Sold At A Desert Auction, She Claimed The Cabin No Lawman Could Steal-nhu9999 - Chainityai

Sold At A Desert Auction, She Claimed The Cabin No Lawman Could Steal-nhu9999

The auctioneer did not ask my name.

He had asked the price of cracked trunks, broken chairs, a rusted stove, and three tired horses with more tenderness than he showed me.

By the time he called me onto the block, the sun over Redemption, Nevada, had turned the whole square white and cruel.

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Dust clung to my hem.

My dark green dress had been washed so many times it no longer knew what color it wanted to be.

I folded my hands in front of me and stared at a loose nail in the boards.

Stillness had carried me through orphan rooms, wagon camps, hungry winters, and women who called me useful only when there was floor to scrub.

If men wanted fear, I had learned not to feed them too much of it.

“What am I bid for this one?” Mr. Gable barked.

Someone laughed.

Someone else said, “Another mouth.”

No one said An Li.

They said Chinese girl.

They said orphan.

They said problem.

Then a voice spoke from the shade.

“Mine.”

The word moved through the crowd like cold water poured over hot iron.

I looked up.

The man under the blacksmith’s awning was enormous, broad-shouldered and silent, with a beard the color of dark bark and eyes that looked as if they had watched storms from mountain ridges for years.

He did not look at Mr. Gable.

He looked at me.

The auctioneer forced a grin.

“That is not a bid, Seth.”

The mountain man stepped into the sun and dropped a canvas sack onto the platform.

Gold spilled across the boards.

Every mouth in the square closed.

Mr. Gable shouted “Sold!” so fast the word cracked.

Seth climbed the block and held out his hand.

He did not grab me.

He did not order me down.

He offered his palm and waited.

That waiting was the first mercy.

I put my hand in his, and he led me out of town while the people of Redemption watched the fortune leave with the girl they had not wanted.

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