The Cowboy Cut Their Ropes, But A Dark Debt Came Riding Back-felicia

The auction hammer cracked down in the square at Red Rock Crossing, and Evelyn Harper felt the sound pass through her chest before it reached her ears.

It was not loud in the ordinary way.

It was final.

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Dust floated above the boards in the hard morning light, and the crowd below the platform smelled of horse sweat, sun-warmed wool, tobacco, and the dry street that had already been walked over by too many boots.

Beside her, Lillian’s hand trembled inside Evelyn’s.

Evelyn held tighter.

Her sister was younger, frightened, and trying so hard not to cry that her whole face looked carved out of panic.

Evelyn kept her chin raised because that was the last thing she still owned.

The law called it seven years of service.

Evelyn knew what it was.

A sale.

Their father had left debts behind when he died, and the men who came to collect did not care that the dry goods store had failed after a bad season, or that their mother had once polished the dishes now stacked in someone else’s wagon.

They took the house.

They took the store.

They took the good dishes, the shelves, the spare blankets, the cracked mirror, and nearly every object that had ever made the Harper girls believe they belonged somewhere.

Then the letter came to the boarding house.

If the debt could not be paid with money, it would be paid with labor.

When the knock landed before dawn, Evelyn was already awake.

Lillian sat up in the narrow bed with fear written all over her face.

‘What if we don’t go?’ she whispered.

Evelyn buttoned the collar of her sister’s plain dress and made her own voice gentle.

‘They’ll come in,’ she said. ‘And it will be worse.’

So they went.

People watched as the Harper girls were taken through town with ropes around their wrists.

Some stared as if they had paid for tickets.

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