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Banished Before the First Frost, She Opened a Hidden Hillside Door — Then Everything Changed

On January 12th, 1888, the temperature dropped 70° in 8 hours. The wind reached at 60 mph. The sky turned the color of a bruise going black, and 235 people died across Minnesota, Dakota Territory, Nebraska, and Wisconsin. Most of them were children found in the fields and on the roads, and in the drifts between schoolhouses and front doors.

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Some of them still holding hands when the thaw finally came and the search parties went out. One structure in northern Wisconsin held 52° through the worst of it. It was 12 ft by 14 ft. Its walls were 16 in thick. It had been built by a 14-year-old girl with a hand ax and creek clay and the scraps that a logging company had kicked aside and left to rot.

This story begins 5 months before that night on the 23rd of August, 1887, when the girl walked into a field of garbage with $9 sewn into the hem of her dress and nowhere else to go. Her name was Mara Asmundson. Her father had come from Norway as a young man and worked timber claims across the north country until the work killed him.

Her mother had followed him from the same village, raised Mara in a two-room house near the Tomahawk River, and died of fever in the summer of 1886, 11 months after her husband. Mara was 13 when her mother died. She was 14 when she walked into the slash field. In between, she lived in the Henderson household, where she woke before the family and went to bed after them, and ate what was left on the plates and slept on a straw tick in the kitchen corner, and told herself it was temporary because the alternative was admitting that it was her life. She was

a good worker. She knew how to wash and cook and garden and keep small children from hurting themselves. Mrs. Henderson needed all of those things, and Mara provided them without complaint, and the arrangement held for 13 months until Mrs. Henderson caught fever in August and died within a week. The husband remarried before the month ended.

A widow from Wausau with three children of her own and a way of looking at Mara that communicated everything without requiring words. The new Mrs. Henderson stood in the kitchen doorway and looked at the straw tick in the corner and looked at Mara and made her assessment in the time it takes to exhale. Mara heard the conversation through the kitchen wall 3 days later.

The words were not cruel in the way that requires effort. They were simply practical. There were enough mouths. The Norwegian girl must go. Mr. Henderson gave her $9 the following morning. He explained that this was money her parents had left, that he had held it in trust, that he was sorry for the circumstances, that the Lutheran church in Merrill would help her find a placement with a family who needed domestic help.

He said she was a capable girl and would land on her feet. He did not meet her eyes when he said any of it. He did not offer to drive her to town. Mara took the $9 and walked north instead of south. She walked north because her father had described the land near the Tomahawk River the way some men describe a place they love, not with sentimentality but with specific detail.

The kind of detail that means a person has walked the ground many times and paid attention. “Good timber,” he had said, “cold creek running clear from the ridge, a meadow wide enough for a proper cabin site, and along the bank clay. Better clay than anything in the county.” Mara deep and pure, the kind of clay a person could build something lasting from.

He had said it more than once and the repetition had lodged in her memory without her understanding why he emphasized it until much later. The logging crews had come through after his death and taken everything worth taking. That much she had heard, but the land itself remained. No one had filed on it. The timber company had purchased the logging rights and abandoned the claim when the good wood was gone and the land had reverted to the county and the county had no immediate plans for it and no homesteader wanted 20 acres of

stripped hillside with nothing on it but stumps and debris. So, the land sat. Mara had nowhere else to go that she was willing to go. What she found was not what she had imagined, though she had tried to prepare herself for the reality of it. The logging crews had not merely harvested the forest, they had consumed it.

The hillside looked the way a carcass looks after the the wolves have finished recognizable in outline, stripped of everything that had given it life. Stumps dotted the slope in irregular rows, some of them taller than she was, their flat tops already weathering gray. Enormous tangles of branches and tree top sections lay where they had fallen.

The needles long since turned brown and dry carpeting the ground in a crackling layer that shifted under her boots. The creek still ran and she was glad of that, but its banks had been gouged and compacted by the dragging of logs and the grass along the water’s edge had not yet grown back.

Everywhere in every direction she turned lay the wood the crews had not wanted. Crooked logs that no sawmill would accept. Logs with hollow centers split lengthwise when they fell. Sections too small in diameter to be worth the hauling hardwood species that would sink rather than float down river, pieces that had broken during felling and been kicked aside, pieces rotted at one end where they had lain in wet ground too long.

The ground was dense with them. A graveyard of timber that the industry had already judged worthless. Mara stood in the middle of it and turned a slow circle. This was what remained. This was what she had to work with. She made camp that first night under a lean-to of branches propped against a fallen pine, built a small fire, and ate the last of the bread the Henderson household had provided.

The bread was 2 days old and she ate it slowly, making it last. The August night was warm enough that she didn’t need a heavy fire, but she kept it going anyway because the light was something in the dark slash field without it was nothing she wanted to sit inside. She did not sleep well. She lay on her back and looked at the branches above her and calculated.

Six months before the killing, cold arrived less of September rain early. She had $9 which could buy flour and salt and marl, but not much else. She had a hand ax, her father’s with a handle she had wrapped in raw hide where the wood had cracked. She had the clothes she was wearing and a change wrapped in burlap.

She had her mother’s Bible, which she did not open, but which she kept near her. She had the knowledge that she could not go back and would not go forward to marl and the Lutheran church and placement in another kitchen corner in another family’s leftover food. She knew what placement meant.

She knew what could happen to a girl alone in another family’s house. She had heard enough over 13 months of kitchen work in thin walls to understand the shape of what she was refusing. So she lay in the dark and calculated instead and the numbers were bad. A proper log cabin required 60 straight logs of at least 8 in diameter and 16 ft in length.

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