She Claimed Her Own Land, Then Found Love Beside It-rosocute

She Told Him She Was Going to Find Her Own Land and Cowboy Said, “I Already Found Mine. It’s Next to Yours.”

Birdie Crawford left Missouri on a morning that smelled of river mud, damp wood, and the end of other people’s opinions.

She did not cry when Clover Ridge fell behind her.

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That surprised her more than anything.

For years, she had imagined leaving would hurt like a tearing seam, but when the borrowed wagon rolled west and the church steeple shrank into the haze, all she felt was the hard, clean pull of air in her lungs.

Her father had died the winter before.

Her mother had been gone three years.

The little plot that had carried their family name was sold to pay what death had left behind, and once the papers were signed, Birdie owned very little anyone else would call valuable.

She had her father’s rifle.

She had a cloth purse holding $43, sewn deep into the lining of her coat.

She had seed sacks, flour, beans, salt pork, two blankets, a skillet, and a letter confirming what she had read until the words nearly wore through the page.

A woman could file a homestead claim.

A woman could hold 160 acres if she lived on it, worked it, improved it, and survived long enough for the law to stop looking temporary.

Her aunt Clara had called the idea madness.

“You need a husband first,” Clara had said, standing in the doorway with her arms folded tight against fear.

Birdie had kissed her cheek and said, “I am going to find my own land.”

She had meant every word.

The road west did not admire her courage.

It gave her heat, broken wheels, creek crossings, hard ground, and nights so alive with insect hum and prairie wind that sleep came in thin scraps.

Twice she lost her bearings under a sky too wide to trust.

Once she sat two days beside a cracked wagon wheel, waiting for a passing freighter to help her lash together a repair that might carry her farther.

Some evenings she was too tired to cook.

She ate salt pork cold, drank water that tasted of iron, and slept with the rifle across her knees.

The prairie did not comfort her, but it did not lie to her either.

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