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He Brought Home a Bride to Scrub His Floors — She Turned His Dying Homestead Into the Pride of Town

A bay mare stood in the nearest stall and turned her head when they entered. The wagon was already hitched. He had expected her to come, or had not allowed himself to consider the alternative, and she did not know yet which of those was true. He set her bag in the wagon bed without comment. She climbed up before he could offer a hand.

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He noticed. He went around to the other side and got up and took the res, and they moved out into the street. The town watched from its doorways. She sat straight and looked forward. The road ran west and then northwest, following a creek she could hear before she could see it, and then climbing through a stretch of open grassland where the wind had room to work.

The sky was enormous here. She had known it would be, had been told, but knowing and sitting under it were different things. It pressed down and opened at the same time. He did not talk on the drive. She did not try to fill the silence. After a while, she decided she was grateful for that. The land changed gradually, a long shallow rise, a stand of cottonwood, and then the homestead appeared at the end of a wagon track that had been worn down to bare clay.

She saw the house first, then the barn behind it, then the fence line that had once been something, and was now a negotiation between post and wire, and the weight of years. He pulled up and set the brake. She looked at the house. The porch had a lean to it, one shutter hung at an angle from a single hinge.

The paint, whatever color it had been, was mostly gone, bleached and peeled back to gray wood, the grain of it raised and rough. She had known it needed work. He had written that plainly. She had not known it was tired. There was a difference between needing work and being tired, and this house was tired in the way of something that had been holding on past its intention.

He stepped down from the wagon. She stepped down herself and stood in the yard and looked at the fence and then at the porch and then at the door. Behind the door was the life the letter had offered her, and she had chosen over the life the letter had saved her from. He carried her bag to the porch and set it down and turned to look at her, looking at the house.

She could feel him waiting to see what she would do. She picked up her bag. She walked to the porch. She pulled the door open and went inside. The smell was dust and old ash and something underneath it. wood and light coming through the west window and the specific quiet of a house that had not had a woman in it for some time. She stood in the doorway until her eyes adjusted.

The main room was large enough. A table, two chairs, a cast iron stove pushed against the east wall with a length of pipe going up through the ceiling, a window above the dry sink, a shelf with three tins on it, evenly spaced, as if someone had arranged them with care, and then stopped caring about everything else.

The floor was swept, but not clean, the kind of swept that a man does when he knows someone is coming and wants to show he has tried. She set her bag down near the door. He came in behind her and stood with his hat in his hands and said nothing. She could feel him watching her take inventory, which was what it was.

She did not try to hide it. She walked to the stove and opened the firebox and looked in. Ash and one unburned piece of wood that had been there long enough to have a thin coat of gray dust over it. She closed the firebox. She walked to the window above the sink and tested the latch. It held but not firmly. He said, “I know it wants work.

” She turned and looked at him. He was holding his hat the same way he had held it since she stepped off the train. Both hands brimmed down. A man unsure what to do with himself in his own house. She said, “Show me the rest of it.” There was a bedroom off the main room, a narrow bed with a wool blanket pulled flat across it.

He had done that recently. She could tell by the way the edge was tucked sharp on one side and left loose on the other, as if he’d been called away before he finished, a window on the north wall. She looked out through it at the yard and passed the yard to a stand of cottonwood that marked where the creek bent. The trees were leafing early. That was something.

The room smelled of him, not unpleasantly. It smelled of a man who worked outside and came in tired and slept without dreaming. She came back to the main room. He was standing where she’d left him. She said, “Where will you sleep?” He said, “There’s a lean to off the back. It’s been used for worse.” She nodded.

She looked at the three tins on the shelf. She walked over and opened the first one. Salt the second. Coffee enough for several mornings. The third was empty. She put the lids back on. She said, “I’ll need flour and lard if there is any and something to get that stove lit.” He said, “I can get those.” She said, “Tonight if you can.

” He said, “I’ll go now.” He put his hat on and went out the door. She listened to his boots on the porch. She listened to the wagon leaving. Then she turned and looked at the room. Just the room and the light through the west window and the work in it. She started with the floor. There was no point starting anywhere else.

The floor was the foundation of everything that happened inside a house. How it felt to wake up in it. How it felt to set a table. Whether a room said, lived in, or given up on. She found a broom behind the stove, its bristles worn to one side. She swept from the back wall forward, working in slow rows, and what came up was months of dirt, maybe longer.

boot grit, wood shavings, the dried husk of something she didn’t look at closely. She swept it all out the front door and off the edge of the porch. Then she stood in the doorway and looked at the floor properly. Pine boards. They’d warped in two places where water had come in. The roof probably or a window left open in rain, but they were sound.

They just needed to be seen. She went back inside and looked at what else needed seeing. The window above the dry sink had a broken latch. She found a length of wire on a nail by the door and fashioned it into something that would hold until wood could be fitted. It wasn’t pretty. It worked. The shelf above the stove was pulling from the wall on the left side.

Three nails had worked loose over time, the wood behind them soft with age. She couldn’t fix that tonight. She took note of it. The stove itself was the last thing. She opened the firebox and found old ash, cold and deep. She cleaned it out with a piece of broken shingle she found near the wood pile, working the ash into a bucket she located under the dry sink.

Then she laid a fire paper from her bag, two small sticks of kindling, one split log on top, and waited. He came back before the dark was full. She heard the wagon first, then his boots on the porch steps. He came in carrying a flower sack under one arm and a tin of lard in his other hand.

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