The Dead Groom’s Letters Were Only the First Lie Waiting Beneath Silver Creek’s Boarded Bank-felicia

Evelyn did not move her hand from Jonas Mercer’s sleeve.

For a moment, the whole of Silver Creek seemed to lean toward the blacksmith’s answer. The crooked mercantile sign creaked once above them. A dun horse stamped at the hitching rail. Somewhere behind a curtain, a child was hushed too quickly by his mother.

Silas Prescott’s smile thinned until it was hardly a smile at all.

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‘You ought to be cautious with old grief, Mercer,’ he said. ‘Some names are best left in the ground.’

Jonas picked up his hammer, but he did not raise it. He set it back on the counter with the same careful weight a preacher might use for a Bible.

‘Then you should have left Marcus Henderson there,’ he said.

The banker’s gold chain shifted against his vest. His eyes went from Jonas to Evelyn’s carpet bag, then to the blue ribbon peeking from beneath the clasp.

‘Miss Carter,’ Prescott said softly, ‘you have arrived in a difficult town on a difficult day. A sensible woman would accept a meal, sleep under Mrs. Henderson’s roof, and take the morning stage wherever it carries her.’

‘With whose money?’ Evelyn asked.

Her voice was not loud. That was why everyone heard it.

Prescott looked at her as if she had placed a muddy boot upon his desk. ‘Charity may be arranged.’

‘No,’ she said. ‘Work may be arranged.’

Jonas turned his head then. It was not admiration she saw in him. Not yet. It was recognition, sharp and quiet, as if he had heard a familiar hymn played on a broken piano.

Prescott gave a small bow. ‘By all means, Miss Carter. Work, if you can find it. But I would advise you not to confuse employment with belonging.’

He walked away with unhurried steps, his boots leaving clean prints where the dust had settled. Men shifted back from him as he passed. No one spoke until he disappeared through the bank’s side door and closed it behind him.

Only then did Evelyn realize her fingers were still resting against Jonas Mercer’s sleeve. She withdrew them at once.

‘Forgive me.’

‘Nothing to forgive.’

He lifted the two silver dollars from the counter and handed one to Tom Garrett, the mercantile owner who had appeared from the rear room with flour on his cuffs and fear in his eyes.

‘Beans,’ Jonas said. ‘Coffee. Whatever bread has not gone green.’

Tom swallowed. ‘Jonas, I cannot—’

‘You can.’

That was all. The matter was settled by the weight of the man’s voice rather than the number of words in it.

Evelyn followed because there was nowhere else to go and because, for all the warnings humming through town like flies over a spill, the blacksmith had named the very thing she had not dared ask.

Someone had sent the letters.

Someone living.

Inside the mercantile, the air smelled of stale flour, vinegar, mouse droppings, and old apples. Shelves leaned as if tired of holding up hope. A jar of penny candy had gone pale in the sun. A stack of unpaid invoices lay beneath a cracked inkwell, each one curled at the edges from damp.

Evelyn noticed the invoices before she noticed the chair Tom offered her.

Accounts in disorder had a language. She had learned it in Boston, in a cotton mill office where men spoke of profit in the front room and missing wages in the back. Numbers lied only when people forced them to.

Her father had been a bookbinder before his hands stiffened. Her mother had taken in washing after his death. Evelyn had learned early that a woman without money was expected to be grateful for any roof, any crust, any hand extended with a price hidden inside the palm. Marcus Henderson’s letters had promised otherwise. They had promised roses by a white fence, a church sewing circle, a husband who wanted a practical woman rather than a decorative one.

She had believed them because believing had felt less foolish than staying.

Now the letters lay on the table beside a bowl of beans, and Jonas Mercer stood across from her, his hat in his hands, watching them as if they were snakes.

‘How do you know?’ she asked.

He did not answer immediately. He went to the window first and looked toward the bank. The forge glow had faded in the street behind him, but the smell of coal smoke clung to his shirt.

‘Marcus Henderson did write letters,’ he said. ‘Years ago. To more women than a decent man would admit. He was vain, weak, and handsome enough to be forgiven for both by those who did not know him long.’

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