Pregnant Widow Bought a Shackled Father Before the Stagecoach Left-felicia

The auctioneer was not selling cattle that afternoon.

He was selling a man.

Dust hung over Bitter Creek in a pale, choking sheet, the kind that got into collars and teeth and the corners of a person’s eyes.

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The July heat pressed down on the town square until every board in the wooden platform seemed to sweat resin.

Wagon wheels creaked past the trough.

A horse stamped and shook its head against the flies.

Somewhere near the dry goods window, a woman lifted a handkerchief to her nose, but she did not leave.

Nobody left.

Not with Silas Montgomery standing on the platform in iron shackles.

Not with a newborn baby pressed against his burned, blood-stained chest.

Silas was the sort of man people made stories about before they bothered knowing him.

Huge shoulders.

Hands like split oak.

Dark hair falling over a face carved down by smoke, hunger, and grief.

He looked like something dragged out of the mountains and brought into town for judgment.

But the thing that held the crowd was not his size.

It was the baby.

She was wrapped in a piece of clean cloth that had once been part of a woman’s skirt, tucked so tight beneath Silas’s chin that only her red little face and one restless fist showed.

Her cry came thin and weak.

It cut through the square more sharply than the gavel.

Silas lowered his face toward her, and for a moment the shackles around his wrists trembled against the wood.

Magistrate Jebediah Cross stood beside the auction table with his sleeves rolled and his vest stretched tight over his stomach.

He had a paper in front of him.

A labor contract.

Five years.

One debtor.

One body to be used until the debt was satisfied.

“Do I hear fifty dollars for the labor contract of this debtor?” Cross called.

His voice carried well because he liked hearing it carry.

A few men shifted near the front.

A mine owner named Mr. Vale kept his thumbs tucked in his vest and looked Silas over with the expression of a man pricing a mule.

A rancher beside him spat into the dust and murmured that the mountain man would be worth something if his hands healed right.

Nobody said wife.

Nobody said fire.

Nobody said the words that mattered.

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