A Pregnant Stranger Came To His Farm With A Secret From His Past-congtien

By 6:17 on that Tuesday evening, Matthew Carter was standing in the last row of beans with a hoe in his hand and dust on the backs of his wrists.

The day had been hot enough to make the gravel in the driveway smell baked.

By evening, the heat had started to loosen its grip, leaving the farm wrapped in the scent of cut grass, damp soil, animal feed, and the faint metal tang from the old water pump beside the barn.

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Lucy was near the fence line, using an old screwdriver to pry weeds out from between the boards.

She was ten, but she worked with the seriousness of a person who had learned too early that adults did not always notice what needed doing.

Matthew had not asked her to help.

She did anyway.

That was how Lucy showed love.

She carried small things before anyone could ask.

She folded towels badly but proudly.

She left his coffee spoon beside the mug every morning, even though she hated the smell.

She remembered which hens laid under the shed and which one tried to peck your hand if you reached in too quickly.

She was a child, but grief had made her observant.

Her mother had died the day Lucy was born.

Nobody said that sentence casually in Matthew’s house.

It sat there like a covered piece of furniture in a room people still had to walk through.

Some days, Lucy asked questions.

Most days, she did not.

Matthew kept a photograph of his wife, Emily, in the top drawer of the dresser in his room.

In the picture, Emily was laughing on the front porch, one hand under her belly, her hair loose from the wind.

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