Widow Claimed Unwanted Kansas Land And Faced A Cattleman’s Threat-rosocute

The deed shook in Henrietta Kendrick’s hands on the morning she first saw the land that nobody else had wanted.

The Kansas wind worried at her skirt, dragged dust across the wagon wheels, and bent the sparse yellow grass until it looked too tired to stand.

Behind her, the children waited in the wagon, hot and quiet after the long road from Missouri.

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Eleven-year-old Clara studied the stretch of cracked ground with the grave honesty she had inherited from her father.

“Mama,” she said, “it does not look like much.”

Henrietta looked at the hard clay, the dry creek bed, and the single cottonwood leaning south as if it had spent years trying to leave.

“No,” she said. “It does not.”

George, eight years old and already angry at Kansas as a whole, folded his arms.

“Then why are we here?”

Henrietta brushed soil from her fingers and stood straighter than she felt.

“Because it is ours.”

That was the whole answer, and it had to be enough.

She had buried Thomas Kendrick outside St. Louis two winters earlier.

She had settled his debts by selling the furniture, the linens, the better dishes, and nearly every trace of the rented life they had once shared.

What remained was a wagon, two mules, a milk cow, four hens, a cast iron stove she would rather starve than abandon, a few crates of seed, hand tools, flour, salt pork, three children, and $112.

It was not much, but it was hers.

The clerk at the Dodge City land office had not tried very hard to hide his amusement when she chose the parcel.

He told her the ground had been passed over fourteen times.

He told her the creek ran dry every summer.

He told her the soil was poor.

Henrietta had listened, nodded, and signed anyway.

A person with nothing left does not always need good odds.

Sometimes she only needs a place nobody can order her out of.

That first night, she and the children slept beneath quilts near the crooked cottonwood.

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