They were just whips then, no taller than her waist. She said she wanted to be able to see the trees from the kitchen window. So I dug eight holes and we carried water to them every evening for two summers. They took everyone. That’s a lot of water. It was. He did not say anything else about his wife. Clara did not ask.
She had learned with Tom that grief was not a thing you wanted handed back to you by strangers, even kind ones, and she suspected Elias had learned the same. The house, when they came to it, was not what she had expected. She had been picturing a homesteaders’s cabin, a one- room thing with a sawed roof and a stove pipe. Instead, what stood beyond the cottonwoods was a long, low ranch house built of plained lumber with a porch that ran the full length of the front and a stone chimney at each end.
The windows had real glass in them. There was a small garden plot to the south side, overgrown now with brown stalks of something that had gone to seed in August and never been pulled. Past the house, she could see a bunk house, a cookhouse with its own chimney, a barn that needed paint, and four pole corral laid out in a square.
It was a real ranch, not a homestead, a working operation. She glanced at Elias. He was watching her face, not quite directly, the way a man watches when he is trying not to be caught watching. It used to be my uncle’s, he said. He left it to me when he passed. I added on the south wing and the cook house the year before Maisie was born.
It’s bigger than I expected. It used to feel bigger. He pulled the wagon up alongside the porch and set the break. Before he could come around to help her down, the cookhouse door banged open and a man came out wiping his hands on a rag. He was short, maybe 5 1/2 ft, but built like he had been put together out of fence posts.
He had a face that had been weathered the color of saddle leather and a gray mustache that hung down past his chin, and he walked with a slight roll like a man who had spent more of his life in a saddle than out of one. “That her,” he said without looking at Clara. “Tully,” Elias said. “Mind your manners.
” “I am minding my manners. I asked if that was her.” “Mrs. Whitmore. This is Tully Hennessy. He’s been with this outfit longer than I have. The old man pulled off his hat. Underneath it, his hair was the same gray as his mustache and stood up in every direction. He squinted at Clara. Ma’am, Mr.
Hennessy, you bake? Yes, sir. Biscuits? Yes. Good biscuits? Clara felt somewhere down underneath the four months of grief and the sleepless night, the smallest possible flicker of a thing she did not at first recognize as humor. I’d like to think so, Mr. Hennessy. We’ll see. He put his hat back on. I’ve been doing the cooking around here since the misses passed, and I will tell you straight, ma’am.
I am a fair with bacon, and I can boil a pot of beans without burning them more than half the time, but my biscuits ain’t fit for a dog. The child has been picking at my biscuits for 4 months, and I have been watching her not eat them and feeling worse and worse about it every day. So, if you can make a biscuit that little one will put in her mouth, I will personally carry your trunk up those porch steps and into whatever room you like. Tully, Elias began.
I’m not finished. Mrs. Whitmore, I do not know what they are saying about you in town, and I do not care what they are saying about you in town. The town is full of people who have not had to feed a grieving child and watch her cheekbones start showing through her face. You feed that child, ma’am, and I will be your man until the day they put me in the ground. Clara was not prepared for it.
She had been bracing for awkwardness, perhaps even hostility. A hired man who would resent her presence, who would see her the way the town saw her. She had not been prepared to be welcomed. Mr. Hennessy. Tully. Tully. I’ll do my best. That’s all anybody can do, ma’am. He came around to the wagon and despite Elias’s protest, he was the one who lifted her trunk down, which he did with a small wheezing grunt, but without dropping it. Elias lifted Maisie down.
The child still held the empty cookie tray. She had not let go of it once during the 11 miles. Elias sat her gently on the porch boards, and she stood there for a moment with the tray in both hands, and then she walked slow and deliberate to the door of the house. She did not look back to see if Clara was following, but she did stop at the door.
She stood there with one small hand on the latch and she waited. “Go on,” Elias said quietly. Clara went. She walked up the three porch steps. She paused at the door behind the child. Maisie looked up at her, not at her face, but at her hand, and Clara understood. She put her palm flat on the door above the child’s small hand, and together they pushed the door open, and Maisie walked in first, and Clara followed.
The inside of the house smelled like a place that had stopped being lived in. It was not dirty. Tully had clearly been keeping it swept, but there was a stillness in the air that Clare recognized at once, the same stillness she had been waking up to in her own cabin for 4 months. The smell of a kitchen that had not had bread baked in it for too long, of curtains that had not been washed since the woman who hung them had died, of a house that was holding its breath.
The main room had a long pine table down the center of it. There was a stone fireplace at one end and a cast iron range at the other. And between them, a long counter and a deep tin sink with a pump handle and an open shelf above it that held a row of crockery. All of it neatly arranged, but every piece of it dusted with a thin gray film.
To the left of the range, a door stood open onto what Clara could see was the cook’s room. Small, but with a real bed and a small window and a chest of drawers. To the right of the fireplace, another doorway opened onto a hall. Maisie went down that hall. She did not run. She walked. She still held the cookie tray. She turned at the second doorway on the right and disappeared inside it.
And a moment later, Clara heard the small, soft sound of a tray being set down on a wooden surface. Her room, Elias said behind her, used to be the sewing room. We moved her in there after after the funeral. She wouldn’t sleep in her own bed anymore. It was too close to ours. All right. She’s been sleeping with that tray. I mean, she will tonight.
She’ll sleep with it. All right, Mr. Boon. Elias. Clara looked at him. He was standing in the middle of his own kitchen with his hat in his hands, looking like a man who had brought a stranger into a sacred place, and was not sure whether he should apologize. Elias, then I’ll need to see the pantry and the springhouse, if you have one, and I’ll need to know what you have in the way of flour, and what kind, and whether you’ve got any decent butter, or if I’ll need to make do with lard.
There’s a spring house out behind the cook house. Tully will show you. The pantry is through that door there. I bought a barrel of flour from Granton 3 weeks ago. It should still be most full. There’s no butter to speak of. The cow went dry in September, and I haven’t bought a new one.
You don’t have a milk cow? Not currently, Mr. Boon. Elias, a child that age needs milk. Child, I know it. I’ve been getting a court twice a week from a neighbor down the river. It’s not enough. I know it’s not enough. Clara nodded slowly. She set her reticule on the long pine table. All right, she said. First things first, Telly, would you bring my trunk into that room there? Elias, I’ll need you to ride out to your neighbor today and arrange for a daily delivery if you can manage it.
Pay him double if you have to. The child needs milk every morning and she needs cream for what I’m going to make her tomorrow. What are you going to make her tomorrow? I don’t know yet. I’ll know when I see what’s in the pantry. Elias smiled. It was the first smile Clare had seen on him, and it was a small, unsteady thing, like a muscle being asked to do work it had forgotten how to do. “Yes, ma’am,” he said.
The pantry was better than she had feared. There was the barrel of flour, half full, and a smaller barrel of cornmeal that had gone slightly off, but could still be salvaged for chicken feed. There was a croc of lard, a tin of salt, a small paper of baking soda, and on the bottom shelf, almost out of sight, a single jar of honey with the comb still in it.
Clara picked up the honey jar and held it to the window. Where did this come from? Tully had come in behind her with her trunk. He set it down and peered at the jar. That would be the Mrs. from the spring before last. She had away with bees that one. She kept three hives up behind the barn. The bees mostly died off last winter. I’m sorry to say.
I didn’t know how to do for them, but there’s still a jar or two of her honey down here, I expect. Clara held the honey jar against her chest for a moment. She thought about a woman she had never met planting eight cottonwoods and keeping three beehives and dying of a fever in May while her husband rode for a doctor he could not bring back in time.
She thought about the small girl in the next room sitting on a bed with an empty cookie tray. Tully. Ma’am, tomorrow morning I’m going to need you to ride into town and bring me back 2 lb of fresh butter, 4 lb of white sugar, a tin of cinnamon, a tin of vanilla extract if Howerins has it, and a dozen good fresh eggs. Bring me back the receipt and I’ll square up with Mr.
Boon. Yes, ma’am. And Tully. Ma’am, if anyone at Howerins ask you what the butter is for, you tell them it’s for biscuits. The old man’s mustache twitched. Yes, ma’am. biscuits. He carried her trunk into the small room off the kitchen, and Clara, after a moment, followed. The room was clean. The bed had been freshly made.
Mom Tully had clearly done it that morning, the corner square in a way that only a man who had once been a soldier or a hired hand could do. There was a small braided rug on the floor and a single lamp on a stand beside the bed. A nail on the wall held a calendar from a year ago, still turned to August, and Clara thought, “I will not change that calendar.
Someone else will need to do it when they are ready. She set her reticule on the bed and then she stood there for a moment in the doorway of a room that was hers now for at least 2 weeks and she thought about how strange it was that this morning she had woken up alone in her own cabin in Blackthornne Ridge and that by midafter afternoon she was standing in a stranger’s house 11 mi from anywhere and how despite everything she did not feel afraid.
She felt tired but not afraid. She unpacked the first layer of the trunk, her aprons, her recipe cards, her wooden spoons, and she carried the spoons out to the kitchen and set them down on the counter beside the range with a small definite clatter. The sound of them seemed to settle something in the room. She tied an apron over her dress and rolled her sleeves up to the elbow.
Tully, she said, “Do you have a kettle on?” There’s one on the back of the range from this morning. It’ll be lukewarm. That’ll do. I’m going to start by cleaning. You don’t have to Telly. I cannot bake in a kitchen I have not cleaned. I cannot. It is not in me. The flower will sulk. He looked at her. The flower will sulk. He said, “Yes.
” “All right, ma’am.” She cleaned for the next 3 hours. She started with the counter, scrubbing it down with hot water and a bar of yellow soap she had brought with her because she did not trust any soap that had been sitting in a kitchen unused for 6 months. She washed every piece of crockery on the open shelf. She wiped the window sills.
She got down on her knees. Her knees popped again twice and scrubbed the floor in a 6-ft circle in front of the range because that was where she would be standing. And she did not believe a woman should bake on a floor she had not scrubbed. While she cleaned, she did not look toward the hallway, but she was aware every moment that Maisy’s door had opened sometime during the second hour and that the child had come halfway down the hall and was standing in the doorway of the main room watching.
The empty cookie tray was tucked under her arm. Clara did not turn around. She kept working. She hummed very quietly an old tune her mother had hummed when she was kneading dough. And after a minute, she let her humming get a little louder. And after another minute she let it turn into the small soft words of the song her mother used to sing.
