A Girl Found Her Mama’s Shoes In The Snow, And A Rancher Ran-lbsuong

Abby Ward hit the snow on both knees and did not feel the pain until much later.

The cold had already taken the first layer of feeling from her body.

It had slipped into her stockings, soaked through the hem of her dress, and settled into her fingers until the baby in her arms felt less like a child and more like something the storm was slowly stealing.

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The wind came down through the canyon with a thin, cutting sound.

Snow moved sideways across the open land.

Ahead of her, through that white blur, the ranch house showed one square of yellow lamplight.

To Abby, that small window looked impossible.

It looked like the last warm thing left in the world.

Behind her, Ben stumbled and nearly went down.

He was only ten, but he had Clara hooked under one arm and Tess riding badly against his hip, her little head dropping forward every few steps.

Clara had stopped crying.

That frightened Abby almost as much as the baby’s silence.

Children were supposed to cry when they hurt.

When they stopped, something worse had usually arrived.

“Mister!” Abby screamed.

Her voice tore in her throat.

The word came out thin, almost swallowed by the wind.

She sucked in another breath that burned like smoke and screamed again.

“Please! Please, mister!”

A man stepped out from the barn.

He was broad through the shoulders, with a beard darkened by snow and a lantern hanging near his side.

For a second he did not move.

He stood there in the barn light as if the sight of five children coming out of the storm had knocked something loose inside him.

Abby knew that pause.

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