The Worthless Hill That Exposed A Mayor's Drought-Time Theft-mdue - Chainityai

The Worthless Hill That Exposed A Mayor’s Drought-Time Theft-mdue

By noon, the courthouse steps had become the hottest place in town.

Not because of the August sun, though that was cruel enough to bleach the boards and burn through the soles of a woman’s boots.

It was hot because everyone had brought their hunger there.

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They came with dry mouths, empty buckets, unpaid store bills, and eyes that kept moving from Mayor Thorne to Eliza as if the whole drought could be settled by deciding which one of them deserved to suffer.

Eliza stood below the steps with dust on her skirt and two deeds in her hands.

One deed was the one the town knew about, the little paper that named her as owner of one hundred sixty acres of shale, scrub, and purple weeds.

The other was older, heavier, folded around itself like it had been waiting through three generations for the right enemy.

Mayor Thorne held up his auction notice and gave the crowd his best sorrowful face.

He said the Shale Hill had been improperly recorded.

He said the drought made water a public emergency.

He said the land would return to the public trust and be sold at noon the next day, with the proceeds used to buy hay for starving livestock.

He said all of it in the voice of a man doing the hard thing for the good of everyone.

Only Eliza saw how his eyes kept flicking toward the ridge.

Only Eliza knew that men who speak too much about the public good are sometimes trying to hide a private appetite.

Sixteen months earlier, nobody had wanted the Shale Hill.

When her father died, he left Eliza a roof that leaked, a stove that smoked, a cracked water barrel, and that strange rise of rock the town had laughed at for as long as she could remember.

Silas Gable at the mercantile told her she would have been richer inheriting a mule with one bad leg.

Women in church lowered their voices and said it was a pity, being left alone with land that could not grow corn.

Mayor Thorne visited the cabin in a polished buggy and offered to take the place off her hands.

He called it kindness.

He said a young woman alone needed a proper start somewhere civilized.

Eliza thanked him and did not sign.

Her father had taught her to read land the way other people read ledgers.

He had walked her across the shale when she was small and shown her where the cracks held moisture after a dry week.

He showed her the purple hyssop that bit into stone with roots tough as wire.

He told her that a foolish farmer curses the soil for not growing wheat, but a wise one asks what the soil already wants to grow.

So Eliza asked.

The answer came with wings.

She spent almost every coin she had on bee skeps from a farmer two counties over.

He asked if her husband knew she was buying them.

She said she had no husband, only land.

The ride home sounded like a storm trapped in a wagon.

She set the skeps on shelves of rock her father had cleared years before, hauled water from the narrow spring at the foot of the hill, and learned how much patience can ache in a person’s back.

The town watched her and shook its head.

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