Thrown Into the Woods With Her Baby Sister, She Found the Impossible-chloe - Chainityai

Thrown Into the Woods With Her Baby Sister, She Found the Impossible-chloe

At ten years old, a child should know the sound of morning as something gentle. A rooster. A kettle. A mother’s soft hand smoothing hair before the day begins.

But in October of 1894, morning came to that cabin before the sun did, and it came with Bernarda’s hand on the door latch.

The girl had been sleeping in the corner with Violeta curled against her ribs. Her little sister was only two, small enough to still wake reaching for warmth, old enough to understand hunger.

Image

For months, that hunger had lived in the walls of the cabin like another person. It sat at the table. It watched from the pantry. It listened while Bernarda counted food that never reached the children.

The good corn went to Bernarda’s son. The milk was locked away. Violeta’s meals came cold in a cracked cup, scraped together from whatever had already been refused.

The ten-year-old learned not to ask twice. Asking once brought a glare. Asking twice brought the wooden spoon against the table, sharp enough to make both children flinch.

Their father’s mule still stood in the corral outside, and the smell of hay still drifted through the cracks when the wind shifted. But the house itself had stopped feeling like a home.

Their mother had been gone long enough for her voice to blur at the edges, but not long enough for her prayer to fade. Four lines. A little copper medal. That was what remained.

The girl carried both like a secret. The medal stayed in her pocket, warm when her hand closed around it, cold when she remembered why she needed it.

Two nights before the door opened, she heard Bernarda counting fourteen pesos on the kitchen table. The coins struck one another in small, bright clicks.

Bernarda spoke as if the children were sacks of spoiled grain. She said she would not “waste another cent on another woman’s children.”

The girl did not cry then. She lay still, with Violeta breathing against her arm, and listened to the sound of a woman deciding their worth in coins.

By the time Bernarda came before sunrise, the decision had already been made. There was no shouting at first. No warning that would give the child time to understand.

Only the door opening. The smell of old smoke. The blast of freezing air. Bernarda’s fingers hard on her shoulder as she shoved her toward the porch.

Violeta woke confused and coughing, her small body wrapped in a thin blanket that smelled of dirt, sour milk, and ashes. The girl tightened both arms around her.

Then Bernarda threw the small bag at the child’s chest.

“Take her with you. Nobody eats for free in this house anymore.”

The words were not loud. That made them worse. They were spoken like an errand, like sweeping dust from a floor.

Before the girl could answer, Bernarda slammed the door and locked it. The sound of the lock was small, but it settled into the child’s bones.

Violeta coughed against her shirt. Her forehead was damp. Her fingers opened and closed against the fabric, searching for something steady to hold.

“If you come back,” Bernarda said from the other side, “I won’t open.”

The sky above the pine trees was still black. Frost silvered the porch boards. Every breath cut the girl’s nose and throat.

From the corral, the mule snorted. Somewhere inside the house, a floorboard creaked. But nobody came to the window. Nobody called Bernarda cruel. Nobody said the children could stay.

No hand appeared.

Read More

Leave a Reply

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