Where the river runs down to the sea, my love, where the willows lean low on the bank. She did not look at the child. She heard behind her a small careful step. Then another, then the soft sound of a small body sitting down on the bench at the long pine table. Clara hummed on. She rung out her rag in the bucket and stood and went to the pantry and brought out the flour.
She measured three cups into a yellowear bowl, working by feel, the way her mother had taught her, the way her grandmother had taught her mother. She added a pinch of salt, a spoon of baking soda, a careful palm full of sugar from the small twist of paper she had brought in her trunk. She mixed the dry ingredients with her fingers.
She turned to the range and tested the heat with her hand held 2 in above the iron. It was a good heat. Tully had been keeping the fire low and steady, and the range was clean. She made biscuits. She used the last of the lard because she had no butter yet, and she used water because she had no buttermilk.
And she knew, even as she patted out the dough and cut it with the rim of a glass, that these would not be her best biscuits. These were the kind of biscuits you made when you had nothing to make them with, and any baker worth her salt could turn out a tray of them. But you would never be proud of them.
She did not need to be proud of them tonight. She just needed to make 12 of them and put them in the oven. She slid the tray in. She closed the oven door. She turned around to wipe her hands on her apron and she saw for the first time since she had started baking that Maisie was still sitting at the table.
The child was watching her hands. Clara stood at the range and looked back at her. She did not smile. She did not invite anything. She simply met the child’s eyes, which were brown and which still had that far away lamp burning at the back of them. And she said, “They’ll be done in about 12 minutes.” Maisie did not answer, but she did not look away either, and her small fingers, which had been clenched in her lap, opened.
The cookie tray sat on the bench beside her. The child put her hand flat on the tray as if to make sure it was still there, and then she went back to watching Clara. The biscuits came out gold. Not perfect, but gold. Clara turned them out onto a clean cloth on the counter and let them rest a minute, and she felt rather than saw Maisie slide off the bench and come closer.
They’re hot, Clara said. I’ll let one cool and I’ll bring it to you. She broke one open with her fingers. The inside was tender. Not as light as it would have been with buttermilk, but tender enough. She put it on a small plate. She did not look at the child. She set the plate down on the table at the bench where Maisie had been sitting.
She turned back to the range and began wiping it down again, although she had already wiped it. Behind her, she heard the soft scrape of a small body climbing back onto the bench. She heard the small clay sound of a fingernail tapping a plate. Then, after what felt like a long time, but was probably only a minute, she heard the small wet sound of a bite being taken. Clara did not turn.
She wiped the range. She rinsed the rag in the bucket. She rung the rag out. She hung the rag over the edge of the bucket. She did each of these things very slowly, and she listened, and she heard a second bite, and a third, and then the small, definite sound of a child swallowing. When she turned, the biscuit was 3/4 gone, and Maisie was holding the last piece in her fingers and looking at Clara as if she were not entirely sure she was real.
“Was it all right?” Clara said. The child nodded, just the smallest nod. It was the first nod Clara had seen from her. “I can make you another one if you want it.” Maisie shook her head, also small, and pointed to the remaining piece in her fingers. “I have enough,” the gesture said. “I am still eating this one.
” Clara nodded back. She put her hands behind her back so they would not reach out and do something the child was not ready for. All right, she said. You take your time, sweetheart. I’ll be right here. She turned back to the counter. She heard after another minute the small soft sound of the last of the biscuit going. Then a small sigh, not unhappy, just the sigh of a body that had been holding itself tight for a long time and was for a moment letting one notch out.
Then nothing. When Clara turned around again, Maisie had laid her head down on her arms on the table. Her eyes were closed. Within another minute, she was asleep. Clara stood and watched her for a long time. She did not move. She did not touch the child. She memorized instead the shape of her, the dried straw hair falling across her arm, the way her small back rose and fell, the way her fingers in sleep had finally let go of the empty cookie tray.
She heard a small sound behind her. She turned. Elias Boon was standing in the door from the porch. He had taken off his hat and was holding it in both hands. His face in the low afternoon light was the face of a man who had just seen something he was not prepared to see. He looked at his daughter sleeping on the kitchen table.
He looked at Clara. He did not speak, but Clara saw his throat work twice, and she saw him bring one hand up and press the heel of it hard against his right eye, and then he turned and went back out onto the porch, and she heard the porch boards creek as he sat down heavily on the top step. She left him alone.
It was a long time before he came back in. The first three days at the ranch went like that. Clare cooked. She kept the fire steady. She made biscuits twice on the second day. once with the butter Tully brought back from town and once without. And the second batch with butter was better than anything she had made in months.
She made a pot of beef stew from a side of beef Tully cut down for her, and she made cornbread to go with it, and she made on the third evening a small, careful apple pie from the half bushel of windfalls Tully scavenged for her under the neighbor’s tree. Maisie ate. She did not eat much, not at first. a biscuit at breakfast, a few spoonfuls of stew at supper, half a slice of cornbread, a small wedge of the apple pie, which she ate slowly with her fingers, because Clara had said it was all right to eat pie with your fingers
if you wanted to. The child still did not talk beyond the thank you she had given Clara in the market and the small nods she gave now when Clara offered her food. But she ate and she came out of her room. On the second day, she came out at midm morning and sat at the kitchen table while Clara rolled out a pie crust.
And she watched the rolling pin go back and forth. And after maybe an hour, she slid off the bench and walked over and stood beside Clara at the counter. She did not touch anything. She just stood there. Clara handed her without looking down a small ball of dough scraps. The child took the dough and went back to the bench and sat there for the rest of the morning, working the dough between her small hands, rolling it into a ball, flattening it, rolling it again.
By the third day, she was following Clara from the kitchen to the spring house and back, walking three steps behind, always carrying something small, a wooden spoon, a tin cup, a square of cheesecloth, as if she had been given a job. She still did not speak, but she had become in 3 days a small, silent shadow. And Clara found by the third evening that she could not turn around in the kitchen without expecting the child to be there, and that the expecting was a thing in her chest that warmed her more than the range did. Elias came in and out. He
rode the fence line in the mornings. He worked with Tully and a young hand named Davies, who came up from the bunk house and tipped his hat to Clara every morning and said, “Ma’am,” and looked very hard at his boots. Elias took his supper with them at the long pine table every night.
He did not say much, but Clara noticed on the second night that he watched his daughter eat, and that when Maisie picked up her spoon and took a bite of stew without being prompted, his hand on the table closed once very tight around the handle of his cup and then opened again. On the fourth evening, after supper, after Maisie had been carried to bed and tucked in by Elias himself with the empty cookie tray on the pillow beside her, Elias came back out to the kitchen and stood in the doorway and watched Clara wash the dishes. Mrs. Whitmore. Mr. Boon. Elias.
We agreed. Elias. Clara. She turned. The use of her first name had come out of him before either of them was ready for it, and they both knew it. He flushed under the dust on his face. He looked down at his boots. My apology. It’s all right. I came out to say, He stopped. He cleared his throat.
I came out to say thank you for what you have done in this house in 4 days. I did not I was not I had not understood until you walked into this kitchen how badly we had let it go. Tully and I we were keeping the child alive, but we were not keeping her. We were not Elias. Yes. Sit down a minute. He sat he sat at the long pine table where his daughter had taken her first solid food in three months.
And he put his hat on the bench beside him, and he folded his hands together in front of him on the table, the way a man folds his hands when he is afraid they will betray him if he leaves them loose. Clara dried her hands on her apron. She did not sit. She stood at the counter, leaning back against it with her arms folded across the front of her apron.
“You don’t owe me thanks yet,” she said. “We’re 4 days in. Two weeks was the trial. You wait until the two weeks are up. Then if you still feel like saying it, you can say it. Clara, she ate three meals today. I know it. She has not eaten three meals in a day since May. I know.
I do not know what to do with that. You don’t have to do anything with it. He looked at her. He looked at her in the lamplight at the long pine table in the kitchen of his own house, and the look was a thing she had not been looked at with in a long time, and she felt the back of her neck go hot. She turned away.
She picked up a plate she had already dried and dried it again. “There is something I need to tell you,” Elias said. “All right.” Tully went into town this morning for the eggs. He came back about 11:00. I know. I have the eggs. He heard things in town. Clara set the plate down. She set it down too hard and it made a small loud crack against the counter and she had to check it for a chip. There was no chip.
She put the plate down again more gently. What kind of things? The kind you would expect. Tell me. He hesitated. Elias. All right. He rubbed his hand across his jaw. Mrs. Pel at the boarding house has been telling anyone who will listen that I brought a woman out to the ranch 4 days after losing my wife.
She is not bothering to mention that my wife passed in May. She is implying she passed last week and she is telling people that the woman I brought out is that you are he stopped. I am not going to repeat the words. You can repeat them. I have heard worse. She is calling you a a designing woman. She is saying you saw a grieving widowerower with money and you set your cap.
She is saying the cookie at the market was a piece of strategy. She is implying that my daughter is a pawn. Clara stood very still at the counter. Anything else? Annie Krauss went to Reverend Hollyy at the church Wednesday evening. Holly is talking about about a visit to the ranch. He is talking about it being necessary that the women of the church examine the situation on behalf of my daughter’s spiritual welfare.
Tully heard this from the postmaster’s wife who heard it from her sister who heard it from Annie Krauss directly. All right, I want you to know I will not have it. I will not have those women on this property. If Holly himself rides up that road, I will turn him back at the gate. Elias, I am sorry. I’m sorry I brought you into this.
I knew it would happen and I did it anyway because I was because I thought he stopped. He pressed his palms flat against the table. I did not consider until this morning what it would actually cost you to be on this property. I considered what it would cost me. I considered what Maisie needed. I did not Clara. I am sorry. Clara folded the dish towel.
She folded it once, then again, then a third time, until it was a small, neat square on the counter, and only then did she turn and look at him. Elias Boon. Yes, ma’am. I am 28 years old. I have buried my husband. I have buried my baby. I have stood on a corner in Blackthorn Ridge every Saturday for 4 months and listened to women I have never harmed in my life make remarks about the size of my body and the shape of my widowhood.
I have sold bread to men who would not meet my eyes. I have walked home alone, and I have eaten cold suppers alone, and I have woken up in the middle of the night, and reached for a husband and a son, who are not there. I do not need you, with respect, to inform me what the town of Blackthornne Ridge is capable of.
