The Frozen Woman at the Depot Was Guarding a Secret in Her Bag-Quieen - Chainityai

The Frozen Woman at the Depot Was Guarding a Secret in Her Bag-Quieen

Boon had not come down off the mountain to save anyone.

He came because the coffee tin in his cabin was nearly empty, the flour barrel sounded hollow when he knocked it with his fist, and his last box of rifle cartridges had only seven rounds left in it.

In February, that was not inconvenience.

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That was arithmetic.

On the mountain, arithmetic decided who saw spring.

By 4:17 PM that Thursday, his sled was loaded in front of the Bitter Creek depot with fifty pounds of flour, two tins of black powder, salted pork wrapped tight in brown paper, coffee beans in a burlap sack, and two boxes of cartridges the mercantile clerk had counted twice before handing over.

Boon counted them again.

Trust was for warm weather.

The depot platform was glazed with hard snow, and every step made a brittle sound under his boots, like walking over broken glass.

The wind came down the tracks in long violent sheets, snapping the small American flag above the depot door until its rope clanked against the pole.

The sound set his teeth on edge.

Bitter Creek looked less like a town than a dare.

Three false-front buildings leaned away from the weather, their paint scraped raw by wind and grit.

The mercantile smelled of wet sawdust, rancid bacon grease, kerosene, and men who had been indoors too long.

The saloon burned yellow behind its windows, loud with stove heat and bad judgment.

The depot office was locked.

A telegraph notice had been nailed crooked to the ticket window: TRACKS BLOCKED BEYOND THE PASS.

The station master had underlined it twice, as if ink could make people behave.

The westbound train was not coming.

No train would come until the pass was cleared, and the pass was buried under ten feet of drift according to the freight hand who had walked in frozen half-stiff the night before.

Boon had no interest in hearing the story again.

He tightened the cinch over the tarp and ignored the annoyed snort from his lead mule.

The sky above the ridge had turned the bruised purple that meant a whiteout was moving fast.

He needed to be above the treeline before it hit.

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