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No One Wanted the 3 Orphan Sisters at the Auction — Until a Mail Order Bride Took Them In and Built a Family the Whole Town Had to Respect

“You understand,” he said, “that the county stipend will be modest.”

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Caleb Ward stood near the wall, hat in hand. “Keep it.”

Pike blinked. “Beg pardon?”

“I said keep it.”

Clara looked at him quickly.

Caleb’s jaw tightened. “You were willing to hand those girls to whoever cost you least. I don’t want your money used as a rope around their necks.”

Pike tapped his pen. “That is a proud position for a man whose ranch is not exactly thriving.”

Clara heard the insult beneath the words.

Caleb heard it too, but his face did not change.

“My ranch is my business.”

“And these girls are now becoming county business no longer,” Pike said. “That means food, schooling, church attendance, clothing. If they’re found neglected, they can be removed.”

Ruth stepped closer to Clara at the word removed.

Clara felt it. That tiny movement, barely anything, but enough to break her heart.

“They won’t be neglected,” Clara said.

Pike looked her over. “You’re not married yet.”

Caleb turned toward her.

For the first time since the courthouse yard, they truly looked at one another.

He was older than she expected. Not old, but weathered. Thirty-two maybe. His hair was dark under the dust, his eyes gray-blue, his hands scarred from rope and work. He looked like a man built by hard winters.

Clara knew what she looked like. Too thin. Too pale. A woman with one good dress, a carpetbag, and twenty-three dollars sewn into her petticoat.

She had come west because the seamstress shop in St. Louis had closed, because respectable work for a woman alone was never as steady as people liked to pretend, and because Caleb Ward’s letters had been plain and honest.

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