Pick Any Wife for Free, the Judge Sneered—The Cowboy Pointed to the Girl in Chains and Said, “Her.”
Dust softened the courthouse porch until the whole street looked as if it had been rubbed down by a cruel hand.
The sun was high, the boards were hot, and the gathered townsfolk stood close enough to smell each other’s fear beneath the tobacco, sweat, leather, and iron.

Judge Pritchard sat back in his chair with one boot angled out, owning the silence before he broke it.
He had the sort of smile that made people laugh before they knew whether anything was funny.
“Pick any wife for free, boy,” he said. “No one here will stop you.”
The crowd laughed because the judge expected laughter.
It came from men who would not meet his eye, from women who pressed their mouths shut a second too late, from boys learning early that power was easier to survive if you pretended it was a joke.
On the courthouse steps stood the women chosen for display.
Their dresses were clean, or clean enough.
Their hair had been pinned and smoothed.
Their faces had the careful blankness of people ordered to be grateful for humiliation.
Cain stood at the edge of the street and said nothing.
He had come in dusty, quiet, and alone, with his hat low over his brow and one hand resting near his belt as naturally as another man might rest a hand on a gate.
No one paid much attention to him at first.
Quiet men were often mistaken for harmless ones by those who only understood noise.
Then his eyes moved past the row of women and stopped at the far end of the porch.
There was one woman there who had not been polished for the judge’s theatre.
She was half hidden behind the porch post, her grey dress hanging thin against her body, her hair falling across her face.
Iron circled both her ankles.
The chain between them was rusted dark and short enough to make every shift of weight a punishment.
Nobody looked at her unless they had to.
That was its own kind of sentence.
Judge Pritchard’s amusement sharpened when he saw where Cain was looking.
He leaned forward slightly, as if hoping the cowboy would choose wrongly enough to entertain him.
Cain stepped into the road.
Dust rose round his boots.
The laughter thinned.
He climbed the first step, then stopped in front of the judge and spoke one word.
“Her.”
For a moment, the street had no sound in it at all.
A horse snorted somewhere behind the livery.
A man near the rail coughed into his fist.
Someone muttered that Cain had gone soft in the head, and nobody corrected him.
Judge Pritchard lifted both brows with the pleased disbelief of a man who had just been handed a sharper knife.
“That one?” he said. “Boy, she’s not fit to keep a dog company.”
Cain’s face did not change.
“Her,” he repeated.
The young woman raised her head.
It was not much of a movement, but it altered the air around her.
Cain saw the bruise along her cheekbone, the dry split at her lip, and the way she looked back at him without softening herself for his comfort.
There was no pleading in her eyes.
There was no gratitude ready and waiting.
There was only a hard, assessing stare, as if she were measuring whether he knew the size of the trouble he had just chosen.
Cain understood more from that look than from anything the judge had said.
She was not asking for rescue like a person reaching from deep water.
She was asking whether he could swim with weight tied to him.
Pritchard watched them both, then gave a lazy flick of his fingers towards the deputies.
“Fine. She’s yours to ruin. Unlock her.”
Two deputies moved at once.
One went for the key at his belt.
The other took the young woman by the arm, fingers digging in as if he meant to remind her that even freedom could be handled roughly.
Cain moved before the man could drag her forward.
He caught the deputy’s wrist, not violently, not loudly, but with enough pressure to stop him dead.
Then Cain took the key himself.
The porch boards creaked when he went down on one knee.
A ripple passed through the crowd at the sight of him kneeling before the girl they had all agreed not to see.
He fitted the key into the lock.
It resisted, rusted and stubborn.
Cain turned it once, then again.
The iron snapped open.
When the chain dropped, it struck the porch with a blunt clank that seemed to travel through every boot, every skirt hem, every closed mouth gathered there.
The marks underneath were worse than the chain.
Raw grooves circled her ankles, red and angry where the metal had eaten into her skin.
A woman in the crowd looked away.
The young woman did not.
She did not cry.
She did not say thank you.
She simply set her bare feet apart on the boards and stood as though standing upright were the one act nobody had managed to take from her.
Cain rose and held out his hand.
“Let’s go.”
She looked at his hand.
She studied it with the suspicion of a person who had been offered kindness before and charged for it after.
