The Night Mercy Hollow Measured Clara, One Stranger Silenced Them-felicia

The church social hall in Mercy Hollow, Colorado, smelled of rose water, fried ham, damp wool, and lantern smoke.

Yellow light trembled against the rafters.

The fiddler scraped through a tune that sounded cheerful only if a person was not the one standing in the center of the room being quietly judged.

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Clara Whitlock stood beneath those lanterns with both hands pinched into the seams of her faded blue dress.

She had scrubbed that dress until her knuckles stung.

She had hung it near the stove and prayed the heat would pull the wrinkles out before evening.

The hem was still scarred where mountain mud had eaten through the cloth, and one side of the waist sat wrong because she had let it out herself with a borrowed needle and thread too dark for the fabric.

She knew all of that before anyone looked at her.

She knew because poverty teaches a woman to inventory her own flaws before strangers get the pleasure.

The first man looked at Clara the way men at the livery looked at horses before naming the price too low.

He turned his hat between both hands.

He did not lower his voice.

“Too broad in the hips,” Mr. Briggs said.

The women near the lemonade table pretended not to listen.

That was the custom in Mercy Hollow.

Cruelty was private as long as everyone agreed to stare at something else.

Mr. Briggs glanced once at Clara’s face and then away again, as though even meeting her eyes might require courage he had not brought with him.

“And too old to be starting fresh,” he added.

Clara was not old.

She was old enough to have buried her father, paid for his debts with her hands, and learned that hunger had a way of putting years into a woman’s face before time got there.

But she was not old.

She smiled because she had been taught that women who did not smile became stories by morning.

“No offense meant, Miss Whitlock,” Mr. Briggs said, tipping his hat.

“No offense taken, Mr. Briggs,” Clara answered.

It was a lie, and the lie had no strength in it.

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