illphated
Bread of Tomorrow
The poster had hung in the town hall for years, its colors fading but its message sharp as ever: “Yet they would find themselves in need once again the very next day.”
The woman in the image was no stranger to the people of Dust Creek. She wasn’t just some painted figure dreamed up by a wartime artist — she was Clara Mae, the rancher’s daughter with the emerald eyes who had baked bread for half the county when rations thinned and soldiers left for the front.
Each morning before dawn, Clara Mae would rise, tie back her hair, and work the dough. Her hands moved with both tenderness and urgency — she knew every loaf would be gone by sunset. Families would crowd outside her porch, children clutching tin pails, mothers whispering prayers of thanks, fathers hollow-eyed from fields left empty of sons.
Still, Clara Mae smiled. She believed in the small act of bread as resistance — proof that no matter what the world took, Dust Creek would keep feeding itself.
The poster was meant as propaganda, urging sacrifice and vigilance. But over time it became something different: a shrine to resilience, a reminder that tomorrow always brings hunger — and that someone, somewhere, must rise before dawn to answer it.
And though the war had ended long ago, folks in Dust Creek still swore they could smell warm bread on the wind each morning — as if Clara Mae herself had never stopped kneading, never stopped giving, never stopped believing in the bread of tomorrow.
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