A 10-Year-Old Was Left Barefoot in Arizona With Her Father’s Secret-lbsuong

The stepmother’s hand struck Emily Carter hard across the face, and the 10-year-old girl tumbled out of the wagon and hit the dusty Arizona road with a cry she swallowed before it could escape.

The sound of the slap disappeared almost at once into the July heat, but Emily felt it ring through her cheek as if Eleanor had struck bone instead of skin.

Her palms hit the road first.

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Tiny stones tore into them.

Her knees followed, scraping through the thin gray cotton of her dress, and dust rose around her mouth so thick that she tasted Arizona before she tasted blood.

Copper filled her tongue.

She did not cry.

That was not because she was brave in the pretty way grown people liked to talk about children after danger was already over.

It was because Samuel Carter had spent the last year of his life teaching his daughter that tears used up water, and water was life in that country.

Emily had learned to be quiet around horses, quiet around men who drank, and quiet around Eleanor.

She had learned silence the way other girls learned embroidery.

The wagon wheels rolled away from her with a grinding wooden groan, and Eleanor Carter’s voice traveled back over the road.

“Don’t you dare follow, girl.”

The reins snapped.

“Don’t you dare.”

Eleanor did not sound angry anymore.

She sounded finished.

That was worse.

Anger could change direction.

A decision just kept moving.

The wagon rattled south until it blurred in the heat, Eleanor’s black skirt a dark stain against the bench, and then the dust swallowed her.

Emily stayed on her knees and listened until there was no wheel sound left at all.

Only wind.

Only insects.

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