The pause lasted long enough for the judge’s smile to return.
Then her fingers closed round Cain’s.
The crowd parted when they came down the steps.
Nobody wished to touch her.
Everybody wished to see what would happen if Cain did.
That is how a crowd behaves when it has already failed someone and wants the next person to fail louder.
Judge Pritchard called after them from the porch.
“You’ll wish you’d picked different, boy. That girl’s not just trouble. She’s got a mouth that’ll hang a man.”
The words struck the street and spread.
People repeated them in smaller pieces.
“She’s the one.”
“You heard what she saw?”
“He won’t last a week.”
A mother pulled her son back as Cain and the young woman passed, as if cruelty were contagious only when worn by its victim.
Cain kept walking.
At the hitching rail stood his bay mare, restless under the heat.
He put one hand at the young woman’s waist to help her up.
She stiffened the instant he touched her.
The reaction was quick, practised, and ugly in what it revealed.
Cain lifted his hands away for half a breath, letting her see he had noticed.
Then he helped only as much as she allowed.
She settled into the saddle and steadied herself without leaning back.
“Cain.”
Sheriff Doran stood a few steps away, badge bright in the sun, face shaded by his hat.
He was not smiling.
That made him more dangerous than the judge in that moment.
“You sure you know what you’re taking home?” Doran asked.
Cain gathered the reins.
“I know enough.”
Doran’s eyes moved to the young woman.
“Enough to hang you, maybe.”
Her shoulders went rigid.
The sheriff saw it and stepped closer, pleased in the smallest possible way.
“Tell him,” he said to her. “Tell him what you saw that day.”
Her mouth closed until the line of it went white.
Cain looked from her to the sheriff.
Doran continued, voice flat enough to pass for official concern if a man was not listening properly.
“Judge Pritchard gave her a choice. Chains or a grave. Generous, some might say.”
Cain stepped between Doran and the mare.
“You finished?”
A few people near the rail went still.
The sheriff’s face cooled.
“You want to play hero, that’s your business,” he said. “Just don’t come crawling back when it blows up.”
Cain mounted behind the young woman and turned the mare out of town.
No one stopped him.
That did not make it safe.
It only meant the men who meant harm had chosen a quieter place for it.
For the first stretch of road, neither of them spoke.
The town fell behind them in a scatter of roofs, dust, and watching eyes.
Wind dragged grit across the track.
The mare’s hooves beat a steady rhythm into the hard earth.
Cain could feel the young woman holding herself carefully away from him, as though even the space between them had to be guarded.
When she finally spoke, her voice was rough from disuse.
“You shouldn’t have chosen me.”
Cain kept his eyes on the road.
“Bit late now.”
“Not too late for them to come after you.”
There was no fear in the sentence, not exactly.
It was closer to warning.
A person does not always tremble because she wants saving.
Sometimes she trembles because she has seen the shape of the trap and knows another person has stepped into it beside her.
Cain did not ask who she meant.
The judge had said enough.
The sheriff had said more.
The crowd had said the rest in whispers they thought were too quiet to matter.
The track dipped less than half a mile from town.
Low ridges rose on both sides, scrub thick along the slopes, trees gathered where the land held a little shade.
Cain noticed the movement before the man showed himself.
A shift of coat.
The glint of metal.
The wrong kind of stillness.
The man stepped into the road ahead.
He was large, broad through the shoulders, wearing a long duster despite the heat.
The rifle in his hands hung loose, but there was nothing careless about the way his fingers rested near the trigger.
“You’re hard to catch, Cain,” he called.
Hooves sounded behind them.
One rider, maybe two.
The road back closed without anyone needing to say it.
Cain slowed the mare.
The young woman’s breath changed.
Not louder.
Thinner.
The rifleman looked up at her and smiled with no warmth in it.
“Judge sends his regards. Says the lady belongs back where you found her.”
Cain’s hand rested on the reins.
“Tell the judge he can say that to me himself.”
From behind, another voice called, “She saw something. She shouldn’t have.”
The words hung in the dip between the ridges.
The young woman turned her head just enough for Cain to see her profile.
The bruise on her cheek had darkened in the sun.
Her lip had cracked again.
Still, when she spoke, her voice cut cleanly through the road.
“If you kill him here, everyone will know why.”
