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The Quiet Girl's Roar

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 884    |    Released on: 10/06/2025

Mr. Mitchell, had saved them from foreclosure years ago, after a bad drought and her mother's mounting medical bills. Sarah had always felt the weight of that obligation, had alwa

l, out-of-the-way rodeos, was her only rebellion, her only space to be purely herself, to feel the adrenaline Jake now claimed she couldn't u

t the simple gold bracelet Jake had given her. It fe

. A text from an

ortant. A friend of mine is a great silversmith. If you g

n Wa

family. She'd seen him at some of the practice circuits, a quiet, intense presence. He'd never

He must have meant he saw something *abo

aw what happene

have bee

ny. And, apparently, her

nk. Tiffany woul

Sarah. She had to go to that party

a plain cotton shirt. No glamour, just practicality. She drove her old pick

could hear the music and laughter from in

group of his usual fair-weather friends, Tiffany glued to his si

s neck, was her grandmothe

st Tiffany's flashy outfit, a treasured

t towards them, her

approached. Jake looked u

t are you d

ake," she said, her voice clear and

is old thing? Jake said I could wear it. It matches m

any. It's a family he

mething you'd find at a flea market. Jake sa

ce rising slightly. "It was my grand

ached

ur hands off me! It's min

" Jake interjected, looking flus

d, incredulous. "You let her

ere was a sharp snap. The leather cord of the bolo tie broke. The heavy silver dollar, her

p. There was a new, ugly dent on one side

Sarah's eyes,

me. Guess it really was just an old p

utting a hand on Sarah'

ce placating. "It's just a thing. I'

tering into a million pieces. He tr

d silver dollar in her hand, t

sion unreadable. He'd seen the whole thing. His earlier text sud

r and music fading behind her, the broke

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The Quiet Girl’s Roar
The Quiet Girl's Roar
“Sarah Miller had spent three years engaged to Jake Mitchell, her life quietly devoted to their struggling Texas ranch under the shadow of his family's loan. Most folks saw her as just a quiet country girl, sweet and a little sheltered, her secret passion for barrel racing hidden from judgmental eyes. Then, Jake returned from Dallas, not alone, but with Tiffany, a flashy rodeo hanger-on who immediately made her presence known. He brutally broke off their engagement, dismissing Sarah and her "quiet farm ways," smugly declaring she'd "never understand the adrenaline of the rodeo arena." Adding insult to injury, he'd given Tiffany Sarah's most cherished heirloom: her grandmother's silver dollar bolo tie. When Sarah dared to ask for it back at a pre-Fair party, Tiffany, with a scornful smirk and Jake's tacit approval, snapped the tie's cord, sending the precious silver dollar clattering to the floor, dented and broken. "It's just a thing, Sarah," Jake carelessly remarked, offering to buy a new one, utterly oblivious to the depth of her hurt and the heirloom's meaning. The public humiliation and blatant disrespect burned, turning Sarah's heartbreak into a simmering fury she'd never known. They thought she was weak, easily managed, a charitable case with no fire. But Jake's condescending words about "adrenaline" had struck a chord. She would show them. She would take back her power and her identity. Tonight, under the bright lights of the County Fair, Sarah Miller would unleash her secret talent, and with her trusted horse, Dust Devil, prove just how much adrenaline she truly possessed.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10