I have known what they are capable of since the morning Tom went into the creek, and the only person who came up to the cabin was Hattie. Clara, I am not finished. He closed his mouth. Your daughter ate three meals today. Your daughter, who you told me had been kept alive on broth and willpower for 3 months, sat at my elbow this afternoon while I made a pie, and she rolled out a small piece of dough with her own hands, and she did not speak, but she hummed.
Elias for about 2 minutes while she rolled out that dough, she hummed. I do not know if you heard it. I heard it. And I will tell you something, sir, and you will please listen to me because I do not say things like this and then say them twice. I do not give a damn what Ednapel says about me. I have given enough dams to last me a lifetime, and I have run out.
The only thing I will give a damn about between now and the end of the two weeks is whether that child keeps eating. Do you understand me? He looked at her. Yes, he said. All right, then. Clara, what? You hummed too this afternoon while she was working the dough. You hummed the same tune. Clara’s mouth open. She closed it. It was my mother’s tune. I know.
I heard you humming it the first day by the river willows where the water runs down. You know it. My mother sang it, too. It’s an old song, older than this country, my uncle used to say. She did not know what to say to that. The fact that this man’s mother had sung the same song her mother had sung was somehow the hardest thing he had said to her since she’d come into his house, and she could not afford to think about why. Not yet.
Not at the long pine table at the end of the fourth day. She turned back to the counter. She picked up the kettle. She filled it from the pump. She put it on the back of the range. “I’m making tea,” she said. “Do you want tea, please?” She made the tea. They drank it sitting at the long pine table on opposite sides like two people who did not entirely know what to do with the fact that they were sitting at a table together.
Clara wrapped her hands around her cup and looked at the steam. Elias looked at the wood of the table and once when she glanced up she found him looking at her hands and he looked away so quickly she almost did not catch him. Tully says Reverend Hollyy will come on a Sunday. Elias said if he comes. All right. It’s Friday. I know what day it is.
I will be here on Sunday. I am not riding the line on Sunday. If anyone comes up that road, I will meet them on the porch. All right, Clara. Elias, I do not want you to think I am I do not want you to think that I He stopped. When I asked you to come at the market, I want you to know I was asking exactly what I said I was asking.
I was not. There was no other thing in it. I would not have insulted you that way. I know. I do not want you to think otherwise. I don’t. All right. He drank his tea. He drank it down faster than was reasonable for tea that had just been poured. And he stood up and he put his cup in the basin and he said, “Good night, Mrs. Whitmore.
” And then, before she could correct him, he was through the door and out onto the porch. And she heard him cross to the bunk house to check on the men. and she heard somewhere out in the dark beyond the cottonwoods an owl call once and then the night was quiet. She sat at the table a long time. She thought about the things he had not said.
She thought about the things she had not said. She thought about a Sunday that was two days off and women on a boardwalk and a small girl asleep with an empty cookie tray on her pillow and a song her mother used to sing about a river running down to a sea Clara had never seen. The kettle made a small ticking sound on the back of the range as it cooled.
After a while, she got up. She washed the two cups. She banked the fire. She blew out the lamp on the table and carried the small lamp from the counter into her room. She closed the door behind her. She did not lock it. She had locked it the first three nights, the way he had said she could, the way a careful woman would. She had locked it without thinking about it.
But tonight, on the fourth night, after the conversation at the table, she stood with her hand on the small iron bolt, and she did not turn it. It did not feel, she realized, like a house she needed to lock a door inside. It felt like a house she was, in some small, careful way beginning to live in. The next morning, at breakfast, Maisie came into the kitchen on her own.
She climbed up on the bench at the long pine table without being lifted. She put her hands flat on the wood and she looked at Clara. And Clara, who was turning bacon in the iron skillet, looked back at her. Good morning, sweetheart. The child did not answer, but she pointed very deliberately at the bowl on the counter where the biscuit dough was rising under a clean cloth, and then she pointed at herself, and then she made a small rolling motion with her palms.
I want to help. Clara sat down the fork. She came around the table. She did not pick the child up. She held out her hand palm up the way she had held out the cookie at the market. “Come on then,” she said. Maisie slid off the bench. She put her small hand in Clara’s. Her fingers were warm and a little sticky from the honey she had eaten on her toast the night before, and Clara closed her fingers around them very gently, and they walked together to the counter, and Clara lifted her up onto the stool by the window where the light was best. She
gave the child a small piece of dough. She gave her a small wooden spoon. She tied an apron around her, one of her own, folded in half and tied behind, far too big, hanging down past Maisy’s knees. And the child looked down at the apron, and then up at Clara, and for a single second the lamp at the back of her eyes brightened, just brightened, just enough to see by.
She did not smile, but she looked for the first time like a child who might one day soon remember how. Clara turned back to the bacon and she did not let the child see her face because there were tears on it and the tears had nothing to do with grief and she was not yet ready to explain them even to herself in the soft yellow light of a Saturday morning in a kitchen 11 mi north of a town where at that very moment three women in three different parlors were sitting down with three different cups of coffee and beginning to plan a visit. Outside in
the cottonwoods, a few last yellow leaves let go and fell. Inside, a small girl in a two big apron rolled a piece of dough between her hands and made for the first time in 6 months a small contented sound at the back of her throat that was not quite a word, but was undeniably the beginning of one. Clara turned the bacon. She did not hum.
She did not need to. The kitchen was already full of sound. The crackle of the fat in the skillet, the small wooden tap of a spoon against a counter, the soft sigh of dough being worked by hands that had forgotten and were remembering, the slow, steady creek of a house that had been holding its breath for 6 months, and was on a Saturday morning at the end of October beginning to let it out.
Out beyond the cottonwoods, the buckskin mayor knickered in the corral. The day was beginning. Sunday came the way bad things tend to come in open country, quietly from a distance, giving you plenty of time to see it approaching, and not nearly enough time to do anything useful about it. Clara had known it was coming since Friday night.
She had known it the way you know a storm is building when the air goes strange and still and the animals in the barn start shifting in their stalls without any reason you can point to. Tully had told Elias. Elias had told her. And then all three of them had gone about the next day and a half pretending they had not been told because there was nothing to do but wait, and waiting is easier when you give yourself something to keep your hands busy.
Clara kept her hands very busy. On Saturday, she made bread. Two loaves of white, one of rye, a small pan of cornbread, and a tray of the ginger snaps she had been saving for when she had enough molasses, which Tully had brought back from town on Friday with the eggs. The ginger snaps were for Maisie specifically.
The child had watched Clara mix the dough with a seriousness that would have been funny if it hadn’t been so heartbreaking. Her brow furrowed, her small hands folded in her lap, as if she were memorizing the steps in case she ever needed to do them alone. She had eaten four of the cooled snaps one after another, and had looked at the tray after the fourth one in a way that Clara recognized as hunger fighting with caution.
Hunger that wasn’t yet sure it was allowed to win. “You can have another one,” Clara said. The child shook her head. Maisie, sweetheart, there are two dozen of them on that tray. I made them for you. You can eat as many as you want. Maisie shook her head again. She folded her hands back in her lap. She looked at the tray.
All right, Clare said, “But they’ll be here when you want them.” She covered the tray with muslin and put it on the high shelf by the window where the child could see it from the bench. And every so often for the rest of that afternoon, she saw Maisie glance up at the high shelf just to make sure. That was Saturday. Sunday morning was cold.
Clara rose before light and built the fire and put water on and made biscuits because she did not know how else to start a day. The dough came together better than usual. The butter was fresh, the baking soda was working the way it should, and she thought, standing at the counter in the gray pre-dawn dark with her hands in the bowl, that if Elias was right and the women came today, she would at least face them on a morning when the biscuits had come out well.
It seemed like the kind of thing that should matter, even though she knew it didn’t. Maisie appeared in the kitchen doorway at 7. She had dressed herself, which was new. Her collar was buttoned wrong, three buttons off, so the whole front of her dress ran crooked, and she was carrying in one hand the empty cookie tray, and in the other her late mother’s shawl.
Clare had seen the shawl twice before, hanging on the peg inside the child’s door. It was good wool, dark green, worn soft at the edges, and it smelled, if you got close enough, faintly of something floral, lavender perhaps, that was nearly all the way gone now. Good morning, Clara said. Maisie came to the counter and set the empty tray down in its usual place.
She looked at the biscuits cooling on the cloth. She looked at Clara. She put the shawl on the bench beside her, very carefully, folded so the edges were even. Your collar is buttoned off, Clara said. May I fix it? The child thought about this for a moment. Then she tilted her chin up and held very still. Clara unbuttoned the collar and started over from the bottom, her fingers working through the small buttons quickly.
Maisy’s neck smelled like sleep. Clara smoothed the collar down when she was done, patted it once, and stepped back. There you go. The child looked down at her own front. She ran one finger along the now straight line of buttons. Something on her face settled. Elias came in from the barn at 8. He had been out since before Clara was up.
She had heard him moving in the yard, heard the barn door, heard his low voice speaking to the horses in the way that men who work animals speak to them. The same way, as it happened, that Clara talked to her chickens. A low, steady murmur that was not quite words, but was not not words either. He came into the kitchen smelling of hay and cold air, and he looked at the biscuits, and he looked at his daughter sitting at the table in her correctly buttoned dress, holding a ginger snap.
“She eating?” he said low to Clara. she is.” He let out a slow breath. He poured himself a cup of coffee from the pot on the range, and he sat down at the far end of the table, and Maisie looked up at him with those brown eyes, and he reached over and pushed the biscuit plate toward her without saying anything.
And the child took one and put it on the plate in front of her. And there they sat, father and daughter, in the kitchen on a Sunday morning, while Clara turned bacon in the skillet, and the house smelled like bread and rendered fat and coffee. And for about 40 minutes, it was something close to ordinary.
The wagon came up the road at 20 10. Tully was the one who saw it first. He had been watching from the bunk house window, Clara later learned, since 8:00, which was the kind of thing Tully did without being asked, without announcing it, without making any fuss about it. He came to the kitchen door and knocked once. Elias.
Elias was on his feet before the knock was finished. How many? Wagon with a team. Three women in it. Fourth one riding behind on her own horse. Tully paused. It’s the Pelw woman driving. Clara set down the fork. Maisie looked up. You stay inside, Elias said to Clara. I will not stay inside. Clara, I will not sit in my kitchen and wait while they stand on your porch and say whatever they have come to say.
