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Authors: Kathleen Duey and Karen A. Bale

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BOOK: Blizzard: Colorado, 1886
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“What's wrong?” Hadyn demanded.

Maggie shook her head. “Nothing's wrong. We're close to the ranch. Closer than I thought.”

Hadyn took her arm and together they began to walk again. They were still clumsy with cold and weariness, but hope carried them along. After a few minutes, Hadyn turned to Maggie. “How far?”

They were rounding the last bend, and Maggie raised one hand to gesture. “I can't see the cabin yet, but we will in a minute.”

Hadyn let go of her hand and did a shuffling little dance, then staggered back around to face her. “Maggie, you are amazing.”

Maggie smiled. “I never thought I'd say this,
Hadyn, but you are, too.” She led the way up the road, searching the night for the amber glow of a lantern at the cabin window. Maybe her parents would be home. Maybe her father would come to the door when he heard them on the porch. He would be all right. He just had to be.

As they turned up the ranch road, Maggie had to admit to herself that the cabin was dark. There were no lanterns lit. Her parents were not there.

“Look!” Hadyn was pointing into the meadow that bordered the road.

Maggie forced herself to stop staring at the dark-windowed cabin and followed his gesture. Rusty was standing with his long ears straight up, his head held high, looking at them. Maggie cried out. Stiff-legged, she made her way through the drifted snow and threw her arms around Rusty's neck. She buried her face in his warm fur, closing her eyes. Rusty smelled of grass and warmth and it was all she could do to make herself straighten up again.

Hadyn had his hands on his hips. “You're nicer to that mule than you ever were to me.”

Maggie laughed. Pulling Rusty along by his
foretop, she led him onto the road and nudged him toward the barn. With almost numb hands she lifted the drop bar and let the door swing open. She didn't have to urge Rusty to follow her now. She put him in his stall. Hadyn carried hay without being asked. Rusty lowered his head into the hayrack and did not look up again. Maggie led the way out, closing up the chicken coop on the way to the cabin. The rest of the chores would have to wait until morning.

“I'll build the fire,” Hadyn said as they clumped up the porch steps.

Maggie nodded. “I'll get us something to eat.” She opened the door to the cabin and went in. She pulled off her gloves, working her fingers to try to limber them up so that she could strike a match. Her breath was a plume of steam in the air. The water in her mother's washbasin was frozen solid.

The lanterns were full, their wicks trimmed as always. Maggie rubbed her hands together for a long moment, then managed to light two. Suddenly she saw a sheet of paper lying on the table. Holding her breath, she went to read it. John Cleave had made another visit.

Maggie and Hadyn,

Now you are worrying me. The mule is gone but the cows in the barn had no water. I filled their buckets and brought in the eggs, but I see no sign of a fire from last night. The hearth is cold as ice. Your father will be all right, says Billy Martin, who spoke to your mother yesterday in Lyons. With the snow, they will have to stay on a few days. I will be back tomorrow, or the following day if the storm gets worse.

With the hope that all is well,

John Cleave

Maggie waited until Hadyn had lit the fire, then handed him the note. He read it and looked up at her. Maggie crossed the room to stand before the fire. Hadyn was silent beside her as he added wood to keep the flames high and bright. They both turned back and forth, warming one side of their bodies, then the other. After a few minutes, Maggie
took off her coat and Hadyn unbuttoned his. Still they were quiet.

Maggie felt tingles in her hands and feet. After a few minutes more, she took off her shoes and socks and looked at her toes. They were pink, not white—she had not gotten frostbite. She hurried to her dresser and got out two pairs of thick woolen socks.

Coming back, she handed one pair to Hadyn. “Take off your boots.” He obeyed without protest and she examined his toes. “We were both lucky. Frostbite can be awful.”

Hadyn was staring at her. “I'm sorry you had to chase after me instead of taking care of the ranch.”

Maggie smiled. “You can help me catch up with chores tomorrow. Besides, it looks like everything is going to be fine. Pa is going to be all right and Rusty made it home. And we're safe now.” She looked at him sidelong.

Hadyn shrugged. “I just hope your parents aren't too angry with me.”

Maggie grinned at him. “Are you afraid they'll send you home?”

An odd expression flickered across Hadyn's face. He frowned. “Do you think they will?”

Maggie shook her head. “No, but I thought you hated it here.”

Hadyn shrugged again. “I did. But maybe the West isn't as boring as I thought it was.”

Maggie laughed out loud and headed for the kitchen.

Molly Bride could hear the river. It sounded like a hard wind. The rain had started again, and her faded yellow shift was wet through, plastered across her back. The path was underwater from the mule shed on. Feeling something sharp stab at her heel, she took an uneven step to the side, splashing brown water on her hem. She balanced herself, reaching out to grip the rain-slick fence rail. She pulled her foot out of the sucking mud, twisting around to look. No blood.

Molly started up the path again, walking more slowly, swatting at the mosquitoes that whined close to her ears. Her family had owned this farm for ten years, and they were still picking up broken glass. The Porter boys had used this end of the farmyard
for target practice. They must have shot up a thousand soda pop bottles, learning to aim straight. She sighed and glanced upward, squinting against the rain. Was it ever going to stop?

The wind drove the spattering raindrops against the side of the chicken coop as Molly swung the door open and stepped over the threshold. She was greeted with startled clucking from the rows of low roosts. Pa's favorite speckled Dominique hen darted out of the shadows, and Molly dodged her pecking beak, then bent to pin her wings and lift her to eye level. “You ought to know better than to try that with me,” she scolded.

The hen struggled, and Molly set her atop the nest shelf and backed up quickly. The floor planks were slippery. The standing water was seeping up from below the floor.

