A Cowboy Defied The Richest Son In San Pedro For A Mud-Covered Schoolteacher-felicia

The piercing scream caught everyone’s attention as Willow Warren went tumbling from the boardwalk, her blue calico dress flying up around her knees before she landed with a wet, sickening splash in the thick brown mud below.

For one breath, San Pedro went silent.

Then Clancy Dobs laughed.

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The sound carried across the street, past the saloon doors, past the general store barrels, past the freight wagons creaking down from the harbor.

“That’ll teach you to refuse a dance, Miss High and Mighty,” he called.

Willow lay stunned in the mud, her palms sunk deep in the brown muck and her cheek burning hotter than the California sun.

She could taste dirt on her lip.

Her blue calico dress, the one she had saved three months to buy, was ruined before she could even understand how hard she had fallen.

A crowd had gathered without meaning to gather.

That was how shame worked in a frontier town.

It pulled people out of doorways and stopped them in the street, then made cowards of them once they saw who was responsible.

A dockhand looked away.

Two women near the general store whispered behind their gloves.

A man outside the saloon shifted his weight as if he might step forward, then remembered the Dobs family name and suddenly found great interest in the dust near his boots.

No one crossed a Dobs in San Pedro.

Not a teacher.

Not a shopkeeper.

Not a man with freight to move through the harbor and bills to pay before winter.

Willow tried to push herself up.

The mud slipped under her hands and dragged her back down.

Her carefully pinned hair had come loose, and strands of it stuck to her face in filthy ribbons.

The humiliation was worse than the fall.

She had faced unruly boys, unpaid wages, cold mornings, and loneliness sharp enough to keep her awake through the night.

But she had not expected to be thrown into the street like refuse because she would not let Clancy Dobs take her arm at the founders’ day dance.

She had said no politely.

She had said it clearly.

That had been her mistake.

Men raised to own every room they entered did not hear no as an answer.

They heard it as a challenge.

Willow swallowed hard and tried again to rise.

Her fingers sank to the knuckles.

Laughter moved through the crowd in nervous little pieces, not because everyone thought it funny, but because fear sometimes dressed itself that way.

Then a shadow crossed over her.

“Need a hand, madam?”

The voice was low, steady, and unfamiliar.

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