Orphan Bought a $1 Cursed Spring and Defied a Billionaire-eirian

The day Nora Bell Hart bought Widow’s Blue, the March wind came down from the Allegheny ridges like it had teeth.

It slipped through the seams of her thin cotton dress, found the places where her coat had no buttons, and made her split shoes feel like open mouths around her toes.

She stood on the county courthouse steps with a cardboard suitcase in one hand and a deed in the other.

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The deed was worth one dollar.

That was also what she had paid for it.

A man in a black Pierce-Arrow laughed so hard that cigar ash fell onto his white suit.

His name was Clayton Wexler.

Everyone in Mercy Ridge, West Virginia, knew his name because his name sat on factory signs, coal leases, rail contracts, unpaid notes, farm equipment, and the kind of debts that kept a family quiet at supper.

He leaned from the car window with the polished cruelty of a man who had never been hungry long enough to learn mercy.

“You hear that, boys?” he called to the men outside the courthouse. “The little orphan bought Widow’s Blue. For a dollar.”

The men laughed because he laughed.

That was how rich men taught poor men to behave around them.

Nora’s fingers tightened around the deed until the paper creased beneath her thumb.

She was sixteen years old, five feet tall if she stood proud, and light enough that a sack of seed corn would have made a better bargain at market.

She had been turned out of Mercy Vale Home for Girls with no mother, no father, no brother, no uncle, no bank account, and no soft place waiting anywhere in the world.

All she owned fit inside the suitcase.

A spare dress with a torn cuff.

A comb with two missing teeth.

A needle wrapped in cloth.

A dented coffee tin.

Inside that tin, wrapped in damp moss, was a tomato seedling she had taken before dawn.

Clayton Wexler looked at the deed first.

Then he looked at Nora.

“Keep your poison, orphan,” he said. “Just don’t come begging when it kills you.”

Every lesson Mercy Vale had ever beaten into a girl rose in Nora’s throat.

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