The Hungry Girl at the Ranch Carried Her Father's Hidden Gift-mdue - Chainityai

The Hungry Girl at the Ranch Carried Her Father’s Hidden Gift-mdue

Ren Voss Begged Work at a Ranch She Didn’t Know Was Hers — Then Her Father’s Cure Returned

The creek bed had been dry so long it no longer looked like a creek.

It looked like broken crockery, pale clay split into plates beneath the white heat of noon.

Image

Ren Voss stood in the empty wash with cottonwood leaves whispering above her and the last heel of bread pressed into her palm.

One side had gone hard.

The other was still soft from the warmth of her pocket.

She ate slowly because hunger had taught her manners no person had ever bothered to teach.

Small bites.

Long pauses.

No complaint.

Somewhere beyond the low brown hills, east of where the dry wash bent around a stand of cottonwoods, there was supposed to be a town called Grover’s Creek.

A woman at a feed store had told her so the day before.

The woman had been sweeping flour dust from the front planks, one hand on the broom, one eye on Ren’s shoes.

“Ranch out that way might need a cook,” she had said. “Maybe laundry help too, if you don’t ask too many questions. Folks don’t like questions from a girl with no people standing behind her.”

Ren had nodded like the advice did not sting.

She had learned to make her face still when pride had no money to defend itself.

For three years, her life had become one door and then another.

A porch.

A kitchen.

A back step.

Sometimes a woman said no gently and wrapped a biscuit in cloth before sending her away.

Sometimes a man stared at her pack as if poverty itself were a crime being carried in plain sight.

Ren had been offered wash work for half pay.

She had been told to sleep in barns.

She had been turned away from kitchens because the mistress of the house did not like the way her husband looked at strange girls with hollow cheeks.

At seventeen, she had already learned the arithmetic of humiliation.

One meal could cost a full day of silence.

One night’s shelter could cost more than a person should have to pay.

Still, it had not always been that way.

Before the doors, before the dry bread, before the careful way she moved through other people’s houses, there had been 200 acres east of Grover’s Creek.

Good valley land.

Her father’s land.

Ezekiah Voss had built the house himself from timber and stone, set the barn square to the prevailing wind, and dug a root cellar deep enough to hold cool through the hottest weeks.

The west half of the property lay flat and generous.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *