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Milk of Human Kindness

Sunday 22nd June, Day/Story #33

By L.C. SchäferPublished 7 months ago 2 min read
Top Story - June 2025
Milk of Human Kindness
Photo by Dana Davis on Unsplash

The baby in his sling was heavy against her. The smell of him hung in the air around and between them. Lingering and following like another companion. Thick with sleep, slightly sour with milk. It clung to her shawl, to her skin, just as much as the dust that rose with every step. It mixed with sweat, and body-smell, and campfire smoke.

Now, the infant slept against Maggie's heart. Soothed, no doubt, by the constant travel.

Aching and weary, she glanced at the long lashes resting peacefully on his smooth, plump cheeks. To be so unaware! To be carried. In comfort. Encircled by stout arms, and a soft breast.

"It's alright for some," she muttered.

How many miles had it been? Four hundred, by now. At least.

She was grateful for the caravan, the noise of it clattering around her, like a reassuring cloak. Would she have survived this far without it? Probably not. Her charge certainly wouldn't have. She shoved these thoughts away, set her jaw, and concentrated on the next step.

He had no idea how lucky he was. Completely innocent of his good fortune.

Motherless he might be, but such babes usually perished quick, and look! He was still here. Growing fat and happy, no less. Better fed than many of the travellers, if Maggie was any judge.

The signal came to make camp.

+

Just as she'd done the night before, and every night before that, Maggie kept a watchful eye on the neighbouring tents and wagons. Noting which were only men (she always avoided those) and which had families.

Canvas flapped and groaned. Saddles squeaked, horses snorted. The familiar sounds rippled around her. Twilight was punctuated by little fires. Pots hissed. Cooking smells thickened the evening air.

As if on cue, he stirred, fists balled and lips pursed.

It's time.

The woman headed towards a nearby wagon, and a woman leaning over the cooking pot.

"Ma'am?" The woman turned, and Maggie met her with a smile, and a deferential dip of her head. "Your little one," she said, "Does he take your milk, still? Only..." Maggie unwrapped the front of her shawl to present that soft face, turning and looking, looking... "He has no mother, you see. And I have no milk."

"Give the little lad over, then," the woman said, giving the contents of the pot another prod and then putting down the spoon. "Come on, little one, if you're hungry." She took him into her arms with that practised air of one used to handling babies, and he went to her just as readily, already rooting and snuffling.

+

Each night was the same. Different women, of course. The lullabies were in different languages sometimes, but there were always lullabies.

Some women were wary or snappish when she approached. Most were busy, after all, and weariness a universal feature. Every last one softened when they reached for him, though, and he took the warm reception as nothing less than his due.

+

Thank you for reading

Inspired by a quote:

I carried a little motherless babe five hundred miles, whose mother had died, and when we would camp I would go from camp to camp in search of some good, kind motherly women to let it nurse, and no one ever refused. - Margaret Inman, 1852

Five hundred miles, five hundred words.

familyHistoricalMicrofictionShort Story

About the Creator

L.C. Schäfer

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Never so naked as I am on a page

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I'm not a writer! I've just had too much coffee!

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Sometimes writes under S.E.Holz

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Outstanding

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Comments (21)

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  • John Cox7 months ago

    Brilliant reimagining!

  • Md Masud Akanda7 months ago

    I am new here please support me

  • Gina C.7 months ago

    This pulled me in immediately; love how it was inspired by a quote!

  • A. J. Schoenfeld7 months ago

    I loved this! I grew up hearing stories about my ancestors walking across the plains to settle in the West. This tale rang true to the many stories I've heard and read from their journals. Great job!

  • Beautiful, thankyou for sharing and congratulations on Top Story xx

  • Jalalahmad 7 months ago

    Well done

  • Jason Freeman7 months ago

    Bro, this drop honestly hits different. Been scrolling all morning looking for something that feels this real, and your post just snaps me back on track. It’s the same little rush I get when I’m chill-playing numbers on Dewatogel, no pressure, just letting the vibes guide the clicks until everything lines up. I’m not talking major jackpots, just those small wins that remind you the universe still roots for quiet grinders. The way you break things down here makes the hustle feel doable, almost therapeutic. Keep throwing gems like this—people like me genuinely need the energy right now to thrive. and Plz come my story

  • Antoni De'Leon7 months ago

    Such stories told through time. So fascinating to read of the many sacrifices. This was sad and uplifting. I agree. well written and compassionate.

  • Caroline Craven7 months ago

    Oh gosh, and this was based on a true story too. you wrote this with such compassion and tenderness. Excellent writing L.C.

  • Alice Ararau7 months ago

    This is absolutely beautiful — what a tender, quietly powerful piece. The rhythm, the imagery, the exhaustion and care woven into every line… it really lingers. You’ve breathed vivid life into Margaret Inman’s words. The details — the milk-sour scent, the dust, the way the baby is passed from arm to arm — feel so intimate and real. I could feel the weight of those 500 miles in every paragraph. Thank you for writing this.

  • Shirley Belk7 months ago

    Inspired by a quote. Was this from a book? So very interesting. Congratulations on Top Story. So nice to have something refreshing and different to read :)

  • Story by anyone 7 months ago

    Plz 🙏 come my story

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Dana Crandell7 months ago

    What a masterful piece of historical fiction. I love the way you immersed us in the scene in your opening paragraph. Great story, L.C! Congratulations!

  • Helen Desilva7 months ago

    This description of Maggie and the baby is so vivid. Reminds me of similar journeys with my own family, always on the move.

  • Gosh that must have been so hard to do. Can't believe it's real

  • Sean A.7 months ago

    An amazing story! Thank you for bringing it to life.

  • Sandy Gillman7 months ago

    This felt real, in a good way. Like a moment taken from history.

  • Test7 months ago

    Oooo! Love the little tale that "quote" inspired!! Well written LC!!

  • Mother Combs7 months ago

    This is one of those you'd like to hear the beginning, plus the middle, and the end.

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