She was not wealthy by the market’s measures. Her hair was simply bound; her hands were callused from work. But when she spoke, the crowd seemed to hush—drawn not merely by the sounds, but by the stories that traveled inside them: stories of rice planted in red-earth fields, of monsoon storms that taught patience, of a village revered for a small, stubborn pagoda. Her Khmer had a particular warmth—a dialect stitched with local proverbs and the slow, musical vowels of the countryside.