The Homestead Wife Who Turned Mocked Chickens Into Proof And Power-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Homestead Wife Who Turned Mocked Chickens Into Proof And Power-nhu9999

The wind came early that year, sharp enough to make the cottonwoods shiver before September had finished its first week.

I remember it because I was walking into it with a cracked leather purse in both hands and twelve cents inside it.

Twelve cents can sound small to people who have never counted supper by candle ends.

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To me, it was the last piece of room between hunger and pride.

Thomas and I had been on our claim north of Clearwater Creek for two years, long enough to know the difference between a home and a place where two people were trying not to fail.

He had built the cabin with a war-damaged hand and a patience I still do not know how to measure.

Two fingers were gone from his left hand, but the greater wound was the quiet he carried inside his chest.

He was not a man who filled a room with plans.

He filled it with work.

A straight door.

A tight roof.

A fence post sunk deep enough that the wind had to think twice.

But work had not yet turned into enough.

The barn held.

The flour sack did not.

That was why I walked to Harkin’s place when I heard he was selling off his flock before the freeze.

I had imagined tired birds.

I had imagined thin birds.

I had not imagined eleven creatures that looked as if winter had already chewed on them and spat them back.

One hen dragged a wing.

One rooster had the sad posture of a broom.

One bald-backed bird blinked at me from the dirt with the solemn patience of something used to being overlooked.

Harkin did not pretend they were worth more than they were.

He only looked at my purse and held out his palm.

I counted twelve cents into it.

Every coin.

Then I gathered the ugliest investment in Powder River country and started home.

The road made sure I was seen.

The Alden boys laughed from their wagon.

Mrs. Coombes turned her face just slowly enough to let me know she had noticed.

Delbert Marsh waited near our gate, as if mockery itself had sent him ahead.

Delbert owned good pasture and spoke as if that made him owner of sense.

He looked at my birds, then at my purse, then at me.

“Sell that trash back by sundown, or no one in Millhaven buys a scrap from you,” he said.

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