If they have come about me, I will be there. They will use you against yourself. Anything you say, Elias, I appreciate that you are trying to protect me. I do, but I have been letting other people decide what I deserve to hear, said about myself for 4 months, and I am finished with it. I will stand on the porch.
” He looked at her. His jaw did the tight thing she had come to recognize as the thing it did when he was trying to decide between two bad options. “Tully,” he said. “I’ll be on the porch, too,” Tully said. He said it like he was reporting the weather. All right. Elias touched his daughter’s head once, a brief familiar pressure of his palm against her straw-led hair.
You stay in here, Bug. You eat your breakfast. Maisie watched her father. She was holding the ginger snap. She had not taken a bite of it in the last 2 minutes. I’ll be right back, Elias said. You hear me? Right back. The child looked at him. She looked at Clara. She put the ginger snap on her plate and folded her hands.
The three of them went out to the porch. The wagon came through the cottonwoods at a slow, deliberate pace, the way a wagon comes when the driver wants to be seen coming and has planned what she is going to say when she arrives. Edna Pel was indeed driving with Annie Krauss sitting beside her on the bench.
In the wagon bed behind them, sitting very straight on a board, was a woman Clara did not know. heavy set, gray-haired, with a face that had the particular set of a woman who has decided in advance to be displeased. And behind the wagon, on a small gray mare, rode Lahy Vain, who still wore the hat she had worn on the boardwalk the Saturday of the market.
They pulled up in front of the porch. Nobody spoke for a moment. Then Edna Pel set the break and looked at the three of them on the porch steps, and her gaze went from Tully to Elias to Clara, and came to rest on Clara. Mrs. Whitmore, Mrs. Pel, this is an unexpected pleasure. I expect you expected it,” Clara said.
Annie Krauss made the small sound again, the one that was maybe a laugh and maybe not. Edna Pel climbed down from the wagon with the deliberate ease of a woman who does not hurry for anyone. She smoothed her skirt. She looked at the porch, at the house behind it, at the cleaned windows Clara had scrubbed out two days after she arrived. “Mr.
Boon,” she said, “we have come on behalf of the women of the Blackthornne Ridge Community Church to to inquire after the welfare of your daughter.” “My daughter is fine,” Elias said. “We have heard some concern about the about the arrangement here in the household.” “There’s no arrangement. Mrs. Whitmore is my cook.
She sleeps in the cook’s room. She makes meals and tends to my daughter. That is the whole of it. Mr. Boon, you are welcome to come in and see the cook’s room if you like, Mrs. Pel. I will show you where the door locks and point out that the lock is on Mrs. Whitmore’s side. Ednapel’s nostrils flared.
The gray-haired woman in the wagon bed said without climbing down, “It is not the sleeping arrangement that concerns us, Mr. Boon. It is the influence.” “And you are?” Elias said, “Mrs. Violet Corman. My husband is on the church vestri. Mrs. Corman, what influence are you concerned about? The child has lost her mother.
A motherless child is she is in a delicate condition spiritually and morally to bring a woman of questionable questionable. Elias said his voice had gone quieter. Clara had learned in the last 10 days that when his voice went quieter, it meant the opposite of calm. Mrs. Corman, I am going to need you to be precise about what you mean when you say questionable.
Mr. Boon, the town has been talking. The town is always talking. The town was talking about my wife’s cooking when she first moved out here. The town talked about my uncle’s drinking for 30 years. The town talked about the Howerin boy when he was born with only one eye. The town talking is not a description of a thing. It is a description of a town.
I am asking you to be specific. Lahy Vain spoke from her horse. her voice clipped and precise. Mrs. Whitmore is a widow of seven months who moved into the home of a widowerower with a young child, Mr. Boon. You must understand how it appears. I understand how you have decided it appears, Elias said.
I am less interested in your reading of it. Elias. Clara put her hand on his arm just once, just briefly. He stopped. She stepped to the edge of the porch. Mrs. Pel, Mrs. Krauss, Mrs. Corman, Mrs. Vain. She looked at each of them in turn. She was aware of how she looked. The big hipped widow, the designing woman, standing on a rancher’s porch in a clean apron she had sewn herself.
She was aware of what they were seeing and what they had already decided. And she knew that nothing she said would change the decision that had been made before this wagon left the ridge that morning. But she was not speaking to change their minds. She was speaking because she would not stand on this porch and be quiet. I came to this ranch 11 days ago because a man asked me to help his daughter eat.
That is the entirety of it. That little girl had not taken solid food in 3 months. She had not spoken in six. You can ride out to the ranch any morning you like and sit at my kitchen table and see for yourself whether things have improved. You can talk to Tully Hennessy, who sleeps in the bunk house and eats his meals in the cook house, and will tell you without any prompting from me exactly what goes on in this house.
You can look at the cook’s room. You can look at the lock on the door. You can examine any part of this household you like. She paused. Or you can drive back to Blackthorn Ridge and tell your friends that the Whitmore woman is exactly what you have decided she is because I suspect that was always going to be the ending of this morning.
Was it not? Edipel was very still. You are not a stupid woman, Edna said finally. I have never said you were stupid. No, you have said other things. I have said things a Christian woman has a right to say about about what Mrs. Pel about my dress about the way I walk about the fact that I buried my husband and my child in the same year and I am still standing and still baking bread and still feeding children who are not my own.
Clara heard her voice crack on the last word and hated herself for it. Hated it but she did not stop. I don’t know what I’ve done to you. I don’t know what my Tom did or my mother or anyone in my family to earn the particular attention Blackthornne Ridge has given me since the day I arrived. But I am telling you, I am telling you to your face that there is a child in that house who ate her breakfast this morning for the first time in months without being coaxed for half an hour.
And I do not intend to stop feeding her because you have driven 11 miles to stand in a man’s yard and imply things. The morning was very quiet. Wind moved through the cottonwoods and three or four leaves came loose and drifted down. Then the kitchen door opened. Everyone on the porch and everyone in the yard turned. Maisy Boon stood in the doorway.
She was wearing her too big apron, the one Clara had tied on her three mornings running now. She had her mother’s shawl over her shoulders, the dark green wool pulled around her and clutched shut with both hands. She was carrying the empty cookie tray under one arm. She did not look at the women in the yard.
She looked at Clara. Elias took a step toward her. Bug, I told you. Maisie walked past him. She walked to Clara and she put herself against Clara’s side, pressing her face into the big pocket of Clara’s apron. And she stood there with her fists full of green wool and her head turned out toward the yard and she looked at Edna Pel.
It was a child’s face, a 5-year-old’s face, and it was doing something Clara had not seen it do in 11 days. It was angry. Maisie, Elias began. The child turned and looked at her father, and the look said very plainly, “I know. I don’t care.” She turned back to the yard. Edna Pel had the grace to look uncertain.
“Just slightly, just enough.” “Sweetheart,” Annie Krauss said, softening her voice. “We are just here to see that you are being,” she takes care of me. Maisy’s voice was very small and very clear in the morning air, the way a small clear bell carries farther than a loud one. Clara had not heard the child speak a full sentence since she arrived.
She heard it now and she felt the words go through her like cold water through stone. She makes breakfast. She fixed my buttons. She stays when I’m scared. Nobody spoke. She stays, the child said again louder. She doesn’t go away. Ednapelle opened her mouth. My mama went away. Maisy’s grip on Clara’s apron tightened.
Her knuckles were white. Her voice was shaking now, but it was not stopping. And the doctor went away. And everybody went away except Papa and Tully. And they didn’t know what to do because they’re not. She stopped. She swallowed hard. Miss Clara knows what to do. She knows what I need. And you don’t know anything because you didn’t even come when my mama was sick.
You didn’t come when she was sick. Her voice broke on the last word. Fully broke. And the tears came and she pushed her face harder into Clare’s apron. and she cried in the enormous full-body way that children cry when they have been not crying for a very long time. Clara’s hand came down on the child’s head. It came down the way a hand does when it has been waiting for somewhere to go.
Elias stood absolutely still. When he finally moved, he moved toward the wagon, not the porch. He came down the steps and crossed the yard and he stopped in front of Edna Pel who was still standing in the dirt with her hands folded in front of her and he was taller than her by a full head and he spoke very quietly.
“My wife’s name was Ruth,” he said. “Ruth Eleanor Boon. She was 29 years old. She had a fever for 9 days in May.” “9 days.” He was not shouting. He was not raising his voice. The quietness of it was worse. She was in this house for 9 days with a fever until he and I and that little girl were watching her and none of us knew what to do.
And I rode to Granton for the doctor. And when I got back, she was already gone. 9 days, Mrs. Pel. 9 days. And not one woman from the ridge came out this road. Not one plate of food. Not one hour of help with the child. Not one knock on that door to ask if we needed anything. Edna Pel was looking at the ground.
Now you have driven 11 mi to examine my household because you are concerned about my daughter’s welfare. He let that sit for a moment. I think you should go home. Annie Krauss leaned forward on the wagon bench. Elias, we did not know she was so ill. We heard she was under the weather, but we did not. You did not come to find out.
Elias said, “That is the point, Mrs. Krauss. You did not come to find out the way you have come today to find out things that are none of your business. Mr. Boon, Violet Corman began, Mrs. Corman, I will thank you to climb back into that wagon. I will thank all of you to climb back into that wagon and drive back to town and tell Reverend Hollyy or anyone else who is keeping track that my daughter is alive and eating and that Mrs.
Whitmore is a person of complete integrity and that any further visits of this nature will not be received. Lahy Vain pulled her horse back a step. Edna Pel raised her head for a moment. Looking at her, Clara thought she might say something, something real, something that cracked through the crust of her because her face did something complicated.
And Clara thought she saw beneath it the flash of something like shame. But it was brief. The crust came back. The chin lifted. I see, Edna said. Good day, Mrs. Pel. A long pause. Then Edna Pel walked back to the wagon and climbed up onto the bench. Annie Krauss moved over to give her room.
Violet Corman turned herself around in the wagon bed. Lahy Vain sat her horse and looked at Clara on the porch for one last moment, a long measuring look, and then she pulled the grey mare around. The wagon turned in the yard. It drove back through the cottonwoods, and then it was gone. and the dust settled and the yard was empty and quiet and the cotton woods were still and Maisie was still crying into Clara’s apron.