Molly shook her finger at the speckled hen. “You just stay put, now.” She glanced away, then back when she saw the hen spread her wings a little. “I said, stay put! You peck me even once and I'll throw you out into that storm and you won't get warm for a week.

The hen made a resentful grinding sound and
settled, lowering her wings and flattening her feathers. Only then did Romeo, the brown-and-white rooster, come out from under the old corncrib built along the far wall. He approached slowly, marching proudly, his arched tail swinging from side to side.

“You'll have to wait for Meachum to bring you supper scraps,” Molly told him. “Mama just sent me out for eggs.”

Just as she finished speaking, the wind shoved against the coop again, and Molly felt the planks shudder beneath her feet. The whole shed rocked and trembled. A chorus of squawking rose from the frightened hens. “No wonder you aren't laying,” Molly murmured as she checked the nests.

She found four eggs in the damp straw. Only four. That would barely be enough for this morning's griddle cakes. Her mother was going to be upset—and the tawny hen was still missing. Maybe a fox had gotten her. Or she was setting somewhere under the mule shed or the porch, trying to hatch a clutch of eggs.

Molly's mother had been pretty testy lately. The rain was on everyone's nerves. Every time they took the truck into town, the water seemed higher. Driving along the top of the levee was strange now. Usually,
the river wasn't anywhere close. You couldn't even see it through the stands of willow and pine, and the tangle of weeds and tye vines that grew along its banks.

Now, the dark brown water had covered all that and come up over the cleared berm. The deep barrow pit at the toe of the levee had filled up weeks ago. Then the water had risen up the slope. The past few days the river had been lapping at the levee road.

Molly gathered her hem in one hand, placing the eggs into the folds of the soft cotton. Careful not to bump them against the coop door, she went out. The wind chilled her and she shivered, stepping back into the cold mud.

Molly glanced across the yard, beyond the out-house, at the slope that led up to the road. A steamboat had gone past yesterday, hugging the levee for some reason. She had craned her neck to watch it go by, so far above her that it was like looking up at the second story of the jail-house. If the levee ever broke here, the river would come crashing through the crevasse. . . . She shook her head and forced the thought away.

Molly started for the house, walking slowly, feeling
her way up the submerged path. Backwater was widening the bayou and muddying the canebrakes on the far side of the north pasture. She could see the lightning tree from here—or at least the stark, barkless top of it. Garrett had said to meet him there as early as she could this evening so they could work on their raft.

Molly picked her way past the mule shed. It was going to be hard to sneak off. Both her brothers were keeping close to home now and neither one of them liked her being friends with a white boy. They would have been furious if they had known the whole truth.

She and Garrett were partners. Hidden high in the lightning tree, they had an old molasses jar half full of pennies and nickels and dimes. They were saving up from Garrett's odd jobs and her sewing and cleaning for Mrs. Spiars at the boardinghouse in Mayersville. Someday, they both wanted to see places like London or Paris, or at least Vicksburg.

The wind gusted, and the cold rain stung Molly's cheeks. Just then, Meachum came into sight, walking back along the levee road, hunched against the wind. Bedraggled, Skipper trotted close at his heels, his ears and tail low.

Meachum had been working for Mr. Turner, sandbagging the edge of the bayou to keep the old man's fields from filling up with backwater. Lawrence had been working for Turner, too, until Pa had made him quit. There was too much to do around home now to spare both boys.

Meachum's lowered head and slogging pace told Molly he was tired. Since he had turned thirteen and started hiring out, he wasn't nearly as mischievous as he had been a year before. Lawrence, at sixteen, liked to play at being a man. He was starting to order her and Meachum around when Pa wasn't looking. Though Molly loved her brothers, she sometimes wished for a sister to share chores and secrets with—but Hope was still just a baby.

“Molly!”

She looked up, blinking, to see through the rain. Her father was standing on the porch, his hands on his hips. “We were beginning to think you got lost!”

Molly grinned at the teasing in his voice. She heard him laugh before he turned to go back in. She hurried as fast as she dared through the deep puddles below the pigsty and the cowshed. When the path
veered up toward the house, she walked faster, mud oozing up between her bare toes.

Meachum made it inside just before she did. As Molly opened the door, she saw him pulling off his wet shirt, hanging it on the clothes wire above the cookstove. Pa was standing close to Hope's cradle, rocking it gently. Ma had the kerosene lantern hung above the sink. She was adding last night's coffee grounds to the scrap bucket. The cast-iron pot was already on the stove, steaming. Molly could smell the warm odor of grits cooking. Her mouth watered.

Meachum opened the fire door and shoved in a piece of split oak. “The bayou up along Turner's place is all right.”

Molly saw her father nod. “Sandbags holding?”

Meachum shrugged. “For now. Lawrence went upriver a little to get a look at the levee. There's a crew from the Corps up there—”

“Put your trust in the Army Corps of Engineers!” Pa interjected. “I will tell you one thing. The day those ol' boys tell me to evacuate, I'm going to laugh in their faces. Back in twenty-two they proved one thing to me. It's in God's hands, not theirs.”

KATHLEEN DUEY
's works include the middle-grade series American Diaries and the well-reviewed chapter book series The Unicorn's Secret, with a companion series, The Faeries' Promise. She is also the author of the National Book Award finalist
Skin Hunger
. She lives in Fallbrook, California.

KAREN A. BALE
grew up in Southern California and graduated from the University of California, Riverside. She has written seventeen historical romances, including the successful seven-book series Sweet Medicine's Prophecy. She has done freelance work for several years, including helping to write two nonfiction books. Karen still resides in Southern California, ten miles from the Pacific Ocean.

ALADDIN

Simon & Schuster, New York

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BOOK: Blizzard: Colorado, 1886
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