The Chair Bet That Made A Whole Town Reconsider Nora Whitaker-heuh

By noon, everyone who wanted a laugh had found one at Nora Belle Whitaker’s expense.

By one, the laugh had grown teeth.

By two, it had picked up witnesses, money, and a shine of confidence that only a cruel joke gets when no one decent interrupts it.

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The story was simple enough for Mercy Ridge to carry from counter to counter.

Someone had offered £2 to see whether Nora would break the mayor’s new chair.

By the time the joke reached the back room of Haskett’s Mercantile, it had become £5.

A little later, it was £10.

Then it was not only a joke but an event people were pretending not to want while listening for every detail.

Nora did not hear it from a man brave enough to stand behind his own words.

She heard it from Eli Baines, a freckled delivery boy whose face went pink only after the damage had already left his mouth.

He came in through the door of Whitaker Feed & Grain with his cap crooked, his boots dusty, and a sack of oats dumped in the wrong place.

“They’re saying you’re too much woman for one chair, Miss Whitaker,” he said.

Then, because cowardice often wears a little bib of innocence, he added, “I didn’t say it. I’m only saying what they’re saying.”

Nora looked at him across the counter.

The shop smelled of grain, old wood, paper invoices, and the faint sharpness of chalk from the price board.

An open ledger lay beneath her left hand.

A delivery note sat under her right.

The pencil she had been using all morning rested between two fingers that knew how to add a column, tie twine round a parcel, and lift a sack heavier than some of the men who laughed at her.

She was twenty-eight years old.

She had been tall before she had been allowed to be pretty, strong before anyone had permitted her to be gentle, and noticed before she had understood what noticing cost.

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