She Was Deemed Unmarriageable—So Her Father Gave Her to the Strongest Slave, Virginia 1856

The first few weeks were awkward. Two strangers trying to navigate an impossible situation. I was used to having housekeepers. He was used to heavy labor. Now he was responsible for intimate tasks. Helping me get dressed, carrying me when the wheelchair didn't work, attending to needs I'd never imagined discussing with a man.

But Josiah handled everything with extraordinary sensitivity. When he had to pick me up, he asked permission first. When he helped me dress, he averted his gaze whenever possible. When I needed help with personal matters, he preserved my dignity even when the situation was intrinsically indecent.

"I know it's an uncomfortable situation," I told him one morning. "I know you didn't choose it."

"Neither do you." He was reorganizing my bookshelf. I'd mentioned wanting it alphabetized, and he'd taken on the task. "But we're managing."

“Are we?”

He looked at me, his imposing figure somehow nonthreatening as he knelt beside the bookshelf. "Ellaner, I've been a slave all my life. I've worked grueling labor in heat that would kill most men. I've been whipped for my mistakes, sold and cast out by my family, treated like a voiced ox." He gestured around the comfortable room. "Living here, caring for someone who treats me like a human, having access to books and conversation... This isn't suffering."

“But you're still a slave.”

"Yes, but I'd rather be a slave here with you than free but lonely somewhere else." He went back to reading his books. "Is it wrong to say that?"

“I don't think so. I think he's sincere.”