She Ran From A Forced Marriage With A Rancher's Four-Line Ad-nhu9999 - Chainityai

She Ran From A Forced Marriage With A Rancher’s Four-Line Ad-nhu9999

The brooch had been my mother’s before it became the price Abram Williams tried to put on my life.

It was small, oval, and set with a blue stone that caught light like water in a tin cup.

My mother wore it to church, to market, and once to my school recital when she was already too sick to stand through the hymn.

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After she died, I kept it wrapped in a square of muslin inside the tin box under my cot.

Abram proved me wrong on a Thursday afternoon, when he opened my tin box with the same key he used for the pantry and handed the brooch to Garrett Howell.

Garrett was the man Abram had chosen for me because Garrett held Abram’s debt and wanted a wife who came with no family brave enough to object.

He turned the brooch in his hand and asked whether I was obedient.

Abram said I was quiet, which was almost the same thing to men like them.

Then Abram told me I would marry Garrett by Sunday.

He said if I refused, he would swear to the sheriff that I had stolen my mother’s brooch from his locked drawer.

He said a woman with no money could not afford the truth.

That was the sentence that did it.

Not the threat.

Not Garrett’s smile.

It was the way Abram believed poverty had made me belong to him.

I folded my hands so they would not shake.

I let Garrett pin my mother’s brooch to his vest.

I looked at the blue stone one last time and promised myself it would not be the last time.

That night, I packed what I could carry.

Three dollars.

Two dresses.

One comb.

A sewing needle wrapped in thread.

And a newspaper clipping I had read so many times the fold had gone soft.

Rancher in Southwest Texas seeks capable woman for practical arrangement.

No romance expected.

Respond to B. Lawrence, Dusty Flats.

Those four lines were not tender, but they were clean.

I wrote to B. Lawrence by lamplight.

I kept my letter practical because the advertisement had asked for practical.

I said I could cook plain meals, mend canvas, keep accounts, clean a house properly, and rise before the sun.

I said I had no expectation of romance.

Then my hand stopped.

So I added one line I had not planned to write.

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