Tully came off the porch and went to the barn without saying anything. Elias came up the steps. He stood in front of his daughter and he put both hands on either side of her face gently and tilted it up and he looked at her. “You did good, Bug,” he said. His voice was rough. Maisie pulled one fist out of Clare’s apron and wiped her face with it.
I was scared, she said. I know, but I was also mad. I noticed. He kissed her forehead. You can be both. He took the child inside. Clara heard him carrying her, heard the soft bump of Maisy’s door being pushed with his shoulder, heard the low murmur of his voice in the room. She stood on the porch for a minute in the cold air, and she pressed her palm flat against the porch railing, and she breathed.
She was fine. She was fine until she was not fine. She went around the side of the house to the kitchen garden, the one that had gone to weeds, because she needed to be somewhere that was not the porch and not the kitchen, and not anywhere anyone could walk in on her, and she sat down on the cold ground between two rows of dead tomato plants.
And she put her face in her apron, and she shook. She did not cry the way Maisie had cried. She shook, which was what she did instead of crying now, a full body shaking that had no sound to it. that just used up everything she had and gave nothing back. She did not know how long she sat there.
Long enough for the cold to come up through the ground and into her legs. Long enough for a small brown bird to land on the tomato steak 2 ft from her face and look at her without alarm, which meant she had been still long enough to be considered part of the garden. She heard footsteps. Elias came around the corner of the house.
He stopped when he saw her on the ground, and he did not say anything, and he did not leave. He stood there for a moment and then he sat down in the dirt beside her with the full resignation of a man who has given up on the idea of keeping his trousers clean and he was quiet. After a while, Clara stopped shaking.
“The ground is freezing,” she said. “Yes, you’re going to ruin your trousers. They’ve been ruined since April.” She almost laughed. It wasn’t quite a laugh, but it was closer than she had gotten in a long time. “Is she all right?” Clara said. “She’s asleep. She was asleep in about 2 minutes. The crying wore her out. He paused. Or the talking.
I have not heard her put that many words together since. He stopped. That’s the most she’s talked since the day Ruth died. She was angry enough to talk. Yes, fear will do that sometimes, but anger is better. Anger means you still care about something. Elias picked up a small stone from the garden bed and turned it over in his fingers.
It was the thing he did with his hands when he was thinking, picking things up, turning them, setting them down. She had noticed it in the first 3 days. She said, “You stay.” He said that you don’t go away. I haven’t gone anywhere. She meant I think she meant it about the future, not just about the last 11 days.
He set the stone down. She’s been waiting for people to leave again. She’s been waiting for it since Ruth. That’s what she does in the mornings when she comes out of her room and checks to see if you’re in the kitchen. She’s making sure you’re still there. Clara looked at the dead tomato plants. I know. Do you? Because he stopped. He chose the words carefully.
She could feel him choosing. Clara, when you came out here, I offered you two weeks. Two weeks have nearly passed, and I have not I should have said this before now, but I did not know how to say it without overstepping. I would like you to stay, not for another two weeks on trial. I would like you to stay past the winter, past next spring.
I would like, if you were willing, to have you stay on as long as Maisie needs you. That could be a very long time. I know it. She was quiet. I know what the town will make of it, he said. I know what they already make of it. I am not offering you a comfortable situation socially. I want to be honest about that.
I’ve never had a comfortable situation socially. I know, and that makes it worse, not better, that I am asking you to walk into more of the same.” Clara looked at her hands in her lap. She looked at the space on her left hand where Tom’s ring had been, the small pale ridge of skin where the sun had not reached for 3 years. She still wore the ring.
She wore it on the other hand now, the right one, because she had not been able to take it off entirely. Not yet, but she had not been able to leave it where it was either. When I was sitting with Tom, she said, “In the last days, he knew he was going. I think he knew before I did. And he kept he kept apologizing.
He kept saying he was sorry he couldn’t stay. And I kept telling him it was not his fault.” And it wasn’t. But when he was gone, the worst of it was not the grief. Exactly. The worst of it was that I had nothing left to do. I had spent months, years doing things for him, for the baby, for the house, for the life we were building.
And then suddenly there was nothing to do for anyone. And the not doing was what was going to kill me. The emptiness of it. Elias was listening. He did not interrupt. I’m not going to stay because you’re paying me, Clara said. I want that to be clear. I’ll stay for Maisie. I’ll stay because she’s been checking the kitchen every morning to see if I’m there.
And I cannot be a person who makes a child think that people leave, that everyone always leaves. I’m not able to be that person. All right, and I’ll stay because that garden behind me is an embarrassment and somebody needs to deal with it before spring. He made a sound. It was unmistakably a laugh. Brief and rough and surprised, but a laugh. The garden, he said.
It’s bad, Elias. It is genuinely bad. It is, he agreed. 300 ft of gone to seed. You’ve got brassica stalks in there 6 ft tall. I know. We’ll need to turn the whole bed in November and put down good composted manure and let it rest through winter. We Yes. He was quiet for a moment. Clara, I know, she said. I know, Elias. Don’t.
He didn’t. He sat there in the cold dirt of the dead garden, and they were both quiet, and the wind moved through the cotton woods, and she could hear the river faint and far down below the second ridge. The town is not going to stop. She said, “I know what happened this morning.” Ed Napel driving back into the ridge and telling everyone what was said on this porch.
It will not make things better. It may make them considerably worse. I know. And you don’t care. I care. He said, “I’m not pretending I don’t care, but I care about it the way you care about a thing you can’t change. You acknowledge it’s real and you don’t pretend it away and then you do what you were going to do anyway. Because Maisie comes first.
Maisy comes first and because. He stopped. And because what? He turned the stone over one more time. Then he set it down and brushed the dirt off his hands and stood up. And he held his hand out to her the way he had held it out at the wagon on the first morning, steady and without hesitation. She took it.
He helped her up. Her knees popped. because of other things,” he said, and he looked at her very directly when he said it, and Clara held his gaze for a count of three, which was all she could manage. And then she looked at the tomato steaks. “I need to start lunch,” she said. “Yes.” “Maisie will be hungry when she wakes up.
” “She will tell looked like he wanted a hot meal. He’s been sulking in the barn.” “Tully sulks in the barn when he’s had too many feelings,” Elias agreed. “Is that right? He’s a sensitive man. He hides it behind the mustache. The almost laugh came back closer this time. She went in and she started lunch.
And when Maisie woke up, she came directly to the kitchen and sat at the long pine table and ate without any coaxing until he came in from the barn with mud on his boots and his hat in his hands and sat down at the other end of the table and ate two full bowls of soup. and Elias came in last after washing at the pump and sat across from Clara and did not say anything and did not need to.
That afternoon, Clara began digging the garden. She had no permission for it, no particular plan. She simply went out there with a spade from the tool shed, and she started turning the earth rowby row, pulling the dead stocks, breaking the clouds, working out the stones. It was hard work. She was not built for easy delicacy.
She knew that about herself, but she had always been built for hard work. And the soil here was good, dark, and deep. The way soil is when someone has been putting back into it for years. Ruth Boon had put back into this garden for years. Clara thought about that. She tried to think about it without apology, without the sick, guilty feeling that a woman gets when she steps into the space another woman has left.
She tried to think about it the way you think about planting a new tree in a place where a tree has died, not as replacement, but as continuation. The ground wanted something growing in it. The ground had been tended, and it missed being tended. That was not anyone’s fault. It was just the ground. She worked until the light went.
She went in and washed her hands and found Maisie sitting on the porch steps with the green shawl around her shoulders, watching the last of the color go out of the western sky. Clara sat down beside her. They sat without speaking, which had been most of what they did, and which Clare had stopped counting as silence because it had ceased to feel like silence and had started feeling like conversation.
The child’s shoulder was warm against her arm. After a while, Maisie said quietly. Are those ladies going to come back? I don’t know, Clara said. Maybe. I don’t want them to come back. I know. Papa said they were wrong about some things. Yes, about all things, Maisie said with the absolute moral conviction of a 5-year-old.
They were wrong about everything. They were wrong about me, Clara said. About what I’m doing here, about why I came. Why did you come? Clara looked at the last streak of red in the sky. Because I saw you at the market, she said, sitting on that bench. And I thought, I knew what that bench felt like.
sitting on a bench where everything is too big and too cold and too loud and none of it makes any sense and you’re very very tired of trying to make sense of it. Maisie thought about this. Did you sit on that bench, too? Different bench, Clara said. Different market, but the same feeling. What made it better for you? Clara looked at the child.
In the last of the light, Maisy’s face was amber and serious and 5 years old and ancient all at the same time. I don’t know yet,” she said truthfully. “I think it might be still happening.” Maisie accepted this. She leaned her head sideways until it rested against Clara’s arm, and she pulled the green shaw tighter around herself, and she was quiet.
Inside, Elias was talking low to Tully. Clara could hear them through the window, the low rumble of two men making practical arrangements, the fence line, the cattle, the weather coming. The fire on the range made the kitchen window glow gold. In the cottonwoods, the owl called. Clara sat on the porch with Ruth Boon’s daughter leaning against her arm in Ruth Boon’s shawl.
And she thought about a woman she had never met who had planted eight trees and tended three beehives and left a jar of honey behind her on a bottom shelf. And she thought for the first time without flinching, “I am glad you put down roots here. I am glad something of you is still growing.” She could feel the child’s breathing slow and deepen against her arm.
It was not what she thought it would feel like. She had thought when she packed her trunk on that Sunday night in her cold cabin that coming here would feel like survival, like the bread on Saturdays, necessary, grim, done, because there was no alternative. She had not thought it would feel 11 days later like the first evidence in a very long time that the world was not finished with her yet.
She did not name that feeling either. She had made a practice of not naming things before they were ready to be named. Some things fought back when you named them too soon, but she sat with it. She let it sit. And in the house behind her the kettle came to a low boil on the back of the range, and the fire settled in the great, and the night came down over the northern hills, the way nights do in open country, wide and dark and full of stars.
And she thought, “I have not checked the sky at night since Samuel. I have not been able to look.” She looked, it was full, edge to edge with stars, the big cold stars of November in high country, more than she could count, more than there was any point in trying to count. She had forgotten there were that many.
She had been looking at the ground so long she had forgotten there was that much sky. Beside her, Maisie slept and Clara sat and the stars came out. And the night was cold and very quiet. And the cottonwoods stood in the dark like witnesses with their bare arms raised. And the ranch breathed slowly in and out.
