The Cowboy Paid Three Hundred Dollars, Then Offered the Girl Something No Man Had Ever Given Her-felicia

The words did not thunder. They did not need to.

They settled over the yard softer than dust and heavier than iron.

She’s a person. Not your bargain.

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For the first time that morning, Alara Wynn heard no wagon wheel, no mule snort, no dry wind snapping the canvas. Even Silas Garrett’s men stood as if the sun had nailed their boots to the hardpan. Her uncle’s face had gone the gray color of old ashes. Her aunt Martha clutched the doorframe so tightly that her knuckles showed white through the dust.

The stranger kept his palm open.

That was what Alara remembered later. Not the pistol on his hip, not the horse at his shoulder, not the pouch of money lying in Silas Garrett’s possession. She remembered the open hand. He did not reach for her. He did not command her. He did not speak of ownership, duty, gratitude, or debt.

He only left a space where her choice might stand.

Silas Garrett closed his fingers around the leather pouch. The coins inside gave a small, greedy clink.

‘Fine words, mister,’ Silas said, polite enough to sound almost amused. ‘But I have seen fine words starve before sundown. If the girl is not bought, then what is she?’

‘Free,’ the stranger said.

Harold Wynn let out a harsh breath. ‘Free to do what? Wander the road? Beg in Red Mesa? She has no land, no dowry, no father, no husband. I have kept her alive three years.’

Alara turned toward him slowly. Dust clung to the hem of her dress. Her shoulder still burned where one of Silas’s men had taken hold of her. Yet the hurt in her body was smaller than the hollow opening in her chest.

‘You kept me alive,’ she said. ‘So you could trade me.’

Martha made a sound then, something between a sob and a prayer, but still she did not step forward.

The stranger looked at Alara, and his gaze did not travel over her like an appraisal. It met her face and stopped there.

‘Name is Colt Harland,’ he said. ‘I have a ranch two days south, where the creek has not gone dry. There is honest work if you want it. Or I can take you to Red Mesa, leave you with the preacher’s wife, and put enough money in your hand to get you farther west.’

His voice was rough, as though unused to being spent on long explanations.

‘You owe me nothing either way.’

That sentence struck her harder than the heat.

You owe me nothing.

All her life had been counted in owed things. Owed meals. Owed shelter. Owed obedience. Owed silence. Owed gratitude for cast-off dresses and watered soup. The words felt strange in her ears, almost dangerous.

Silas laughed under his breath. ‘You hear that, Harold? Man throws three hundred dollars in the dirt and says he wants nothing.’

Colt did not answer him.

Harold took one step toward Alara. ‘Girl, do not be foolish. You ride off with a stranger, you may find worse than Garrett waiting.’

Alara looked at the wagon loaded with grain. She looked at the uncle who had weighed her against food. She looked at the aunt who had loved her weakly, which in hard country sometimes amounted to no love at all.

Then she looked at Colt Harland’s open hand.

She did not take it at first. She lifted her own hand and wiped dust from her cheek with the back of her wrist. It left a pale streak across her skin.

‘If I come,’ she said, ‘I work for wages.’

Something almost like approval moved through Colt’s eyes.

‘Same wages I would pay any hand.’

‘And if I leave?’

‘Then you leave.’

‘You will not stop me?’

‘No.’

Alara took one breath. Then another. The air tasted of grain dust, leather, and the coming storm that never came. She stepped past Silas Garrett without looking at him and walked to Colt’s horse.

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