The Woman Sent as a Joke Who Faced the Beast of Rourke Ranch-felicia

Hannah Bell reached the black iron gate of Rourke Ranch just as something inside the barn screamed.

The sound cut through the frost-thin morning and went straight into her hands.

It was not a human scream, but it was close enough to make her fingers lock around the latch and her breath catch in her chest.

The yard beyond the gate smelled of wet hay, cold mud, and old wood that had seen too many winters without fresh paint.

Then the scream came again.

A crash followed it.

Wood split somewhere inside the barn.

Hooves thundered against boards.

A man’s voice tore through the morning, raw with anger and fear.

“Back! Easy, you fool animal—back!”

Hannah should have turned around.

That was the whole point of sending her there.

The men at the Red Lantern Saloon had pointed her eight miles outside Mercy Falls with faces so straight they might have fooled a kinder woman.

They told her Caleb Rourke needed help.

They told her the rancher was looking for someone practical.

They told her not to mind his temper.

But Hannah had seen the rotten grin behind the whiskey glass.

She had heard the whisper that followed her when she stepped out into the street.

Send the big girl to the Beast.

Watch her come waddling back before noon.

Watch Caleb Rourke slam the door in her face.

By supper, Mercy Falls would have a new story to pass from table to table.

Hannah was twenty-seven years old, and she had been living inside other people’s jokes long enough to know their shape before they finished speaking.

She was five foot three in boots, one heel slightly lower than the other.

Her waist was thick.

Her cheeks were round.

Her arms were strong from laundry work, hauling wet sheets, beating dust from rugs, and carrying baskets through back doors where women like her were paid to be useful and invisible.

Nobody in Mercy Falls called it strength.

They called it size.

They looked at her body and decided they already knew her hunger, her loneliness, her worth, and her chances.

Some people do not insult what they see.

They insult what they need to believe about you.

Hannah had learned to keep her face still.

She had learned that arguing with cruelty only gave it a better seat at the table.

But she had also learned something quieter.

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