The Gold He Threw In The Dust Bought More Than Three Sisters-lbsuong

The rope had already torn skin by the time Daniel stepped out from the shade.

That was the first thing he noticed.

Not the crowd.

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Not the auctioneer’s grin.

Not even the three young women standing on the wooden platform in the center of Abilene like the town had decided shame was something worth gathering around.

He noticed the rope because rope told the truth faster than men did.

It had been pulled too tight.

It had been tied by someone who wanted pain to do part of the selling.

The afternoon was so bright it made the square look washed out and cruel, all white sky, red dirt, pale storefront boards, and wagon wheels trembling in the heat.

The air smelled of tobacco, horse leather, old whiskey, and sun-cooked pine.

Dust moved in small restless circles around boots and hems, catching in the folds of skirts and along the edge of gun belts.

Somewhere behind Daniel, a loose shutter knocked again and again against a storefront wall.

Nobody turned toward the sound.

They were all watching the platform.

Three sisters stood up there with their hands bound in front of them.

Sarah was the oldest.

Emily stood to her left, trying not to shake.

Megan, the youngest, stayed close enough to Sarah’s back that her sleeve brushed the older girl’s skirt whenever the wind moved.

Sarah had made herself the line between her sisters and the crowd.

There was nothing formal about the way she stood.

No softness arranged for sympathy.

No lowered eyes.

No pleading look sent out like a cup.

She stood straight with her chin lifted, her jaw set, and her dark braid half falling apart where sweat had loosened it at her temple.

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