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Not eating their sheep led to being laughed at… But then the fire burned all the town

Neither of them knew how soon that day would arrive. The question that troubled the Rooks through those parched weeks was a simple one, and a heavy one. Should they give up? The market men came through Bellow Crossing in early September, same as every year. And this time they made Daniel an offer that made him sit down at the kitchen table and go very still.

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300 sheep, sold live, would bring enough money to clear every debt they had, and carry them comfortably through two winters. All he had to do was let the animals go. Annie set a cup of coffee in front of him. “You’re thinking about it.” “I’d be a fool not to think about it.” She sat across from him. Outside, the wind hissed through the dry grass.

“And what do we do next spring with no flock to shear? Buy lambs again at twice the price? Start over from nothing?” “We’d have money,” Daniel said, “real money, not a shed full of blankets that won’t sell.” It was the closest they had ever come to quarreling. Annie looked at her hands, rough from years of carding wool, and thought of every lamb she’d nursed through cold nights, every fleece she’d turned to yarn.

“Hollis stopped me in the store today,” she admitted, “asked when we were going to start farming like sensible people.” Mrs. Pratt laughed behind her hand. “I pretended I didn’t hear.” She paused. “I’m tired of being the joke of this town, Daniel.” Daniel reached across and covered her hand with his. “So am I,” he said honestly, “but tired isn’t the same as wrong.” They sat in silence.

The lamp guttered. “If we sell,” Daniel finally said, “we’d be doing it because we’re afraid of what folks think, not because it’s right. And I never wanted to build a life out of being afraid.” Annie’s eyes filled, but she nodded. “I keep dreaming the blankets matter,” she whispered. “I can’t explain it. I just feel like they’re for something, like all this work isn’t an accident.

” Daniel went to the window. He looked out at the flock, gray shapes settling in the failing light, and beyond them the town where their chimneys smoked against a sky too dry for comfort. “One more season,” he said, “we keep the flock, we keep the blankets. If come spring we’re still the fools of Bellow Crossing, then we’ll talk to the market men, but not yet.

” Annie crossed the room and stood beside him. The decision settled over them both, frightening and certain. Neither of them slept well that night. The wind never stopped. And far to the south, where a careless camp had been left smoldering, something had already begun to stir. The next morning, Daniel walked out before dawn and found Annie already in the wool shed, the lamp lit, her needle moving.

“I thought we agreed to wait,” he said. “We did.” She didn’t stop sewing. “But if we’re keeping the flock, then I’m not stopping either. I’m going to make every blanket this wool will give us, all of them, as many as these hands can stitch.” Daniel looked at her, the set of her jaw, the lamp light in her hair, and something in him steadied.

He took up his tools and went to build another drying rack. From that hour they stopped apologizing for who they were. They worked harder than ever. Two people committed fully to a path the whole town thought was foolish they had chosen. And there was no turning back now. It was the Widow Aldridge who first crossed the line from pity to friendship.

She arrived one afternoon with a basket of pears, ostensibly to trade. “My late husband kept sheep back in Ohio,” she said, watching Annie spin. “Folks mocked him, too.” She ran a weathered hand over a finished quilt. “This is fine work, child. Finer than this town deserves.” Annie’s throat tightened.

It was the first kind word she’d heard about her craft in years. “Come spring, Mrs. Aldridge said, “I’ll help you sew. These old fingers still remember.” She smiled. “Let them laugh. We’ll keep each other company.” From then on, Annie was not entirely alone. The dry season deepened, and so did the Rook’s resolve.

What followed were the strangest, busiest weeks of their lives. A stretch of days where the very thing the town laughed at became the center of everything they did. Annie established a rhythm. She rose before the sun, lit the lamp in the wool shed, and spun until her shoulders ached. Aldridge came 3 days a week.

And the two women sat opposite each other with their needles flashing, talking and laughing in a way Annie had nearly forgotten she could. The widow taught her a faster stitch, a tighter weave that made the quilts even warmer. “You hold the wool like it’s alive,” Mrs. Aldridge observed one afternoon. “Most folks fight it.

You let it be what it wants.” Annie laughed. “Daniel says I talk to the sheep more than I talk to him.” “Does it work?” “The sheep listen better.” Out in the pasture, Daniel was equally absorbed. He had decided, since they were committed, to do the thing properly. He built three new drying racks, tall and sturdy, where freshly washed fleece could hang in the sun.

He repaired the old loom and built a second, smaller one for finer work. He wove storage baskets from river reeds, dozens of them, to keep the finished blankets clean and dry and stacked in neat rows. The flock, for its part, seemed to sense the care lavished upon it. Daniel knew each sheep. The bold ram he called Captain.

The three ewes who always crowded the gate. The gentle old mother who followed him like a dog. He moved them to the shaded draws where what little grass remained stayed greenest. He hauled water from the dropping river morning and evening. His back aching, never once regretting the labor. Word of their stubbornness spread and curious townsfolk began finding reasons to wander past the Rook place.

The Pratt boys came to gawk and stayed to help carry water. Won over by Daniel’s easy way and Annie’s fresh bread. Hollis himself wrote out one Sunday, ostensibly to check on a fence line that didn’t concern him at all. He found Daniel knee-deep in fleece, sorting wool by grade. “Still at it then.” Hollis said from his saddle.

“Still at it.” Hollis looked at the drying racks, the baskets, the shed visible through its open doors stacked floor to rafter with folded quilts. Something in his expression shifted. Not quite respect, but the beginning of curiosity. “That’s a powerful lot of blankets, Rook.” “Annie’s been busy.” “Who’s going to buy 300 blankets in a town this size?” Daniel straightened, wiping his hands.

“Don’t rightly know. Maybe nobody. But she makes them anyhow, and they’re good, and that’s enough for now.” Hollis chewed on that. He glanced at the sheep dotting the hillside, fat and content despite the drought. “Your animals look better fed than half the cattle in the county.” he admitted grudgingly.

“How you keeping them so fine in a dry year like this?” And so Daniel told him about the shaded draws, the careful rotation, the hauled water, the attention to each animal. Hollis listened despite himself. When he rode off, he didn’t laugh. That alone felt like a victory. Inside, the work took on an almost joyful quality.

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