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The Girl Was Sold Just Minutes After Giving Birth — But The Cowboy Bought Her And Set Her Free

Pel reached into his coat for the money. I’ll give you 70. The voice came from the left and it came quiet. Not raised a carry, just a flat statement, the way you’d quote a price at a store counter. But the yard went still in the particular way yards go still when a certain kind of man speaks. Ayra turned her head.

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He was standing at the edge of the stable, maybe 12 ft away, and he was leaning against the wall with his arms crossed and his hat low enough that she couldn’t see his eyes at first. He was tall, not exceptionally, but built in a way that suggested substance. A dark canvas coat, trailworn, a gun on his hip that he wasn’t touching.

He had a few days of dark beard and a jaw that had clearly been broken at least once in his life and set crooked. He wasn’t looking at her. He was looking at Pel. Rhett called her, someone in the crowd said under their breath with exactly the tone of voice you’d use to say rattlesnake. Pel’s pleasant expression tightened at the edges.

This isn’t your business, Calder. Made it my business. Rhett Calder pushed off the wall and walked into the center of the yard and the crowd parted for him. Not dramatically, not with obvious hurry, but steadily, the way water moves around a stone in a stream. 70 cash. Krauss was staring at him. You’re buying.

I’m making a better offer than this man. He finally looked at Ayra then, and she got a look at his eyes. Dark brown, close set, utterly unreadable. He looked at her for perhaps 3 seconds with the same impersonal assessment that Pel had used, but somehow entirely different in character, like a man checking whether a window was broken rather than whether a thing was valuable. Then he looked back at Krauss.

Do you want $70 or not? What for? Pel’s pleasant voice had developed an edge. What do you want with her? Called her. My business. Now hold on. Krauss was looking between them. Money was fighting instinct behind his eyes, and money was winning, as it generally did with Krauss.

“Pel I, you take his money,” Pel said flatly. “And we’re done doing business.” “A moment.” The snow was still falling, slow and indifferent to everything happening beneath it. “75,” Rhett said, “and I’m getting bored.” Krauss took the money. Pel stared at Calder with the particular expression of a man who is doing the mathematics of violence and arriving at an answer he doesn’t like.

Then he walked to his wagon without another word, climbed up, and drove it out of the yard at a pace that was careful not to look like retreat. The crowd in the yard remained. Nobody spoke. Rhett called her turned and looked at Elra again. She looked back at him. You got anything here? He said belongings. Her voice, when it came, was steadier than she expected.

A bag in Mabel’s room. Get it. He was already turning toward the stable. Meet me out front in 10 minutes. Wait. She took a step toward him and her leg nearly gave. She stopped it. My son, they took Krauss sold my son last night to I know he said it without stopping, without turning around. She stared at his back.

You know, he was already inside the stable. It’s him. Chapter 3. The road to Nowhere. Good. Mabel tried to stop her. Not forcefully. She wasn’t the kind of woman who tried to control others once they’d made their minds up, but she stood in the doorway of the back room while Elra pulled on a second wool skirt and wrapped a shawl around her shoulders, and she said what she felt she had to say. Elyra, that man is not safe.

I know he’s killed people more than one. That’s not I’m not saying it the way people say things in this town is gossip. I am telling you he has killed people and nobody did a thing about it because there’s nobody here to do a thing about it. I know pulled the bag from under the bed. It wasn’t much.

A change of clothes, a small knife she’d had since she was 15. $20 that Thomas hadn’t found. She straightened up slowly, pressing one hand to the wall. Mabel, what? The men who took my son. Krauss said buyers from the south. People who can’t have children. She heard her own voice say the words and they still didn’t make sense.

They still didn’t fit together into anything she could hold. Do you know who? Mabel’s face did something complicated. There’s talk. the Harland Syndicate. They’ve been doing more than cattle for the last few years, moving people, children, especially. Her voice had gone very quiet. There was a family last spring.

The Nortons, their little girl. Where do they take them? Bush. South. That’s all anyone knows for certain. The Dakotas first. Then Mabel stopped. Ra, even if Calder is sincere, even if he actually intends to help you find the boy, and I cannot imagine why he would, the syndicate is not a group of men you can go up against.

They have judges, town marshals. Half the territory is in their pocket. Looked at her. My son is alive, she said. He was alive when they took him. That means there’s time. She picked up her bag. The man outside is the only person in this entire town who offered me anything. I’m going with him. Mabel was quiet for a moment.

Then she went to her bureau, opened the top drawer, and came back with a small paper wrapped parcel. Food for the road. There’s dried meat and hardtac. She pressed it into Ayra’s hands and then held on. Her eyes were red at the rims. You send word when you can. I will. And Mabel’s grip tightened briefly.

You’re tougher than you know. You always were from the moment you walked into this town. Don’t let anyone, including that man, make you forget that. Nodded. She didn’t trust her voice to hold. She went out through the front door into the snow. Rhett Calder had a horse, a gorilla geling, heavybilt, the kind of animal that prioritized endurance over beauty, and a pack mule loaded with supplies.

He was checking the mule’s cinch when came out of the boarding house. He glanced at her once, noted the bag, noted the way she was walking. You’re bleeding, he said. I’m aware. Bad? She considered lying. Possibly. He looked at her for a moment with the same unreadable expression. There’s a settlement 40 mi north.

Trapper named Holland Beck lives there. His wife was a medicine woman, Crow. She knows what she’s doing. And you’re taking me there? That’s where I’m going? She looked at the horse and the mule and the gray empty road leading north out of Clearwater Hollow. Then she looked back at him. You know about my son, she said. You said that.

I know you said. So tell me what you know. He finished with the cinch. He didn’t look at her. The child was taken last night before you delivered based on what Krauss had already arranged. Sold to a buyer who works for the Harland Syndicates acquisition arm. The buyer’s name is Sutter. He runs a distribution operation out of a trading post on the South Fork.

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