The Sheriff Offered $12,000 for Any Man Who’d Marry Me — Ethan Walker Refused the Money First-QuynhTranJP

His hand stayed open between us.

The church had gone so quiet I could hear the ceiling fan ticking above the pulpit and the dry scrape of somebody’s boot against the pine floor. Sunlight from the tall windows struck the dust in the air and turned it gold, but the room itself had gone hard and tight around me. My ribs were still trapped inside that red corset. Every breath came shallow. Ethan Walker’s palm was rough, broad, steady. Not impatient. Not pitying. Just there.

I looked at his hand, then at his face.

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He didn’t smile for the crowd. He didn’t look around to see who was watching. He looked only at me.

“Miss Hannah,” he said quietly, his voice carrying anyway in the stillness, “you don’t have to do one more thing you don’t want to do today. But if you walk out of here with me, nobody’s going to shame you again while I’m standing there.”

Something in my throat pulled tight.

Behind me, my mother made a sharp sound under her breath. Sheriff Boone shifted his weight, leather creaking. Caleb stayed near the church door with one hand on the frame, pale as flour, like maybe he hadn’t expected the story to move on without him.

I put my hand in Ethan’s.

The murmur that moved through the room sounded like wind through dry grass.

His fingers closed around mine, warm and firm. He turned to Pastor Miller.

“Finish it.”

Pastor Miller blinked, licked his lips, and looked at Sheriff Boone before opening the Bible again. The sheriff gave one stiff nod. The vows came out in a rush, words tripping over each other while the congregation watched like they were afraid to blink and miss something. Ethan answered in a low, even voice. Mine came thin from the pressure in my chest, but it came.

When Pastor Miller reached the end, he cleared his throat. “You may kiss the bride.”

Ethan looked at me first.

“Only if you want that too,” he said.

I shook my head once, quick, because my heart was already beating hard enough to shake the dress.

He turned back to the pastor. “Then that’s enough.”

The Bible snapped closed.

Pastor Miller swallowed. “I now pronounce you husband and wife.”

That should have sounded holy. Instead it sounded like a door unlatching.

Ethan kept hold of my hand and led me down the aisle. I could feel every face turn as we passed. I heard my Aunt Clara whisper, “This is madness.” I heard somebody else hiss, “He’ll regret it by morning.” My mother sat rigid in the front pew with her jaw locked so hard a pulse jumped near her ear. My father still would not look at me.

Caleb moved aside before Ethan reached him. He tried to say something, but Ethan didn’t slow down.

Outside, the noon heat hit like a wall. The smell of hot dirt, horse sweat, and wagon grease replaced the church dust. Cicadas screamed from the cottonwoods. Ethan walked me straight to a dark wagon parked under the elm beside the churchyard. He helped me up, then climbed in and took the reins.

We rolled away without a backward glance.

For the first few minutes, all I could hear was the rattle of wheels, the leather harness, and my own breath fighting the corset. The town fell behind us. White fences turned to open pasture. Heat shimmered above the road.

Ethan kept his eyes on the team.

At last he said, “Can you breathe?”

“Enough.”

“That means no.”

I turned my face toward the fields because it was easier than looking at him. “It means I’m used to making do.”

That got his attention. I felt it before I saw it. He pulled the wagon to a stop beneath a line of pecan trees where the shade broke the sun. Then he set the brake, climbed down, and came around to my side.

“I’m going to ask you something,” he said. “And you can tell me no in front of God and everybody if you want.”

I stared at him.

He held up a pocketknife. “May I cut those laces?”

My mouth opened, then shut. Nobody had asked permission all day.

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