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The Cowboy’s Children Hadn’t Tasted Bread in Months—Then a Heavyset Widow Changed Everything

She was 11 and looked at in the face, sharp, watchful with her mother’s jaw, though Delila wouldn’t know that until later. She was not looking 11 anywhere else. She was standing in the doorway of her own house with the expression of someone who had been making adult decisions for longer than she should have had to, and she looked at Delila with the particular combination of relief and suspicion that only comes from being very tired and very scared and needing help too much to refuse it.

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The inside of the house was cold. Not dangerously cold, but cold enough that the children’s breath showed faintly. The fire in the iron stove was exactly what she’d feared from outside. Two logs and some kindling, making a brave attempt at warmth and losing. The wood box beside the stove was nearly empty.

One small piece of split pine and a handful of bark scraps. The crying was coming from a small girl in the corner of the main room, four years old, sitting on a braided rug and crying with the automatic quality of a child who has used up her ideas for feeling better and is simply enduring. Beside her, sitting with the rigid stillness of a child who has decided he is supposed to be brave and is finding it hard work, was a boy of about six, with the same dark hair and wideset eyes as Norah.

The fourth child, Caleb, was sitting at the kitchen table with a tin plate in front of him. The plate was empty. Delilah took all of this in with one sweep of the room and then she turned to Nora. Wood pile outside? She asked. Around back. I don’t I haven’t been able to carry enough by myself. The storm came fast.

I’ll get wood first, then we’ll sort out the rest. She went out into the wind without setting down her pack, found the wood pile around the back of the house under a sagging leanto, and spent three trips carrying as much wood as she could in arms that had almost no feeling left. She stacked it inside the door on her second trip.

Got a fire going properly on the third. Real fire with purpose. A fire that was going to stay. And then she sat down on the floor next to the stove with her coat still on and waited for her hands to start working again. The four-year-old had stopped crying, or mostly stopped. She was staring at Delilah from the rug with eyes that were too large for the situation and still wet at the edges.

The six-year-old had unclenched slightly. “What’s her name?” Delilah asked Norah. May the boy is Henry. Are you hungry? Norah’s face did something complicated. We had some porridge this morning. That was the entire answer. Delilah opened her pack and took out two of the loaves. They were cold and hard, but the stove was warming now.

She set them on the flat iron surface of the stove’s top to warm, balancing them carefully. And then she looked at Caleb, who was still sitting at the table watching her. “You’ve had nothing since morning?” she asked. He shook his head, not sulking, just honest. 15 minutes, she said. “Maybe 20.” The bread was not what it would have been fresh.

The cold had changed it, and reheating on a stove top is not the same as coming out of an oven, and she knew it. But she watched Caleb eat his portion with a focused intensity that made something in her chest pull tight and ache. And May, who had stopped crying entirely and migrated across the room during the warming process, ate hers with both hands wrapped around it, sitting so close to the stove that Delilah had to gently move her back twice. “Papa will be angry,” Norah said.

She was eating her own bread standing up as though she didn’t want to commit to being at rest at me. At us for letting a stranger in. “That’s fair,” Delila said. “He doesn’t know me.” “Do you know him?” No. Norah chewed in and thought, “Then you’re not really a stranger to each other.

You’re just people who haven’t met.” Delilah looked at her for a moment. That’s a very specific distinction. Mama used to say that. Norah said it flatly without changing expression and then looked away. There it was. Delilah had suspected it from the moment she walked in. The particular quality of disorder in the house. Not the disorder of a man who doesn’t care, but the disorder of someone who has been doing more than he can manage for too long. Things slowly falling behind.

A home that had been someone’s and was now trying to remember how to still be one without her. She didn’t ask. She filed it away and put another log on the fire. Gideon Cross came in 2 hours after dark. She heard the horse first, then the boots on the porch, and then the door opened and a man came in who was quite obviously at the exact end of whatever he had in him.

He was tall, considerably taller than the door frame should have required, but he ducked instinctively, the habit of a man who’d been ducking that particular door frame for years. He was wearing a coat that had been good once, and was now held together in two places by wire rather than buttons, and his face had the particular grayish exhaustion of someone who has been cold for so long they’ve stopped registering it. He saw her.

He stopped dead in the middle of the room. The children were all asleep. Norah on the settle, May and Henry in the corner, nest of quilts they’d made. Caleb at the table with his head on his arms. The fire was going strong. The room was warm. And there was a woman he had never seen in his life sitting in his kitchen chair with her hands wrapped around a tin cup.

“Who are you?” he said, not aggressively, too tired for aggressive, but with the alertness of a man who had been surprised and wasn’t sure yet what kind of surprise this was. Delilah Mercer,” she said, keeping her voice low so the children wouldn’t wake. “I was on the road to Cutters Bend. I heard your youngest crying and came in.

Your daughter let me in.” He looked at the sleeping children. His expression when he looked at Norah was brief and difficult to read. She shouldn’t have done that. Probably not by the usual rule, but it was very cold and there was almost no wood inside and nothing to eat. She kept her voice even.

I got wood and I had bread. He was still watching her. She met it directly, which she had learned was better than looking away. I’m not asking to stay, she said. I was going to leave when you got back, except the storm got worse, and I don’t know if the road is passable. I’ll sleep in the barn if you’ll let me.

I’ll be gone when it clears. I was quiet for a long moment. He looked at the fire, the proper solid fire that was filling the room, and at the empty tin plate near May’s sleeping spot that still had breadcrumbs on it, and at the stack of wood she’d brought in that was now the difference between tonight being manageable and it not being.

“There’s a cot in the back room,” he said finally. “It’s cold back there.” “I’ve been in the cold all day,” she said. “Cold doesn’t scare me anymore. I hung his coat on the hook by the door with the movements of a man whose shoulders were aching badly. “I’m Gideon Cross,” he said. He didn’t offer a hand. She didn’t expect him to.

“I know, Norah told me.” He looked at the breadcrumbs again. “I’ll pay you for the bread.” “You don’t need to. I don’t take charity.” She picked her cup up and stood. Then call it a business arrangement. I bake. I sell. You bought bread tonight and you can pay me in the morning. That’s commerce, not charity. She held out the cup to him.

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