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 continue reading …