The rifleman’s smile faded a little.
For one strange second, the horses seemed to listen too.
Then the man raised the rifle by an inch.
“Then we’ll make it look like an accident.”
Cain felt the mare tense beneath them.
He felt the young woman stop breathing.
He let his right hand drift towards the revolver at his hip.
The rifleman saw it.
“You thinking of drawing?”
Cain looked at the scrub to the left, the loose stones, the narrow break between thorn and rock.
“No,” he said. “I’m thinking we’re not staying in this conversation.”
He drove his heels in.
The mare lunged hard sideways.
The rifle cracked.
Dirt burst beside them, spraying Cain’s coat and the young woman’s bare feet.
She grabbed at the saddle, but she did not scream.
Branches tore at their sleeves as the mare plunged into the scrub.
A second shot split the air behind them.
The sound bounced off the ridge and came back warped.
Cain bent low, one arm braced round the young woman without pinning her, guiding the mare through gaps that barely looked wide enough until they were already through them.
Thorns scraped leather.
Stones rolled under the mare’s hooves.
Men shouted behind them, angry now rather than amused.
That was something.
Amusement had belonged to the judge.
Anger belonged to men who had begun to lose control.
They rode until the shouting thinned, until the shots stopped, until the road was gone and the world became rock, scrub, heat, and the stubborn sound of the mare forcing a path where none had been offered.
Only then did Cain slow.
He guided the horse into a narrow gully hidden by cottonwoods and stone.
A thin stream moved through the shade, no wider than a man’s arm, but alive enough to cool the air around it.
Cain dismounted first.
He reached up to help her down.
Again, she hesitated.
Again, he let her decide how much of his help she would accept.
When her feet touched the ground, pain flashed across her face and vanished almost at once.
The raw rings round her ankles had opened in places.
She stood anyway.
Cain looked at the ridge line, then at the water, then back at her.
“You want to tell me what that was?”
“No.”
The answer came quickly.
Too quickly.
Cain repeated it, quieter.
“No?”
She bent beside the stream, cupped water in both hands, and drank with the urgent control of someone who had been saving her strength for when it would matter most.
Water ran down her wrist and darkened the torn cuff of her dress.
Cain waited.
He had known men who filled silence because they were afraid of what might grow in it.
He had also known silence to be the only decent thing a person could offer someone who had been questioned by crueler mouths.
At last she sat back on her heels and wiped her mouth with the back of her hand.
“You think picking me was charity?” she said.
“No.”
That seemed to surprise her more than if he had lied.
Cain crouched across from her, not too near.
“The judge wanted me to choose anyone else,” he said. “The sheriff wanted me frightened after I didn’t. Those riders wanted you back before you could speak. That doesn’t sound like charity to me.”
Her eyes held his.
There was a flicker there now, not softness, but something close to calculation giving way to exhaustion.
“You’ve put yourself in his sights,” she said.
“I expect I was already there.”
“You don’t even know his reason.”
“No,” Cain said. “But I’m starting to know yours.”
A breeze moved through the cottonwoods.
For the first time since the courthouse porch, the young woman looked away.
Not because she was ashamed.
Because whatever she had carried this far had weight enough to bend her neck.
Cain’s gaze dropped to the torn seam near her hip.
She noticed.
Her hand moved there before she could stop it.
It was a small movement, but fear often lives in small movements.
Cain said nothing.
The mare drank from the stream.
Above them, the ridge held its breath.
After a long moment, the young woman reached into the torn seam of her dress.
Her fingers came out holding a folded scrap of paper, stained with dirt, sweat, and a brownish mark Cain did not need named.
It had been folded so many times the edges were soft.
On one corner, pressed faintly into the paper, was the judge’s mark.
Cain looked at it.
Then he looked at her.
The woman who had not begged on the porch, who had not cried when the chains came off, who had warned armed men with blood still dry on her mouth, now looked frightened.
Not of Cain.
Of what would happen once the paper was opened.
“You saw something,” Cain said.
This time, she did not deny it.
Her fingers tightened round the scrap until the paper trembled.
And in the shaded gully, with the riders still somewhere beyond the ridge and Judge Pritchard’s town waiting behind them, the girl in chains finally lifted her eyes and prepared to tell him why a judge would rather see her buried than heard.