Moonlightlilly
Experienced
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2022
- Posts
- 73
Mouse returned from taking a rabbit and some vegies to the girls running the Golden Tusk Tavern. He loved going to visit them and always took a barrow full of supplies with him. He took some to Cassandra as well. After all, she was the one who placed the cold spell on their cellar making it possible to store so much food. He saw them as his family and would not see them go hungry. Nor would Izzy. They had plenty and could share some with those they cared for. The cold cellar they had dug out have been enlarged twice and was stocked to the top. Rabbit and fish were the bulk of the meat, along with the ham and bacon they had traded the butcher for, along with a large variety of large vegetables, bags of flour, rice, oats, salt and sugar. Compared to many, they were eating like royalty.
Lock had brought in enough rabbits that all the women and the youngest children now slept on fur instead of the timber floor. During the night many of the children found their way onto Mouses story rug and slept comfortably. There was no more room in the cellar for more rabbits, and even though Lock had brought home so many of them, there was no fear of them becoming scarce. Out in the grasslands they were still breading and replenishing their numbers faster than Lock hunt them.
As winter began to sink its teeth into the land, many families found themselves in grave danger of starvation. This winter had already been particularly harsh, and it was a long way from being over yet. Everyone wanted to help. Lock brought in rabbits and the fur was used in Haven. The meat, along with an assortment of vegetables, was placed in bags and left on the doorstep of some of the worst affected homes once a week. It was enough to ensure they would make it through until the snow melted, and the world was warm again.
………………………………………………………….
As it turned out, Kim was a wonder when it came to needle and thread. She pulled apart the clothing Izzy had brough back from her marks and cut them to make clothing to fit children. The leftover bits, she put together to make quilts. The first quilt she made was for her baby, which wasn’t far away, then she made one for herself. For a backing she used a white sheet soaked in beet juice, turning the cloth a lovely shade of lavender. When she was sewing, she was in a world of her own. She started teaching some of the girls how to draft a pattern and put the pieces together in such a way as the stitches can’t be seen. She was a very patient teacher; Izzy was thrilled that the girls were learning a skill normally taught by their mothers. These children should not be disadvantaged because they were orphans.
One morning, just before dawn when Izzy was preparing to get the morning bread, the was a loud banging on the front door. When she went to investigate, she found a basket with a note. “Please care for my baby, I can’t. Her name is Eden. Tell her I am sorry, and I will always love her”. Izzy pulled back the covers to reveal a baby no more than a few hours old. She was wrapped and warm but still covered in the blood and fluids from birth. Izzy looked up and down the street but saw no one. How sad it was that a woman would have her baby and give it up because society saw unwed mothers as something depraved. She took the basket inside and went to where Francis had just finished feeding her baby boy. Setting the basket before Frances, revealing the baby and showed her the note. Frances fell in love right away, lifting her out of the basket and putting her to her breast. The little one suckled hungrily. “Don’t you worry about this one Miss Izzy; I’ll love her like she was my own”. Izzy hoped that a some point the child’s mother would return for her, but deep down, she knew she never would.
Lock had brought in enough rabbits that all the women and the youngest children now slept on fur instead of the timber floor. During the night many of the children found their way onto Mouses story rug and slept comfortably. There was no more room in the cellar for more rabbits, and even though Lock had brought home so many of them, there was no fear of them becoming scarce. Out in the grasslands they were still breading and replenishing their numbers faster than Lock hunt them.
As winter began to sink its teeth into the land, many families found themselves in grave danger of starvation. This winter had already been particularly harsh, and it was a long way from being over yet. Everyone wanted to help. Lock brought in rabbits and the fur was used in Haven. The meat, along with an assortment of vegetables, was placed in bags and left on the doorstep of some of the worst affected homes once a week. It was enough to ensure they would make it through until the snow melted, and the world was warm again.
………………………………………………………….
As it turned out, Kim was a wonder when it came to needle and thread. She pulled apart the clothing Izzy had brough back from her marks and cut them to make clothing to fit children. The leftover bits, she put together to make quilts. The first quilt she made was for her baby, which wasn’t far away, then she made one for herself. For a backing she used a white sheet soaked in beet juice, turning the cloth a lovely shade of lavender. When she was sewing, she was in a world of her own. She started teaching some of the girls how to draft a pattern and put the pieces together in such a way as the stitches can’t be seen. She was a very patient teacher; Izzy was thrilled that the girls were learning a skill normally taught by their mothers. These children should not be disadvantaged because they were orphans.
One morning, just before dawn when Izzy was preparing to get the morning bread, the was a loud banging on the front door. When she went to investigate, she found a basket with a note. “Please care for my baby, I can’t. Her name is Eden. Tell her I am sorry, and I will always love her”. Izzy pulled back the covers to reveal a baby no more than a few hours old. She was wrapped and warm but still covered in the blood and fluids from birth. Izzy looked up and down the street but saw no one. How sad it was that a woman would have her baby and give it up because society saw unwed mothers as something depraved. She took the basket inside and went to where Francis had just finished feeding her baby boy. Setting the basket before Frances, revealing the baby and showed her the note. Frances fell in love right away, lifting her out of the basket and putting her to her breast. The little one suckled hungrily. “Don’t you worry about this one Miss Izzy; I’ll love her like she was my own”. Izzy hoped that a some point the child’s mother would return for her, but deep down, she knew she never would.