Sold for $300, Saved by the Cowboy Who Paid More-felicia

Laya May Whitaker ran because stopping meant being handed over.

The Kansas prairie lay pale beneath the moon, every blade of grass silver, every rut in the dirt road sharp beneath her bare feet.

Her lungs burned from more than the cold.

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Fear had its own fire.

Behind her, her brother shouted her name as if he still had the right to use it.

“Stop running, Laya!”

She almost looked back.

Almost.

But she knew what she would see if she did.

His shape coming after her.

The men he had sold her to riding close enough to laugh.

The whole ugly truth of it pressing down on her shoulders.

Three weeks earlier, she had still believed family meant something, even when it was poor, ragged, and grief-struck.

She had believed blood made a claim of protection.

Now blood had put a price on her.

Three hundred dollars.

That was the number her brother had accepted.

Not for a horse.

Not for a wagon.

Not for a piece of land or a winter’s worth of feed.

For Laya.

The Dust Lantern saloon glowed ahead, its windows throwing yellow squares across the road.

Music spilled out through the cracks, bright and careless.

Men inside were drinking, laughing, losing wages, winning lies, and pretending the world outside the saloon doors did not concern them.

Laya caught her dress on a fence post and tore the skirt nearly to the knee.

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