Posted in

A Pregnant Widow Took In Two Orphans for $1—Until a Cowboy’s Hidden Secret Changed Their Fate

A second arrangement with a feed supplier. A private note held by a man named Gerald Pruitt, who had shown up at the door 2 weeks after the funeral and explained, with the careful politeness of a man who had done this many times before, that he expected repayment by spring or he would pursue the property through the courts.

"
"

Maeve had asked him to leave. He had gone. He would come back. She back to the house, took off her coat, and sat down at the kitchen table with Thomas’s account ledger open in front of her. She’d gone over the numbers so many times she could have recited them in her sleep. The arithmetic didn’t change.

The cold didn’t care about arithmetic. She needed help. She needed working hands specifically, not hired men because she had nothing to pay hired men with. She needed someone who could drive posts and mend fence line and haul water and do the hundred other tasks that a seven-months-pregnant woman should not be doing alone in the dead of winter.

She turned to a blank page in the back of the ledger and wrote in her neat careful hand, “What can you actually offer?” She stared at the question for a long time. Then she wrote beneath it, “A roof, a fire, food, for now, work that matters.” She closed the ledger. She picked up the dollar from the table.

She started putting her coat back on. Walk. Harlan Creek was eight miles from the ranch by the main road, 12 by the back trail, and in January you took the main road no matter how long it was. Maeve drove the wagon herself, the old bay mare plodding through the snow with the resigned patience of an animal who had long since made peace with difficult circumstances.

Maeve sat up on the box with a wool blanket across her lap and her hat pulled low and thought about what she was going to say. The Harlan Creek Orphan Station had been operating out of a converted feed warehouse on the east end of town since 1879. It wasn’t officially called an orphan station. The county paperwork referred to it as a dependent children’s temporary care facility, but everyone called it the orphan station, and everyone in town had a story about it.

None of the stories were particularly good. She tied the mare at the post outside and sat there for a moment in the cold looking at the building. Gray wood, two small windows, a stovepipe that was putting out almost no smoke. Not promising. Inside a woman named Mrs. Aldridge ran the operation with the efficient cheerlessness of someone who had long ago used up whatever sympathy they once possessed.

She was in her 50s, wide across the shoulders with the look of a person who had heard every variation of every hard luck story and had categorized them all as unpersuasive. She looked up from her desk when Maeve came in. “Mrs. Holloway,” she said. She’d known Thomas, knew about the death, knew about the debts.

Everyone in town knew about the debts. “I wasn’t expecting you.” “I wasn’t expecting to be here,” Maeve said. She sat down across from Mrs. Aldridge without being invited and unwrapped her scarf. The room was cold enough that she could still see her breath, but it was better than outside. “I’m looking to take on a child,” Maeve said.

“Someone old enough to work. I can provide shelter, food, and a real home. The work would be ranch work, hard work.” Mrs. Aldridge looked at her for a long moment. “You’re 7 months pregnant and you’re running that ranch alone,” she said. “Yes.” “And you want to take on a child.” “That’s what I said.” Mrs. Aldridge folded her hands on the desk. “Mrs.

Holloway, with respect, I’ve had people walk in here with grand intentions before. What happens in 4 months when you’ve got a newborn and you’re exhausted and the person you’ve taken in is more trouble than help?” “Then we’ll both be exhausted,” Maeve said, “but we’ll still have a roof over our heads.” A silence.

“How old?” Mrs. Aldridge asked. “Old enough to work,” Maeve said again. “12, 13, 14. Someone who knows what they’re doing, won’t fall apart the first time a fence breaks.” Mrs. Aldridge opened a ledger of her own. A thicker one, more worn at the edges. She ran her finger down a column of names.

“I have two children here who might fit your requirements,” she said. And there was something careful in her voice, something that made Maeve sit straighter. But I should tell you about them before I introduce you because most people hear the particulars and they walk back out that door. “Tell me,” Maeve said. “Colton Reed, 16 years old.

He’s been through four placements in 2 years. Two farms, a blacksmith in Billings, a family in Helena. Every single one sent him back.” She paused. “He’s not violent. He’s not stupid. He’s difficult. Doesn’t take direction well. Has opinions he’s not shy about sharing. Pushed back on a foreman in Helena hard enough that the man threatened to press charges.

” “What did the foreman do to earn that?” Mrs. Aldridge blinked. “I beg your pardon?” “The man threatened to press charges,” Maeve said. “That suggests Colton pushed back on something specific. What was it?” A pause. “The foreman was cutting the younger children’s food rations.” Maeve nodded slowly. “What’s the other one?” “His sister, Elsie, 9 years old.

She came in with Colton 2 years ago. She doesn’t cause trouble, barely speaks, actually. She’s been passed over four times for placement because families want the girls who smile and make it easy. What happened to the parents?” “Died,” Mrs. Aldridge said flatly. “Both of them, within a year of each other.

Fever, an accident, in that order. No other family came forward.” Maeve sat with that for a moment. “Can I meet them?” she asked. “Ducked. They were in the back room, which turned out to be a large dim space filled with cots and a single wood stove that was putting in more effort than the one in the front office. Several younger children were asleep or close to it.

Near the window, a boy sat on the edge of a cot with his elbows on his knees, staring at the floor with the practiced blankness of someone who had learned that expressions were things other people used against you. He was tall for 16, so long in the leg and broad at the shoulder in a way that suggested he’d done serious physical work. His hands were roughened.

There was a scar along the left side of his jaw that looked old. His hair was dark and badly cut, probably by himself. He looked up when Maeve walked in and his eyes, dark, steady, unimpressed, went straight to her stomach before coming up to her face. She’d noticed people doing that ever since she started showing.

Usually it made her want to say something sharp. With this boy, she had the odd sense he was simply taking inventory, the way you’d assess a situation before deciding how to act in it. Beside him, sitting cross-legged on the same cot with a book open in her lap, was a small girl with dark hair and two braids and the same steady dark eyes as her brother.

Read More