Norah’s Notebook Exposed The Boundary Trap Threatening Dun Creek-felicia

Norah Caldwell learned early that people liked a simple flaw.

A limp was easy.

It gave them something to see first, something to judge quickly, something to turn away from before they had to ask what else might be standing in front of them.

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On the morning she stood in the auction yard, the air smelled of damp rope, horse sweat, and dust baked hard by a pale sun.

Her left knee had locked before sunrise.

Cold weather did that.

Cold and damp.

She could feel the joint resisting every careful shift of her weight, and she hated that the men along the fence could see it.

They did not see her satchel first.

They did not see the careful way she held herself, the hands that had dressed wounds, copied case notes, cleaned instruments, and pressed cool cloths against fevered foreheads.

They saw the limp.

The Harrisburg agency had written its judgment in kinder language.

Women past thirty with visible physical limitations were difficult placements.

Norah had read the line three times, not because she failed to understand it, but because difficult was the sort of clean word people used when they wanted cruelty to look practical.

Difficult meant unwanted.

It meant eleven days left before even the agency stopped pretending there was still a place for her.

She was thirty-one years old.

In that yard, it might as well have been ancient.

The younger women had bright faces and quick smiles, and the ranchers wanted youth because youth let them imagine obedience, health, and gratitude all folded into one pretty package.

Norah kept her eyes forward.

She had learned not to look back at men who had already dismissed her.

Looking back gave them the pleasure of watching the blow land.

Then Elias Cutter arrived late.

He came on foot, dusty and unsmiling, with a hat brim that had lost its shape in more than one storm.

He did not stroll the fence.

He did not measure the women like horses.

He went straight to the registrar’s table, asked for the paper, and read it with a frown that deepened only once.

Then he looked up and found Norah.

Not scanned.

Found.

He crossed the yard and stopped at the fence.

“You’re Norah Caldwell.”

“I am.”

“The registry says you have a medical background.”

Her fingers tightened around the handle of the worn satchel at her feet.

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