And for the first time since May, since before May, since before the baby, since before the creek, and the blue cold in the morning had came to the door. Clara Whitmore looked up. She did not feel better. She felt real, which it turned out was what she had been missing. What came next she could not have predicted, even sitting under that sky.
She could not have known that 3 weeks from that night, Edna Pel would drive out to the ranch a second time, and not with Annie Krauss or Violet Corman. She could not have known what that visit would cost or what it would break or what she herself would do in the dark before sunrise with a trunk and a decision that she would convince herself was kindness and that would turn out to be the worst mistake she ever made. But that was still 3 weeks away.
Tonight the sky was full. Tonight the child breathed against her arm. Tonight she looked up and kept looking and did not drop her eyes. She had told herself it was for Maisie. That was the thing she kept coming back to. In the 3 weeks after the Sunday with the women in the yard, in the slow cold deepening of November, when the first real snow came and the ranch pulled itself inward the way ranches do in winter, everything drawn close to the fire, everything quieter and more deliberate.
She had told herself the leaving was for Maisie, and she had believed it when she believed it. And now, sitting in her cold cabin in Blackthorn Ridge, with the trunk half unpacked, and the chickens clucking outside because Mrs. Pritchard had not yet been told she was back. She was not sure she believed it anymore. The leaving had happened on a Wednesday before anyone was awake.
She had done it the way she did most hard things without allowing herself to stop and think, because she had learned that stopping to think was how hard things never got done. She had packed the trunk in the dark. She had left a note on the long pine table, waited under the salt croc where Elias would find it in the morning when he came to start the coffee.
The note said, “I am sorry. This is not working the way I hoped. Please give my love to Maisie.” CW. It had taken her six attempts to write it, and the final version was barely longer than the first, because there was nothing she could say in a note that would not be either a lie or too much truth. She had slid the note under the salt croc at 4 in the morning, and she had lifted the trunk alone, which had nearly broken her back, and she had carried it out to the road, and she had walked it 300 yd to the corner where the south track met the
river road, and she had sat on it in the cold and the dark and waited for the freight wagon from Granton that she knew came through on Wednesdays at 5. And the driver, a quiet man named Kieser, who ran freight up and down the valley, had let her climb up without asking questions because he was a man who had been running freight long enough to understand that people sitting on trunks at corners in the dark at 5:00 in the morning do not want to be questioned.
She had been back in the cabin for 2 days. She had not gone to the market. She had not gone out at all. She had sat in her dead husband’s chair, and she had stared at the wall. and she had tried to make herself feel better by listing the reasons the leaving had been right. Maisie deserved stability, not a woman the whole town was watching and waiting to condemn.
Elias deserved to be able to go into town for supplies without men looking at him sideways. The child was eating now. She was sleeping. She had spoken. She would keep doing those things. She would keep going. She didn’t need Clara anymore. Not the way she had needed her in those first terrible weeks.
Clara had done what she came to do. It was finished. Leaving was kind. She said this to herself in various arrangements for 2 days. She did not feel better. On the morning of the third day, she was sitting at the table with a cup of cold tea she had forgotten to drink. And she was staring at the wall and she was thinking, not for the first time, about Maisie waking up and coming to the kitchen door and looking at the empty room where Clara had been.
She was thinking about what that looked like from the inside of a 5-year-old who had already learned once that the people you loved were capable of not being there when you woke up. She was thinking about this when someone knocked on the door. She did not answer it the first time. It knocked again. Mrs. Whitmore.
A man’s voice. Not one she knew right away. Then she knew it. Tully. She opened the door. Tully Hennessy stood on her step with his hat in his hands and mudc caked up his boots to the ankle, which meant he had been riding hard and in wet ground, which meant he had left the ranch before the morning frost burned off.
He looked at her with his small weathered eyes, and he did not say anything for a moment, and she could see him deciding how to begin. “She’s not eating,” he said. Clara put her hand on the door frame. “Since Wednesday,” Tully said. “She won’t come out of her room. She won’t eat. She won’t talk. It’s like he stopped. He pressed his mouth together.
Ma’am, it is exactly like before. Exactly. Like those three months never happened. Like you were never there and she never ate and never talked and never laughed. And I am I am telling you I am watching that man come apart at the seams in his own house. And I cannot His voice stopped. He looked down at his hat. I am 63 years old, Mrs. Whitmore.
I have watched hard things. I wrote in a war. I have buried people I loved. I am not a man who comes into town and knocks on widows doors. He raised his head. I am here because there is no one else to come and I cannot watch that child starve herself to death. Clara was already reaching for her coat. Does he know you came? She said. No, ma’am.
My trunk is already packed. She had not unpacked it. She had told herself she was going to every morning for 2 days and she had not. Can you get it up on your horse? I can get it up on my horse. Give me 5 minutes. She did not take 5 minutes. She wrote a note for Mrs. Pritchard about the chickens. She put the note under the Pritchard’s door herself because Tully’s horse could not carry both of them and the trunk if she went three streets out of the way.
And so she walked the three streets alone, at a pace just short of running, in the cold and the gray morning, past the boarding house where she did not look at the windows, past the dry goods where the Saturday market had been, past the corner where she had knelt in the cold beside a bench and held out a cookie.
She did not run, but she wanted to. The road north was longer than it had been the first time. She did not know if that was because of the cold or the mud, or the weight of knowing what she would find when she got there. Tully rode ahead with the trunk on the saddle horn, and she walked beside him, which he did not argue with, because she had told him to take the horse, and she would follow on foot, and he had known better than to argue.
She walked the 11 mi in the thin November cold, with her coat pulled around her, and her boots finding every rut in the road. They came through the cottonwoods at early afternoon. The yard was empty. The bunk house door was closed. The kitchen window was dark. The ranch had the quality of a held breath. not abandoned, just inside drawn, tightened like a living thing that had taken a blow and was waiting to see if another one was coming.
Tully took his horse to the barn without a word. Clara went up the porch steps. She put her hand on the door handle. She went in. The kitchen was cold. Not cold the way a kitchen gets when the fire goes out overnight. Cold the way a kitchen gets when nobody has been paying attention to the fire for several days.
The range held a faint warmth in the iron, just enough to tell her someone had put wood in that morning, but the fire was low, and the room had not been properly warm all day. The table was empty. The long pine table was completely clear. No dishes, no cups, no breadcrumbs, nothing. It looked like a table in a house where nobody lived.
Clara took off her coat. She tied on an apron. She built up the fire first because everything else required a good fire. And she did this without letting herself think about what was in the small room at the end of the hall. Because if she thought about it, she would go down the hall before she was ready. And she needed to be ready. She put water on.
She got the flour from the pantry. She began making biscuits. Her hands found the motions on their own. Measure and mix and cut the way they always did. And the kitchen began to warm around her, and the smell of the fire mixed with the smell of the flour and the small sharp smell of the baking soda.
and she put the biscuits in the oven and she set the kettle to boil and she turned around. Elias was standing in the doorway to the hall. He had not shaved in days. The gray in his jaw was heavier than she had seen it, and his eyes had the look she recognized from the first day at the market, the flat, unfocused look of a man who has used up his reserves and is running on something thinner and colder than hope.
He looked at her for a long moment. He looked at the apron. He looked at her hands which had flower on them. He looked at the range where the fire was going. He said nothing. I know, Clara said. I know I don’t have any right to come back in here and act like I didn’t do what I did. I know that. Still nothing. Elias, you left her. His voice was flat.
Not angry, which might have been easier. Just flat. The way a voice gets when it has passed through anger and come out the other side somewhere worse. You left a note under the salt croc. She found it. I didn’t get there first. She came into the kitchen before I did. And she saw the note before I did. And she can’t She doesn’t read well enough to read it.
But she knew what it was. She knew from the room being empty. She knew from the way the note was sitting there. I know. She asked me if you were coming back and I told her I didn’t know because I didn’t know. And then she went into her room and she has not come out for meals since Wednesday and she will take a cup of water if I bring it. But that is all.
I know. Tully told me. Tully went to town. Yes. I didn’t ask him to. I know you didn’t. He went because he decided to go. You can be angry at him for it if you need to, but you’d be wrong to be. Clara picked up the dish towel. She folded it. She set it down. I left because I thought I told myself it was better for her.
That I was doing damage by being here. that the town’s attention on this household was something she didn’t need. That she’d be safer if I She hasn’t eaten in three days, Clara. The sound of her name in his mouth after 3 days of the empty cabin and the cold tea and the wall she had been staring at did something to her she was not prepared for. I know, she said.
Her voice was smaller than she intended. She was eating. She was talking. She was helping you in the kitchen with an apron on. She was He stopped. He pressed his fist against the doorframe. She was coming back. She was coming back from wherever she went after Ruth died. And then you left and she went back there and I am. His voice broke. Not entirely.
Just the edge of it. Just enough. He got it back. I am not able to get her out again by myself. I could not do it the first time and I cannot do it now. And I know that you came back today which means Tully made a convincing case and maybe you had already made up your mind. I don’t know, but I need to say this to you before anything else happens.
All right. He pushed off the door frame. He came into the kitchen. He stopped on the other side of the long pine table. Not close, not far. And he looked at her across it the way he had looked at her the first night over the teacups. I’m not asking you to stay because of Maisie, he said.
I asked you to come the first time because of Maisie. That was true, and I meant it. But I’m not asking you to stay because of Maisie. Clara held very still. “I’m asking you to stay because of me,” he said. “Because I have been a widowerower in this house for 6 months, and I had stopped. I had gone somewhere inside myself, too.
Not as far as Maisie, but in the same direction. And you came and you built the fire and you cleaned the kitchen and you made biscuits with your mother’s recipe and you sang your mother’s song and you said exactly what you meant to Ednipelle’s face on this porch and you went out and turned the garden by yourself with a spade like the weeds had personally insulted you and I he stopped.
He made a sound that was not quite a laugh. Clara, I do not want you to go because my house is a better place with you in it, and I am a better man with you in it, and that has nothing to do with Maisie or with money or with any arrangement. He looked at his hands on the table. I love you. I don’t know when it started.
Maybe the day at the market. Maybe the evening you told me you didn’t give a damn what Ed Neapel said about you. I don’t know, but it is true, and I thought I should say it before we talk about anything else. She could hear the biscuits in the oven, the small sounds they made as the heat reached them, the soft creek of the dough rising.
