Up at the cave, Henrik was worried, but not desperate. The blizzard’s wind never reached inside the cave’s mouth. The limestone overhang deflected it upward, creating a calm pocket where snow accumulated gently rather than driving horizontally. Interior temperature, even during the storm’s worst fury, never dropped below 58°. Henrik maintained his two fire routine, though he extended each burn by 30 minutes for psychological comfort as much as thermal need.
On the storm’s third day, December 26th, something changed. The wind shifted from northwest to straight north, and its velocity increased. Snow began driving directly into the cave’s mouth for the first time, accumulating against the cabin’s front wall, piling up against the door. Hrich watched through his window as the drift grew. 3t 4t 5 ft high. By afternoon, snow had buried the door completely and was climbing toward the windows. This was genuinely dangerous. If snow blocked the chimney, smoke would fill the cabin. If it sealed the entrance entirely, he could suffocate as oxygen depleted.
Henrik grabbed a shovel and went out through the window, climbing onto the growing drift to clear the chimney. The cold hit him like a physical blow, 44 below zero, according to his thermometer, with wind making it feel substantially worse. Exposed skin would freeze in under 2 minutes. He cleared the chimney, then dug out the door enough to crack it open, maintaining an air path to the outside. His hands achd even through heavy gloves. His lungs burned with each breath, but the work was manageable because he could retreat back into the 60°ree cabin every few minutes, warm up, and returned to the task. Valley homesteaders, whose cabins barely maintained 40° inside, had no such luxury. Going outside meant risking death. Staying inside meant slowly freezing anyway.
Henrik had just climbed back through his window when he heard it. A sound that didn’t belong to the storm. Faint, rhythmic, almost swallowed by the wind. He stopped, listened, heard it again. Someone was chopping wood. No, someone was hitting wood repeatedly, but without rhythm. Someone was pounding on wood. He grabbed his coat and went back outside, following the sound to its source.
50 yards down the slope, barely visible through the blowing snow, a shape moved. As Henrik fought through drifts toward it, the shape resolved into Thomas Whitmore, stumbling uphill, carrying something wrapped in blankets. Behind him, another figure, Margaret, carrying another bundle. Behind her, a third shape that Henrik realized was their 14-year-old daughter, Emma, dragging a makeshift sled with two smaller children on it. They were abandoning their cabin.