The Cowboy Who Paid Three Dollars and Refused to Own Her-thuyhien

The barn smelled like sweat, damp hay, tobacco, and dust baked into boards that had carried too many boots and too little mercy.

Annabeth stood under the crooked sign with her hands folded so tightly her knuckles ached.

UNCLAIMED BRIDES, AUCTION ENDS AT NOON.

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The words had been painted in a hurry, but not carelessly.

Someone had wanted the shame to be clear.

Sunlight slipped through gaps in the plank walls and fell across her borrowed dress in thin yellow bars.

The dress had been taken from a trunk behind the boarding room, and it fit like something meant for another life.

The sleeves were too short.

The hem dragged in the dirt.

The bodice pulled whenever she breathed.

Her bonnet was old, soft at the edges, and carefully kept because it was the last thing that had belonged to her mother.

Her mother had died before she could teach Annabeth how to recognize tenderness.

So Annabeth had learned other things instead.

She had learned how to keep her eyes low when men were drinking.

She had learned how to measure a room by the distance to the door.

She had learned that laughter could hurt before anyone laid a hand on you.

She was nineteen years old.

Untouched.

Unkissed.

So unfamiliar with kindness that the idea of it felt less like hope and more like a trick.

The auctioneer came close enough that she could smell old tobacco on his breath.

He hooked one finger beneath her chin and lifted her face toward the crowd.

“A virgin!” he called, his voice booming off the rafters. “Not a mark on her except the ones you can’t see.”

The men laughed.

It rolled through the barn the way thunder rolls over dry country, wide and ugly and impossible to stop.

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