She put her hands flat on the table. “You don’t know me,” she said. “We have known each other for for less than 4 weeks, Elias. I know you know my biscuits better than you know me. I know that, too. Your biscuits are exceptional.” He looked up. There was something in his face now that had not been there before.
Not hope exactly, but the distant relative of it, something that was trying to be brave. I also know that you walked 11 miles from town this morning because Tully knocked on your door and told you Maisie wasn’t eating. I know you were already going to come before he said 10 words to you. I know because your trunk wasn’t unpacked.
He told me that too just now in the barn. I told you not to unpack it, Tully called from the doorway. They both turned. Tully was leaning in the kitchen doorway with his arms crossed and his hat on and the expression of a man who has not been caught doing anything he wasn’t doing on purpose. “Tully,” Elias said. I told her to leave it packed that first week, Tully said, addressing the middle distance with great dignity.
In case she needed to get at the wooden spoons quick, it was practical advice. “Get out of my kitchen,” Elias said. “It’s my kitchen, too. I cooked in it for 6 months.” Tully going. He did not go. He pointed at Clara. Biscuits are done, Mrs. Whitmore. I can smell when they’re done. He went. The back door banged. Clara pressed her lips together. She turned to the oven.
She pulled the biscuits out. They were good, gold and risen, the way they were supposed to be. She set the tray on the counter and stood there with her back to the room for a moment. And she did not say anything, and he did not say anything. And the silence was the kind that had a shape to it. Await. I am afraid, she said. I know.
Not of you. Of of wanting something again. Of deciding that something is mine and then having it. She stopped. I have decided things were mine before. I know, Clara. And I don’t know if I am I don’t know if what I feel for you is what you think it is or if it is just gratitude for being seen. for being asked, for having somewhere to go when the cabin was unbearable.
She turned around. I don’t know if I can tell the difference yet between love and the relief of being wanted. He nodded slowly. He was listening. Really listening, the way he listened to things with his whole body still in his eyes, not moving from her face. “Then stay,” he said. “Stay until you can tell the difference. Stay as long as you need to.
And if I figure it out and the answer is not what you hope for, then we will handle it like adults. A pause. I am not asking you to marry me today, Clara. I am asking you to not leave before sunrise in a freight wagon and not come back. She almost laughed. It was closer than before. It was very close. All right, she said. All right, I’ll stay.
She picked up a biscuit from the tray. It was hot enough to hurt, but she held it anyway. I’ll stay until I know and then we’ll talk. That’s all I’m asking. And in the meantime, I’m going to need to go down that hall and see Maisie. And I need to do it alone. Yes. Will you Elias, will you give me about 10 minutes and then come and knock on her door.
Don’t come in. Just knock and say you’re there. Why? Because she needs to know both of us are staying, not just me. He looked at her. 10 minutes, he said. She took the biscuit with her. She walked down the hall. The door to the sewing room, to Maisy’s room, was pulled almost shut.
She could see through the thin gap, the rectangle of the child’s bed, the shape of a small body on it, the faint light from the window. She pushed the door open. The room smelled stale and warm, the smell of a small person who has not been moving much. The curtain was drawn, but the light came through the thin cotton anyway. that gray November light that has given up on being warm and is just being present.
Maisie was in the bed with the covers pulled up to her chin and her face turned away and the cookie tray was on the pillow beside her head and her mother’s green shaw was on top of the covers. Maisie, Clara said. The child did not move. Clara sat down on the edge of the bed. The mattress dipped under her. She did not reach for the child.
Did not touch her. She just sat. I went away,” she said. “I know I went away. I know that was wrong, and I’m not going to tell you it wasn’t.” She looked at the shawl, the dark green wool, the soft worn edges. I told myself it was better for you if I wasn’t here. I believed it when I was thinking it, but I was wrong.
And I know I was wrong. And I am back. Nothing. I brought a biscuit. Clara said, “It’s still hot. I’ll set it here on the edge of the bed in case you want it. She set it down. She sat. The wind outside found a gap somewhere in the eaves and made a small thin sound going through it. Somewhere in the barn, a horse moved.
I won’t go away again, Clara said. I’m not asking you to believe me right now. You don’t have to believe me right now, but I won’t. The small body under the covers was very still. Then, very slowly, Maisie turned over. Her face was not what Clara expected. She had been expecting the closed off look, the empty lamp look from the market.
Instead, what Maisy’s face showed was something raw than that, something that had not had time to go away yet. Her eyes were red rimmed and swollen from crying she had clearly been doing for 3 days, and her cheeks were pale. And she looked at Clara with the look of a child who is deciding whether to trust a thing that is already broken once. Clara met her eyes.
She did not look away. “Are you actually staying?” Maisie said. Her voice was rough from disuse. “Yes, forever.” Clara felt the word in her chest. It was the hardest word in any language, heavier than grief, heavier than love, because it was a promise about the future, and the future was the thing Clara had least reason to trust.
“Yes,” she said. “Forever.” Maisie looked at her. She looked at her for a long time, the way a child looks at something they want to believe and are not sure they’re allowed to. And then slowly she sat up. She reached across the bed cover, past the cookie tray, past the folded shawl, and she put her small, cold hand on top of Clara’s large, warm one, and she pressed down as if to check that Clara’s hand was solid, that it was there, that it was real.
It was. Clara turned her hand over and closed her fingers around the small, cold ones. They sat there. Then came the knock at the door. Elias on the other side, not opening it, just knocking twice. And then his voice, low and steady. I’m here, Bug. Maisie looked at the door. She looked at Clara. Both of you, the child said.
Both of us, Clara said. Maisie picked up the biscuit from the edge of the bed. She turned it over in her hands the way she had turned the cookie over at the market, examining it, checking its realness. Then she took a bite. She chewed. She swallowed. She took another bite. Clara sat with her hand closed around the child’s, and she watched Maisie eat, and she felt in her chest the thing she had not been able to name for 4 weeks.
The thing under the grief, the thin warmth at the back of a cold stove. And she still did not name it because it was not finished yet, because there was more of it to come. And some things needed room to grow before you put a word on them. But she knew what it was. She had always known what it was. She had just been afraid it would go the way everything else had gone, quick and senseless, without warning, without any chance to hold it tighter or brace herself.
She did not let herself think about that. She thought about the biscuit. She thought about the small hand in hers. She thought about the knock at the door and the voice on the other side of it saying, “I’m here.” That evening, Clara made supper, real supper, a pot of stew with the last of the good beef and three kinds of root vegetable.
Cornbread in the iron skillet. A small pot of the honey stirred into warm milk for Maisie, who drank all of it and held the empty cup afterward with both hands, and looked at the bottom of it like she was surprised to find it gone. Tully ate two bowls without comment. Elias ate and watched his daughter and did not say much.
But once when Maisie reached across the table without prompting and broke off a piece of Clara’s cornbread and put it in her mouth, he set down his spoon and just looked at the ceiling for a moment. And Clara saw his jaw work and she looked away. After supper, Maisie asked asked without being prompted in a voice still a little rough but willing if Clara would make pancakes in the morning. Pancakes, Clara said.
with the honey in them. Maisie said, “Not on top. In the batter. You put the honey in the batter last time.” Clara had done that exactly once 12 days ago, and the child had been watching. “Yes,” Clara said. “Pancakes with honey in the batter.” Maisie nodded, satisfied, as if the arrangement were settled.
She picked up the cookie tray from beside her plate. She had brought it to the table with her. first time she’d brought it to the table, not just held it privately in her room. And she held it in her lap. She looked at Clara. Miss Clara. Yes. Can I have a real cookie cutter for the stars? Because the mug makes the points wrong.
Clara opened her mouth. She closed it. She looked at Elias. He was looking at his plate, but his mouth had done the thing it did. the small unsteady thing that was trying to be a smile and making a reasonable go of it. I’ll see what I can do, Clare said. Tully made a sound into his coffee cup.
I have something to say, Tully said, which was not his usual opening, and both Elias and Clara looked at him. He set the cup down. He wiped his mustache. I have spent 6 months in the bunk house of this outfit. I have eaten my own biscuits for 6 months, which I am not proud of. I am proud of many things in my life, but not the biscuits. He looked at Clara. Mrs.
Whitmore, I wanted on record that it is my professional opinion, having eaten in bunk houses and cookous from here to the Missouri, that you are the finest cook in this part of the territory, and possibly any part of the territory I have personally visited, and that if you ever leave this ranch again before I am in the ground, I will be exceedingly put out.” Clara looked at him.
“Thank you, Tully. I am not finished. He picked the cup back up. I also wanted on record that the next time you pack that trunk in the dark and try to walk it down to the road by yourself, you’re going to put your back out. And at your age, you can’t afford that. At my age, Clare said. Yes, ma’am. Tully, I am 28. And the trunk weighs a lot, he said with enormous dignity. Good night.
He pushed back from the table and went out to the bunk house. Maisy watched him go. She looked at Clara. She looked at her father. He’s funny, she said. He really is, Elias agreed. He wasn’t funny before. He was. He hid it behind the mustache. Maisie thought about this. I like the mustache, she said. Don’t tell him that, Elias said.
He’ll grow it longer. The child looked down at the cookie tray in her lap. She ran her thumb along the edge of it, the familiar gesture, the one Clara had watched her do a hundred times in the last four weeks, checking, confirming, making sure the thing was still there. Then she set the tray on the table.
It was the first time since the Saturday at the market that Clara had seen her set it down voluntarily, deliberately, and leave it. Maisie slid off her chair. She walked to Clara and she put her arms around Clara’s middle. Not like a lean. Not like the uncertain press of a child testing whether a thing will hold. Like a hug. A real hug. The full body kind.
Her small face turned against Clara’s apron. Clara’s arms came around her carefully first, then tighter. The way you hold something you are only now allowing yourself to admit you have been wanting to hold. Are you staying forever now? Maisie said into the apron. It was the question Clare had known was coming since she walked back down that road in the cold. She had been preparing for it.
She had been thinking about how to answer it in a way that was honest and also not terrifying and also not so hedged with conditions that it meant nothing. In the end, there was only one answer. “Yes,” she said. “I’m staying forever now.” Maisie held on for another moment. Then she let go, stepped back, and wiped her face once with her sleeve with the business-like efficiency of a child who is done with the feeling and ready to move on to the next thing.
