A Judge Opened the Town Ledger and Frost Creek Learned Who Had Been Stealing Every Deed-felicia

The sheriff’s spur scraped once behind the curtain, then stopped.

Judge Alden did not look toward it at first. He kept his eyes on Julian Bell, whose revolver hovered over Nora Whitlock’s workbench like a thing suddenly too heavy for his hand. Snow slipped from the judge’s coat and melted in dark spots on the floorboards. The county ledger under his arm was wrapped in oilcloth, its corners worn pale from years of hands pretending not to tremble.

Nora stood behind the counter with the red-sealed survey in her stained fingers. The lamplight caught the pale scar on her wrist. Her mouth stayed flat, but her breathing had changed into something measured and sharp, like she was stitching herself together from the inside.

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Judge Alden repeated it quietly.

“Where is your mother hiding the town books?”

Julian’s throat moved. The pistol dipped another inch.

“I don’t know what you mean.”

The curtain behind him shifted.

Alden’s deputy, Mr. Cole, stepped to the side wall, one hand near his holster. The second deputy moved in front of the door, blocking the only clean exit. Outside, the county wagon creaked under the weight of two men climbing down. Harness bells gave one hard jingle, then fell still.

The shop smelled of pine smoke, wet wool, hot metal, and leather dye. Somewhere beneath it was the sour ink stink of the foreclosure notice Julian had brought in like a weapon.

I kept my hand on the counter, close enough to the cracked leather envelope for Julian to see I was not reaching for the knife at my belt.

“Put it down,” I said.

Julian’s eyes flicked to me. “You don’t give orders here.”

Nora spoke before I could.

“No. But I do.”

Her voice was not loud. It carried better than shouting.

Julian turned toward her, confused for half a second, and that half second was all Deputy Cole needed. He caught Julian’s wrist, twisted it down against the bench, and the revolver hit the floor with a dull clatter beside a coil of saddle thread.

Julian made a small, offended sound, like a man whose glove had been stepped on.

From behind the curtain, Sheriff Rawlins emerged with both hands raised chest-high.

His face had gone the color of old candle wax. His brass spur, the same one I had seen under the curtain, clicked once on the floor. His coat was buttoned wrong. A thin line of sweat showed at his temple despite the cold pressing against every window.

Judge Alden finally looked at him.

“Sheriff.”

Rawlins swallowed. “Judge, I was only here to keep peace.”

Nora reached beneath the counter and lifted something I had not seen before. A small account book, brown, bent at the corners, tied with black thread. She set it beside the foreclosure notice.

“No,” she said. “You were here because Mrs. Bell told you I kept copies.”

Julian’s head snapped toward her.

Nora untied the thread.

Her hands did not shake. Mine did, once, against the counter.

The first page showed names in a tight, elegant hand. Whitlock. Thorne. Mercer. Vaughn. Kessler. Eighteen years of rent payments, deed fees, taxes, penalties, and “emergency assessments” collected under Bell Mercantile Bank seal. At the bottom of each page was a second line in smaller script.

Sheriff percentage.

Rawlins took one step back.

Deputy Cole saw it. “Don’t.”

Judge Alden opened the county ledger on Nora’s counter. The spine cracked like a rifle shot in the quiet room.

He turned pages slowly. Tax rolls. Parcel maps. Old signatures. The paper gave off that dry courthouse smell: dust, ink, damp wood, and time. He found the page he wanted and placed one finger on the line.

“Frost Creek township land,” he read, “held in trust under original survey seal until formal patent transfer is completed through the territorial office.”

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