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The bank statement showed negative forty-three dollars when Gabriel Marsh's nine-year-old daughter asked if they could afford dinner that wasn't canned soup, her voice carrying the careful neutrality of a child who'd learned not to burden adults with needs they couldn't meet. The overdraft notice had arrived that morning alongside the final eviction warning, twenty-one days to vacate the apartment where they'd been living since his wife left eighteen months ago with a note that said she couldn't handle the weight of their choices anymore. Gabriel looked at his daughter Lily across the kitchen table of the cramped apartment, seeing her mother in the set of her jaw, in the way she held herself too still when things were bad. She'd stopped asking about Anna months ago, had accepted with the terrible wisdom of children that some people left and didn't come back. Now she just watched Gabriel with quiet assessment, measuring whether he could keep them afloat or whether the current would finally pull them under. "We'll figure something out," he said, the words automatic and hollow. He'd been saying them for months, since the construction company he'd worked for went under, since the temp jobs dried up, since his truck's transmission failed and he couldn't afford to fix it. The apartment was already stripped bare of anything that could be sold, the walls showing rectangles where furniture used to stand. That afternoon, while Lily was at school, Gabriel sat in the public library searching rental listings he couldn't afford, his laptop held together with duct tape, the battery dying because he'd sold the charger two weeks ago for grocery money. He was about to close the browser when an advertisement caught his eye, different from the rental listings, stranger. County foreclosure auction, commercial property with historic designation. Riverside Tannery, 4.3 acres including main processing building and curing sheds. Minimum bid four hundred dollars. Property sold as-is, all environmental liens transfer to buyer. The photographs showed a massive brick structure that looked like it had been slowly dying for decades, its windows either broken or covered with plywood, its roof sagging in sections that suggested structural damage. The tannery sat on the edge of Millbrook Falls, a town Gabriel had driven through once on the way to somewhere else, a place that had the worn quality of communities the economy had forgotten. According to the county assessor's records, the Riverside Tannery had been built in 1892 by a family named Caldwell, had operated through two world wars processing leather for everything from boots to saddles to luxury goods. It had closed in 1978 when synthetic materials made traditional leather tanning obsolete for most uses, had sat abandoned since then, accumulating tax liens and environmental citations that made it untouchable for conventional buyers.