He Paid $500 For The Caged Widow, Then Offered Her His Name Forever-felicia

The iron cage stood in the middle of Willow Creek like the town had decided shame needed a proper address.

It sat where horses used to be tied outside the stores, bolted to a wooden platform and left under the hot frontier sun.

A rough board had been nailed to the bars.

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The crooked black letters said $10 to touch the giant widow.

That was what they called Martha Cain when they wanted to sound amused.

When they wanted to sound righteous, they called her a murderer.

When they wanted to frighten their children into obedience, they called her the beast in the square.

Sheriff Harlan liked that last one because fear sold better than facts.

He kept a small table beside the cage and stacked coins into neat piles while the crowd moved around him.

A dollar to look.

Ten dollars to touch.

Every ticket, he told them, bought boards and nails for the fine new schoolhouse the town council wanted.

People nodded at that part.

It let them pretend the cage was charity instead of cruelty.

Cruelty gets cleaner when people call it civic duty.

Martha sat on a plain bench inside the bars with her hands locked together in her lap.

She was tall, nearly as tall as most men, and hard work had made her broad through the shoulders.

Her blonde hair hung loose and dusty around a face the weather had sharpened.

Old scars crossed her knuckles.

Purple shadows darkened the skin beneath her pale blue eyes.

She did not pace.

She did not beg.

She did not rattle the bars.

That stillness made the town meaner.

A skinny boy near the front bent down, grabbed a rock, and threw it at the cage.

The stone struck the bars with a hard clang that cut through the afternoon.

Several women gasped before they remembered they were supposed to be entertained.

Then the crowd laughed.

The boy’s father pushed him forward proudly, as if cruelty were courage.

Martha did not blink.

Her eyes stayed on a worn patch of dirt near her boots.

The refusal to react was the last thing in Willow Creek she still owned.

That was the sound Jake Morrison heard when he rode into town.

He had only meant to buy coffee, flour, cartridges, and maybe a clean shirt before moving on.

Dust coated his hat and coat.

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