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At 16, She Was Traded to a Widowed Rancher for a Sack of Flour and Three Chickens

But that spring, he looked like something the land itself had been at work on, like a fence post that’s been through too many wet winters and too many dry summers and has no give left in it. Just the question of when. His wife, Mabel, had died the previous winter. Influenza, the fast kind, 3 days from sick to gone.

She’d left him with six kids, ranging from 4 years old up to 16, and the eldest was Nora. I could see even from the gate that the yard was swept and the laundry was on the line, hung straight, and even in the cold air, which meant someone was keeping things from going entirely to pieces. From the look of Harland, it wasn’t him.

He didn’t bring up the cow right away. He walked me around the property first. Showed me where the south fence had heaved in the spring thaw. Showed me the wagon wheel with the cracked spoke he’d been living with for 6 weeks. Talked about the price of flour and salt and lamp oil going up every time he went to the general store while what he could get for his cattle at market held flat or dropped. I listened.

I’ve always had patience for men working their way toward what they need to say. Clara used to say it was because I’d grown up with a father who never asked for anything directly and that I’d learned to hear around the edges of things. She was right about that and most things. Then he stopped at the fence rail on the east side of the yard and he turned to face me and he said, “I got a proposition, Abel. I said I was listening.

You’re alone out there at the cutter place.” He said I told him that was accurate. I got Nora. He said it the way you’d note the weather or the condition of a road, flat, factual, like it wasn’t the most extraordinary thing he’d said in recent memory. She’s 16 and she’s healthy and she can cook and sew and keep a house and she ain’t delicate.

She’s been running this household since Mabel went. He looked away from me when he said the next part, fixed his eyes on something in the middle distance. I need a real start right now, not next season. I need that flower and I need those laying hens today. And if you can bring them out here, Norah can come back with you.

I looked at him for a long time, long enough that the silence got uncomfortable and he started shifting his weight, which was something Harlon always did when quiet went on past what he could carry. “You’re talking about your daughter,” I said. “I’m talking about a trade that helps everyone,” he said, the voice of a man who talked himself into something and didn’t want to be made to look at it directly.

“She gets a roof and steady food. You get help with the house. I get my kids through the summer without going under.” Harland Abel, I’ve thought on this. You’ve thought about what you need, I said. That’s different from thinking it through. He looked at the fence rail. I want to be honest with you about what followed because there’s a version of this story where I’m some kind of good man doing a generous thing, and that version isn’t accurate.

I stood at that fence, and I thought about riding away. There was no law that required me to be part of what Harlon was doing. And every piece of me that was worth anything knew it was wrong. A man selling his daughter for flour and chickens is wrong. And a man who participates in that is part of the wrong.

And I have never argued myself out of that or tried to. It’s just what’s true. But I looked past Harland toward the yard and I saw her. Norah was standing near the laundry line, not working. The laundry was done and drying. just standing near it with one hand resting lightly on a hanging sheet watching us. The way you watch something that concerns you directly and that you have no power over with a particular stillness.

A stillness that takes practice. 16 years old and she’d already learned that kind of watching. The patience of having no choices. I thought if I leave, what does she get? She stays here and the next man who comes through to buy a horse or a piece of wire gets the same proposition. And maybe that man doesn’t ask her name. That reasoning didn’t make what I did right. I’m not offering it as a defense.

I’m offering it as what I thought. I drove back to my place and I loaded the sack of Meridian Mills flour into the wagon bed and I crated up the two hens and the rooster and I drove back to the fruit place and I completed the transaction. Harlon shook my hand and went inside without meeting my eyes which told me he knew what he’d done.

Nora came out of the house with her flower sack of belongings and she walked to the wagon and she looked at it for a moment and then she looked at me. Do you have a name? She said. Abel Cutter. I’m Nora, she said. Not Nor, just Nora. Like she’d already decided what she was keeping and what she was putting down.

I know, I said. She put her sack in the wagon bed and she climbed up not into the seat, into the bed with her sack between her feet, and she settled there. She looked at the house once as we pulled away from the gate. One look taking it in. Then she turned and looked out at the land to the south, and that was the last she looked at the fruit house for a long time.

I didn’t try to talk to her on the drive. I thought, “Give her the space. Don’t be another man telling her where she’s going and what it means.” The afternoon was cold, still April cold on those planes, and she had her arms crossed against the wind off the grass, but her back was straight. I noticed the straight of her back.

Something in it that I couldn’t name at the time. When we got to the cutter place, I stopped at the front of the house and I got down and came around and offered my hand to help her down. She looked at my hand for a moment, maybe two or 3 seconds, and then she stepped down on her own, no grip taken, landed clean, picked up her sack, looked at the house.

“Is there a room?” she said. “There is,” I said. I showed her the back bedroom, what had been Clara’s sewing room, closed since the fever. A narrow iron bed with a good mattress, a window on the west wall that caught the afternoon light, a small chest of drawers with a cracked handle on the middle drawer I’d been meaning to fix for 2 years.

I put a clean quilt on the bed that morning before I left, some instinct about preparation that I hadn’t examined too closely. She walked in and set her sack on the foot of the bed, went to the window and looked out at the yard and the south pasture and the grass moving in the wind. “It’s clean,” she said. “I keep a clean house,” I said.

“My father didn’t,” she said. Matter of fact, not looking for anything from me. She unpacked that evening while I was doing the end of day chores. I don’t know what she had in that flower sack because I didn’t ask and I didn’t intrude. When I came in for supper, she had made a meal from what she’d found in my pantry.

cornmeal and dried beans and some salt pork and dried onion she’d found in a tin I’d forgotten about in the back and it was the best food I’d sat down to in four years. Not because it was fancy, but because it had been made by someone paying attention. I told her so. You don’t need to be kind, she said. I’m not being kind, I said. I’m being accurate.

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