The dead groom left one note beneath the church floor, and by sundown Silvervale feared its own truth-felicia

Murphy’s silver tooth caught the lantern glow as if the church itself had given him one small, wicked candle.

Eleanor Price stood with the oilskin packet pressed flat against her bodice, the papers inside stiff with dust, damp, and the weight of seventy-three dead souls. Behind her, the half-buried altar leaned under a skin of dried mud. Above them, somewhere in the broken steeple, the old bell moved once in the wind and gave no sound at all.

Caleb Mercer’s hand remained one inch from his Colt.

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That inch held the whole ruined town.

Murphy did not shout. Men like him seldom needed to. He had learned the manner of bank men and undertakers, the soft voice that made cruelty sound like business.

“Those papers, Miss Price,” he repeated. “If you please.”

The three men behind him spread just enough to make the doorway useless. One had a shotgun angled at Caleb’s ribs. Another held a revolver low, not at Eleanor’s heart but at her knees, the way a butcher might consider which joint would do. The third, a narrow fellow with a yellow beard, kept looking at the ceiling as if he feared the church would remember God and come down on them all.

Eleanor heard her own breathing. She heard Caleb’s leather holster creak. She heard mud flakes dropping somewhere in the buried nave.

She did not hand over the papers.

Henry Blackwell had written her for six months from this town, his hand steady, his hopes plain, his sentences always careful not to boast. He had written of a church with a bell. A little house with glass in the windows. A quilt bought from Mrs. Chen because he had wanted something bright waiting on the bed when his bride arrived. He had written of silver, yes, but more often of decency.

The West is hard, Eleanor, but I believe a hard place can still be made honest by honest people.

Now the honest man lay somewhere beneath the mountain, and the proof of why was warm beneath her hand.

“No,” she said.

It was not loud. It carried.

Murphy’s smile lifted at one corner. “Boston gave you courage, did it?”

“No,” Eleanor said. “Grief did.”

The yellow-bearded man swallowed. Caleb’s eyes moved once, not to the pistols, not to Murphy’s smile, but to Eleanor’s right hand. She understood then what he had seen. The oilskin packet had loosened at the tie. One telegram corner showed through, brittle and cream-colored, already torn from age and damp.

If they could not shoot their way out, they might still keep the truth from dying whole.

Murphy stepped closer. “Mr. Worthington said you might take that tone. He finds educated women troublesome. Says they mistake handwriting for law.”

Caleb’s voice came low. “Worthington sent you to steal evidence from a church?”

“A church with no roof and no preacher,” Murphy said. “Hardly counts.”

Eleanor looked at him then, truly looked. Not at the silver tooth or the gun or the polished cruelty, but at the mud on his boots. Red clay. Fresh. Not the pale dust from Main Street. He had come from the mine road that morning. He had been waiting for them to find Henry’s hiding place.

“You followed us from Henry’s house,” she said.

Murphy inclined his head, almost admiring. “I do like a woman who catches up.”

Caleb moved.

Not far. Only one step, his boot grinding softly on grit. But it put his shoulder between Eleanor and the shotgun. The gesture was small enough to seem accidental and exact enough to make Murphy’s eyes narrow.

“Don’t,” Murphy said.

Caleb stopped.

Eleanor remembered then how little she knew of this man who had lifted her trunk as if it were a question already answered. His badge was tarnished. His scar pulled white along one cheek. When survivors spoke his name, they did so with respect and pity braided together. Former Ranger. Current peacekeeper. A man who stood in doorways and did not sleep much.

Now, in the lantern light of a ruined church, she saw something else in him.

Weariness.

Not fear. Not hesitation. A tiredness so old it seemed to live beneath his skin.

Murphy saw it too and smiled wider.

“That badge won’t rise from the dead, Mercer. Nor will the woman in Texas.”

For one breath, Caleb’s face changed.

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