A Cowboy Paid $2 At Auction, Then The Native Girl Defied Him-felicia

Dust had a way of making every cruelty in Red Creek look ordinary.

It settled on hat brims, on horse backs, on the plank steps of the general store, and on the hands of men who liked to pretend business was business no matter who stood trembling in front of them.

That afternoon, the town had gathered around the auction platform with the lazy hunger of people who had already decided they would not be ashamed.

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Ranchers leaned against hitching rails.

Traders squinted beneath the sun.

Drifters with empty pockets laughed anyway, because laughter cost nothing and made them feel larger than they were.

The auctioneer stood behind a rough table with an open ledger in front of him.

A tin cup sat near his elbow.

Beside it lay a few coins, a stub of pencil, and a folded scrap of paper used to mark whatever had just been sold.

Horses stamped behind the crowd, restless in the heat.

Somewhere, a screen door banged.

Then the noise bent toward silence when the girl was brought up onto the platform.

Her wrists were loosely bound, but the rope had already done its work.

It had left red marks against her skin and told everyone watching what they were expected to believe.

That she could be handled.

That she could be priced.

That her will mattered less than the ink in a ledger.

She looked young, though not soft.

Travel had worn dust into the folds of her dress and wind had roughened her hair, but nothing in her face begged for pity.

Her eyes moved over the crowd with a dark, steady fire.

She saw the men at the front.

She saw the ones pretending not to stare too hard.

She saw the ones smiling because her pride made them uncomfortable, and they needed to turn discomfort into sport.

The auctioneer cleared his throat.

The sound was small, but it carried.

A few men chuckled before he even started.

The first bid came low.

Too low to be serious.

The second came with a laugh attached to it.

The third was tossed out by a man who never took his elbow off the rail.

Each number landed like a stone.

The girl did not flinch.

She stood taller instead, and that straightening of her back seemed to bother the crowd more than tears would have.

Tears would have proved the world was working the way they wanted.

Fear would have given them permission.

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