Thomas saw Henrik and shouted something lost in the wind. Henrik reached them, took the bundle from Thomas’s arms. Their youngest, a three-year-old boy named David, pale and barely conscious, and led the family up the slope to the cave. It took 20 minutes to move 50 yards. By the time they reached the cave’s mouth, Margaret had collapsed twice, and Emma’s face showed the white patches of frostbite starting on her cheeks.
Inside the cabin, the warmth hit them like a blessing. Thomas, who’d been prepared to defend his choice to reject Henrik’s help all winter, said nothing. He just stood there while Margaret sank to the floor, still holding their middle child, a 5-year-old girl named Sarah, and wept.
“Our stove cracked,” Thomas finally said, his voice hollow. “Can’t run it anymore. Cabin got down to 32°. Water froze in the bucket. We were dying.”
Henrik was already moving, stoking the fire, heating water, laying out blankets. “How many families still down there?”
“Seven, maybe eight. Morrison’s place is still burning. Quincade moved to his root cellar yesterday. The Omali family, the Hendersons, the Johnson’s.” Thomas trailed off, doing math that wasn’t adding up. “Most will make it probably if it breaks tomorrow.”
But the storm didn’t break tomorrow. It continued through December 27th, then the 28th. The wind finally died on the 29th, but temperatures remained brutally cold, 38 below on the morning of the 30th. Valley cabins had become uninhabitable. Families burned everything combustible, wore every piece of clothing they owned, and waited for the cold to kill them or the weather to break.
Henrik, meanwhile, had 11 people living in his 18x 24 ft cabin. The Whitmore had been joined by the Concades. On the 27th, James had carried his half-frozen wife up the slope after their root cellar started flooding from melting frost. On the 28th, Samuel Morrison arrived with his hypothermic wife and terrified son, having finally accepted that pride meant nothing compared to survival.
11 people in 432 square ft should have been miserable, cramped, tense, oxygen depleted. Instead, the cave cabin’s design proved itself in ways Henrik had never tested. The masonry heater, now burning three times daily instead of two, kept the interior at 66°. The cave’s natural ventilation, enhanced by Henrik’s culvert system, circulated fresh air without creating drafts. The stone ceiling and walls absorbed moisture from breathing and cooking, preventing the condensation that plagued tightly sealed cabins. The space felt crowded but not oppressive, warm but not stuffy.