Sold for Gold at 19, She Faced Her Father With a Rifle in Hand-lbsuong

My father sold me on a Tuesday morning in Oakhaven, Dakota Territory, when the mud was half-frozen and the wind off the Black Hills could cut through wool.

I was 19, though most men in town looked at me like life had already spent me and left only the damaged part behind.

Silas, my father, dragged me into the street by the wrist and shoved me face-first into the mud before the mercantile had even opened its front shutters.

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His fingers crushed the small bones together until my hand went numb, and when he yanked me upright, I tasted grit, blood, and the stale gin on his breath.

The right side of my face caught the morning light.

That was always the part people noticed first.

I had been 7 when the stove burst in our kitchen, sending flame and iron and boiling grease across my cheek.

The scar ran from my temple to my jaw in roped, twisted ridges, shiny in summer and pale in winter, and every mirror I passed had taught me to look quickly and then look away.

My mother had been alive then.

She had pressed cool cloths over my face and whispered that pain was not the same thing as ugliness.

After she died, Silas forgot that lesson on purpose.

He looked at my scar the way a man looks at a cracked plate he cannot sell, and over the years, I learned exactly how little softness remained in him.

Still, a child keeps hoping long after sense should have killed hope.

I once trusted him to lace my boots, lift me over flooded ditches, and stand between me and men who laughed too loudly.

He remembered that trust and used it for leverage.

That morning, he lifted my bruising wrist for Gideon Hayes to inspect and said, “She can cook. She can mend. She won’t cause trouble with other men.”

The blacksmith’s hammer rang once and stopped.

Men stood outside the mercantile with their hands buried under their coats, pretending the cold was the reason they did not interfere.

Women watched from behind cloudy glass, their mouths tight, their eyes sliding away whenever mine found them.

A boy near the hitching post stopped chewing licorice and stared at the mud on my dress.

The whole street heard him sell me.

Nobody moved.

Cruelty loves a witness when the witness plans to do nothing.

Silence can become a second hand around your throat.

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