Okay, she said. I’m going to bed. All right. Will you come and fix my blanket? Yes. And tell me the river song. Yes. Okay. She picked the cookie tray back up from the table, tucked it under her arm, and walked down the hall to her room. Clara sat still for a moment. Elias was watching her from across the table.
“The river song,” he said. “Your mother’s song,” she said. “She asked me to sing it to her the first week. I’ve been singing it to her at bedtime. She asked you for it.” She hummed it first, then she pointed at me. He was quiet for a moment. My mother used to say that song was older than memory, he said. She didn’t know where it came from.
She just knew it from her own mother. Mine, too. He nodded. He did not say anything else, and Clara did not either, and they sat at the long pine table in the warm kitchen, with the fire low in the range, and the November dark pressed soft against the windows. And the river far below the ridge ran the way it always ran down toward the sea, unhurried, indifferent to winter or grief or the particular difficulty of being a person who has lost too much and is learning slowly, uncertainly without any guarantee to want things again. Good
night, Elias, Clara said. Good night, Clara. She went down the hall. She fixed the blanket. She sang the song just once through soft the words about the river and the willows and the love that ran down to the sea. And before she got to the end of it, Maisie was asleep. Clara sat on the edge of the child’s bed for a long time after.
She did not think about the town. She did not think about Edna Pel or Violet Corman or the things that would still be said because they would still be said. She knew that. She was not innocent about it. The world did not change because a woman sat on a child’s bed and sang a song. She thought about Tom. She thought about Samuel.
She thought about the 41 minutes she had held her son and the four months she had held the grief. Like something she could not set down because setting it down would mean something she was not ready for it to mean. She set it down. Not all of it. Not permanently. She would pick it up again.
A person picks grief up and sets it down their whole life. That was the honest truth of it. But tonight she sat it down and she let herself sit in the warm room with the sleeping child, and she let herself feel without apology that she was exactly where she was supposed to be. The fire in the range ticked as it cooled.
Outside, first snow had started again, soft and without hurry, settling onto the roof of the ranch house, and the bare arms of the cottonwoods and the dark turned earth of the garden that would need tending in the spring. Clara sat with the sleeping child. She stayed. The snow kept coming through November and into December, and the ranch kept going the way ranches do in hard weather, slowly, steadily, one day at a time.
The garden slept under its white cover. The cottonwood stood bare and patient. Maisie ate pancakes every Sunday morning with honey in the batter, and she laughed at Tully’s mustache, and she stopped carrying the cookie tray everywhere she went, though she kept it on the shelf above her bed where she could see it from the pillow. Elias asked Clara to marry him on a Tuesday in December, which she later told him was a very unromantic day of the week to propose.
“I didn’t plan it,” he said. “You were making bread, and I just decided.” You decided? I had been deciding for a while. Tuesday was when I finished. She said yes. Not without fear. Not without the complicated, tangled grief of a woman who had already loved one man and buried him and was asking herself honestly whether she had the courage to love another.
She said yes with all of that in her. And Elias knew it was in her and did not ask her to pretend otherwise. And that more than anything else was why she said it. They married in the Blackthornne Ridge Church on a Saturday in January. Elias had wanted to do it at the ranch quietly with only Tully present.
It was Clara who said no. It was Clara who said she would not be married in a barn like something that needed to be hidden. That if they were going to do this, they were going to do it in town in the church in front of every person who had stood on a boardwalk and laughed at the way her dress fit.
You want to do it in front of them? Elias said, I want to do it in spite of them, Clare said. That’s different. It was different. The church was half full, not full. There were empty pews that would not have been empty at Ruth’s funeral, and they all knew whose empty pews they were, and nobody mentioned it. But half full was more than Clara had expected.
The school teacher, Miss Bellweather, came. Old Mr. Pritchard, came with his wife, who squeezed Clara’s hands before the ceremony and said nothing because nothing needed saying. Three ranch families from up the valley came. People Clara had not met, who came because they knew Elias and because the ridge had been watching this story long enough to have formed opinions that were not all Edna Pel’s opinion. Ed Neapel came too.
Clara saw her when she walked in on Tully’s arm. Tully cleaned up and shaved to an improbable smoothness, wearing a collar that was clearly strangling him and enduring it with dignity. Edna was in the third pew on the left in her good coat, and her face when she looked at Clara was the complicated face of a woman who has not entirely made her peace with something and knows it.
She did not smile, but she did not look away either, and Clara walking past her gave her a single nod. It was not forgiveness. It was not cruelty. It was acknowledgment. I see you. You see me. We are both here. Elias was waiting at the front of the church. He had polished his boots. He had combed his hair.
He had the look of a man who is terrified and has decided to be terrified in public because the alternative is worse. When Clara came up the aisle and stopped beside him, he looked at her the way he had looked at her across the long pine table on the night she came back. Like a man who has been given back something he had stopped believing he deserved.
The ceremony was short. Reverend Hollyy performed it with the stiff precision of a man who has reconsidered a position he was certain of and is not entirely sure yet where to stand. Maisie sat in the front pew between Tully and Mrs. Pritchard, wearing her collar button correctly, holding a small bunch of dried flowers Tully had found somewhere, and presented to her that morning with great ceremony.
She watched the ceremony with the focused seriousness of a child witnessing something important. When the reverend pronounced them married, Elias took Clare’s face in his rough, calloused hands, and he kissed her briefly, and when he pulled back, he was not entirely steady on his feet, and Clara was not either, and Tully cleared his throat loudly from the front pew.
Then Elias turned around. He looked at the half-ful church at the people who had come and the empty pews of the people who hadn’t, and he was quiet for a moment, and Clara thought he was going to let it go. thought he was going to simply walk them back down the aisle and let the day be what it was.
He did not let it go. “This woman,” he said, not loudly, but in the carrying way of a man who has spent years calling across open ground and knows how to fill a space, came to my ranch in October because I asked her to. She came because my daughter wasn’t eating and I was out of things to try. She cooked and she cleaned and she tended to my child and she fixed a household that had gone to pieces and she did it quietly and without complaint.
And half the people in this room spent those months deciding what it meant in saying so out loud to anyone who would listen. A pause. It meant she was saving my daughter’s life. That is what it meant. And I want that said in this building clearly so there is no further confusion about it. The church was very quiet.
Maisie in the front pew nodded with conviction. Nobody argued. Clara put her hand on her husband’s arm and he put his hand over hers and they walked back down the aisle together and out into the January cold where the sky was white and the street was frozen and Tully was already untying the horses with the expression of a man who has attended enough ceremonies for one lifetime and is ready for the reception.
The ranch came back to life the way things come back to life in open country. Not all at once, but in increments, each one small enough to overlook if you weren’t watching. The garden in spring was Clara’s. She put in tomatoes and beans and three kinds of squash. And she replanted the herb bed that had been Ruth’s, not because she was trying to restore something, but because the ground was good, and she was a woman who believed in using good ground.
She bought a proper star-shaped cookie cutter from a tinsmith in Granton. Maisie used it with ferocious precision every Saturday morning, cutting each shape slowly, checking the points. By summer, Maisie was laughing the way children laugh when they have forgotten to be careful about it. Suddenly, completely for reasons that made no sense and required no explanation.
She helped Clare in the kitchen and bossed Tully about the garden and followed her father around the ranch on a small spotted pony he bought for her in May, narrating everything she saw in the running commentary of a child who has made up for 6 months of silence by having a very great deal to say. She told anyone who asked that she had two mothers, one she remembered and one who stayed.
She said it the first time to Miss Belellweather at the schoolhouse. And Miss Belleweather wrote it in a letter to Clara, and Clara read the letter at the kitchen table and then folded it and put it in the tin with her recipe cards, which was where she put the things she wanted to keep. In late August, Clara told Elias she was expecting.
He sat very still when she said it. “Clara, I know. Are you? How do you feel?” “Terrified,” she said, and glad, both at the same time. He reached across the table and put his hand over hers. The same way he had on the night she came back, the same steadiness in it. Both is all right, he said. I know it is.
Maisie took the news with the gravity of a child who has been given a serious responsibility and is prepared to take it seriously. She asked if the baby would like cookies. She asked if she could help teach it to Rolo. She asked after a pause if the baby would know about her first mother, too. And Clara said yes, that Maisie would tell it, that the baby would know everything Maisie wanted it to know.
Maisie thought about this for a long time. Okay, she said. Then I’ll remember everything good. That was the thing, Clara thought. That nobody told you about grief when you were inside of it. They told you it passed. They told you time helped. They told you there was life on the other side of it. What they didn’t tell you was that it didn’t disappear. It changed shape.
It stopped being the thing that filled the whole room and became instead something you carried in your pocket, something with weight and meaning, something you could take out and look at and put back. Tom was in her pocket. Samuel was in her pocket. Ruth Boon was in there, too. In the honey on the bottom shelf, in the cottonwoods, in the green shaw that Maisie still kept on her bed.
You carried the people you had loved, and you kept living. That was the whole of it. There was no trick to it and no shortcut and no way around it. And it was not beautiful in the way that stories made it beautiful because real grief was ugly and slow and it made you mean some days and stupid other days. And it made you leave in the dark on a freight wagon when you should have stayed.
But if you were lucky, and Clara had not considered herself lucky, had not considered herself anything at all for most of that year. If you were lucky, something knelt down beside you in the cold and held out a hand and said, “Come on.” And you were too tired and too stubborn and too hungry to say no. That was how it had happened. Not perfectly, not cleanly, with wrong turns and bad decisions, and a trunk that had been carried in the dark, and a note under a salt croc that she was not proud of.
and a child who had gone back into silence because of it. And a man who had stood at a kitchen table and told her the truth when the truth was the hardest thing anyone had said to her since Hattie had taken Samuel from her arms. Imperfect, human, real, and real. Clara had learned standing in the kitchen of the Boone Ranch on a December morning with her husband’s coffee getting cold on the counter and her stepdaughter’s voice carrying from the barn where she was interrogating Tully about whether ponies like ginger snaps.
Real was enough. Real was more than enough. Real was in the end everything. The cottonwoods Ruth had planted stood outside the kitchen window, eight of them, their bare arms raised against the winter sky, waiting for spring the way things wait. when they have been well-rooted and have nowhere else they need to be.
Clara looked at them every morning.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.