Forced to Wed the Girl Nobody Wanted, the Cowboy Saw Her Power-rosocute

They called me the fat girl nobody wanted before they even put me on the platform.

They said it softly at first, the way cruel people do when they want to pretend they are only telling the truth.

By the time the sun rose over Black Hollow, they were saying it loud enough for me to hear.

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I stood in a dark blue calico dress that had been mended twice at the elbows and pulled too tight across my chest.

The cold morning smelled of manure, frying grease, wet leather, and old smoke caught between the false-front buildings.

My mother had walked beside me without touching my arm.

She had told me to stand straight.

She had not told me she was sorry.

There were twelve of us lined up in front of the territorial office, all unmarried women between eighteen and thirty.

The administrator called it an organized settlement program.

The men called it opportunity.

The girls in line knew better.

We were being offered like cattle, with a marriage certificate in one hand and a threat in the other.

The unmarried men stood in a rough half-circle below the platform.

Some had scrubbed their faces for the occasion.

Some had not.

A few looked ashamed to be there.

Most looked like they were judging weight, usefulness, and price.

Three marshals leaned against the brick wall with rifles in their arms.

That was how voluntary the morning was.

One by one, the administrator called the girls forward.

Jenny Carson went first, shaking so hard I thought her knees might fold.

Four men raised their hands for her.

Sarah Given tried to speak up, but the administrator reminded her that women who refused could be transported to the laundry facility in Cheyenne until they reconsidered.

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