"Kephart," the sheriff said, addressing not just the cabin but the nearby woods.
A man Rachel guessed to be in his late sixties appeared in the doorway. He wore denim breeches and a wrinkled chambray work shirt. His gallouses were unstrapped from his shoulders, and a gray stubble showed he hadn't shaved in several days. The skin below his eyes was puffy and jaundiced looking, the eyes themselves bloodshot. Rachel knew from being around her father what that meant.
"I need a favor," Sheriff McDowell said, and nodded toward Rachel and Jacob. "They need to stay here, maybe just till this evening, maybe till morning."
Kephart looked not at Rachel but at the child, who'd fallen back asleep. His tan weathered face revealed neither pleasure nor irritation as he nodded and said all right. Sheriff McDowell stepped onto the porch and set the carpetbag down, turned and looked at Rachel.
"I'll get back soon as I can," he said, and walked down the trail and soon disappeared.
"I have a bed you can lay him on if you like," Kephart said after an awkward minute had passed.
Kephart's voice sounded different from any she'd heard before. Flatter, leveled out as if every word had been sanded to a smooth sameness. Rachel wondered where he was from.
"Thank you," Rachel said and followed him into the cabin. It took a few moments for her eyes to adjust to the darkness, but then she saw the bed in the back corner. Rachel laid the child on the bed and opened the carpetbag, removed first Jacob's bottle and then the pins and clean swaddlings. Shadows cloaked the cabin's corners, and Rachel knew that even had the two oil lamps been lit shadows would remain, like a root cellar where so much dark had gathered for so long it could never be gotten completely rid of.
"When's the last time you two ate?' Kephart asked.
"I fed him near noon."
"And you?"
It took Rachel a few moments to remember.
"Supper last night."
"I've got beans simmering in that kettle," Kephart said. "That's about all I have but you're welcome to it."
"Beans is fine."
He filled a bowl and placed it on the table with a tin of cornbread.
"You partial to sweet milk or buttermilk?"
"Buttermilk would be my rathering," Rachel said.
Kephart took two pint jelly glasses outside. He came back with one brimmed with buttermilk, the other sweet milk.
"I figure that chap will be hungry again before too long," he said. "I got another pot to put on the fire if you want to warm him a bottle."
"That's alright. He's learned to drink it cold."
"Get your bottle then. I'll pour this in and set it in the springhouse so it'll be ready when he wakes up. Got some graham crackers too if he wants something to nibble."
Rachel did what he suggested, knowing he'd done these things before, maybe a long time ago, but sometime. She wondered where his wife and children were and almost asked.
"Have a seat," Kephart said, and nodded at the table's one chair.
Rachel looked around the room. Another chair and table were in the corner opposite the hearth. On the table was one of the room's oil lamps, beside it paper and a typewriter, the words REMINGTON STANDARD stamped in white beneath the keys. A mason jar filled with a clear liquid was also on the table. The lid lay beside the jar.
While she ate, Kephart took Jacob's bottle to the springhouse. Rachel was ravenous and ate every bean in the bowl. Kephart refilled her jelly jar and she drank half, then crumbled a square of cornbread in it. It struck her how eating was a comfort during a hard time because it reminded you that there had been other days, good days, when you'd eaten the same thing. Reminded you there were good days in life, when precious little else did.
When Rachel finished, she went out to the creek with the bowl and spoon. She laid them on the mossy bank and went into the woods to squat. She came back to the creek and cleaned the bowl and spoon with water and sand and brought them inside. Jacob was awake, clutching the bottle to his mouth. Kephart sat on the bed beside the child.
"He wasn't of a mind to wait for you, so I figured I'd oblige him."
Kephart lingered a few moments longer and then went outside. When Jacob finished the bottle, Rachel burped him and changed his swaddlings. The room felt cozy, but it didn't seem right to be in the cabin without Kephart there, so she took Jacob outside. Rachel sat on the lowest porch step and placed the child on the grass. Kephart came and perched on the top step. Rachel tried to think of something to make conversation, hoping it'd take at least some of her thinking off Widow Jenkins, them that would do the same to her and Jacob.
"You live here all the time?" Rachel asked.
"No, I got a place in Bryson City," Kephart answered. "I come out here when I'm tired of being around people."
He hadn't said the words in a mean sort of way, the way he would have if he meant to make her feel bad, but they made Rachel feel even more like a bother. Half an hour passed and they didn't speak again. Then Jacob began to fuss. Rachel checked his swaddlings and set him on her lap, but he continued to whine.
"I got something in the shed I bet he'll like," Kephart said.
Rachel followed him behind the cabin. He opened the shed door. Inside two fox kits nestled against each other on a bed of straw.
"Something got their mama. There was another one, but it was too weak to live."
The kits rose, mewing as they came to Kephart, who scratched them behind their ears as he might pups.
"How do you feed them?" Rachel asked.
"Table scraps now. The first few days cow milk in a medicine dropper."
Jacob reached out his hand toward the kits, and Rachel stepped inside, kneeled as she held Jacob by the waist.
"Pet them soft, Jacob," Rachel said, and took the child's hand and brushed it over one of the kit's fur.
The other kit nudged closer, pressed its black nose against Jacob's hand as well.
"It's about time for them to go out and fend for themselves," Kephart said.
"They look fat and sassy enough," Rachel said. "You look to have been a good parent."
"It'd be the first time," Kephart said.
After a while, Rachel and Jacob went back to the front steps and watched as the afternoon settled into the gorge. It was the kind of early fall day Rachel had always loved, not warm or cold, the sky all deep-blue and cloudless and no breeze, the crops proud and ripe and the leaves so pretty but hardly a one yet fallen-a day so perfect that the earth itself seemed sorry to let it pass, so slowed down its roll into evening and let it linger. Rachel tried to lose herself in that, let it clear her mind, and for a few minutes she could. But then she'd think of Widow Jenkins, and she could just as well have been sitting in a hailstorm for the comfort the day gave her.