The Fence Line
I was mending a fence on the south ridge when I saw them. At first, I thought it was a mirage—the Colorado heat plays tricks on your mind out here, especially when you’ve been alone as long as I have. But then I saw the smallest one fall.
I dropped my pliers and ran. By the time I reached them, the woman was on her knees in the dust, trying to lift a little boy who couldn’t have been more than four. Four other children stood around her, swaying like dried cornstalks in the wind.
They were ghost-pale, lips cracked, eyes wide with terror. “Please,” the woman whispered, her voice like sandpaper. “Just water.”
I didn’t ask questions.
Not yet. I scooped up the little boy—he felt lighter than a saddlebag—and guided them to the porch. I gave them water slowly, knowing the drill: give a starving person too much too fast, and it can kill them.
I set out bread, dried jerky, and a can of peaches. The kids ate like wolves, with a ferocity that made my gut twist. The mother, Martha, didn’t eat a bite.
She just watched them, tears cutting clean tracks through the dust on her face. When the food was gone, I finally spoke. “You running from the law?”
“No,” she said, pulling her daughter close.
“From a man.”
“A man?” I looked at the bruises on her arm. She hesitated, then nodded. “A landlord.
My husband died in the mines three weeks ago. The company didn’t pay out. The landlord… he said I had to work off the debt.
Me and the children.”
Slavery. That’s what it was, wrapped up in a fancy contract. “Are they coming after you?”
“I don’t know,” she trembled.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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