The Marshal Came for a Killer, but Found Grace Brennan Bleeding in Copper Creek’s Dust-felicia

The brass jail key stopped swinging when Eli Carson said the word killer.

For one breath, the whole of Copper Creek seemed to hang from that small piece of metal at Barrett Cole’s belt. The horse at the trough quit blowing through its nose. The flies over the dust lifted and settled again. Somewhere down the street, a loose shutter tapped once against its frame and then went still.

Grace Brennan stood behind Eli with his glove still clenched in one hand. Her fingers had closed around the leather before she knew she meant to keep it, the way a drowning woman might close around a branch without asking whether the tree belonged to her. Her knees shook beneath her torn skirt, and each breath scraped along her ribs, but she stayed upright.

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No jail, he had said. Not for her.

Then he had told them why he had come.

Barrett Cole’s face remained smooth, but his eyes had sharpened. He had the look of a man who had learned to smile through almost any insult, so long as he could calculate the cost of answering it later. His gold watch chain rested against his vest like a little sun, bright and useless in the merciless afternoon.

Frank Miller stood near the saloon steps, his big hand hovering too close to his pistol. The scratches on his cheek had darkened since morning. Grace knew the shape of them. She had put them there when he pinned her against the storeroom shelves, his breath sour with whiskey, his voice soft as he told her no one in Copper Creek would believe a woman like her over a man like him.

Now Eli Carson was looking at him as if belief no longer mattered.

“Sarah Mitchell,” Eli said again, quieter this time. “Her boy was three. Her baby girl was six months. A neighbor found the door open before dawn, and the cradle tipped on its side.”

A low sound moved through the watching town. Not speech. Not yet. Only a shifting of bodies behind windows and posts, the first uneasy stirring of people who had spent too long pretending not to see.

Miller’s mouth bent. “Plenty of women die in these territories.”

Eli did not move. “Not all of them die the same way.”

Cole lifted one hand, palm outward, as if calming a business meeting. “Mr. Carson, whatever past grievance brought you here, it does not permit you to obstruct lawful discipline. Miss Brennan is accused of theft from my establishment.”

Grace’s throat tightened. Dust stuck to the blood on her lip.

“I did not steal,” she said.

The words came out rough, but they came out.

For the first time, several faces turned toward her instead of away from her. Mrs. Henderson’s eyes glistened above the flour sack. Old Tom Brennan took one step from the general store post and stopped, his hat twisted between both hands.

Cole did not look at Grace. That was part of his cruelty. He had learned that a woman could be made smaller by being discussed like a misplaced parcel.

“Her statement has already been considered,” he said.

“No,” Eli replied. “It was buried.”

Miller laughed under his breath. “You calling Mr. Cole a liar?”

“I’m calling this town afraid.”

The silence that followed that was worse than accusation. It landed on every boardwalk, every curtain, every lowered pair of eyes.

Sheriff Dawson’s blinds moved from inside his office.

Eli saw it. Cole saw it too.

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