Nancy, like her bedbound sister, Jean, back in the tiny log cabin at Red Lick, cannot countenance even a chance that she will miss the next tranche of stories. “You don’t have to walk five miles to meet me,” she tells the woman, every fortnight. Past the Indian escarpment, up the yellow pine track, two more hollers, and old Nancy will appear, singing hymns as she always does, her clear, strong voice echoing through the forest as she walks, arms swinging like a child’s, to meet her. Might even have some myself.”įour more miles, she thinks, wishing she had eaten more breakfast. She shifts, adjusting the saddlebags, making sure the mule is balanced as they pick their way down toward the creek. “Extra food for you tonight, Charley boy,” she says, and watches as his huge ears flick back. She strokes the big mule’s neck, brushing off the crystals forming on his dense coat with her heavy men’s gloves. Three pairs of wool stockings, and in this weather you might as well go bare-legged. Margery O’Hare tests her toes inside her boots, but feeling went a long time back and she winces at the thought of how they’re going to hurt when they warm up again. Only the narrow creek below moves confidently, its clear water murmuring and bubbling over the stony bed, headed down toward an endpoint nobody around here has ever seen. The snow is so deep the mule’s legs disappear up to his hocks, and every few strides he staggers and snorts suspiciously, checking for loose flints and holes under the endless white. Among the oak and hickory nothing stirs: wild animals are deep underground, soft pelts intertwined in narrow caves or hollowed-out trunks. There’s no birdsong past dawn, not even in high summer, and especially not now, with the chill air so thick with moisture that it stills those few leaves clinging gamely to the branches. Three miles deep in the forest just below Arnott’s Ridge, and you’re in silence so dense it’s like you’re wading through it.
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