The Feared Gunslinger Opened One Letter — And The Sheriff Finally Looked At Hector Finch-QuynhTranJP

The spoon rolled once across the floorboards and stopped under Bo Callahan’s boot.

Hector Finch’s woman pressed her yellow fan against her mouth. Her knuckles had gone white around the painted sticks. Outside the dusty window, the sheriff tied his horse to the rail, slow and careful, as if he already knew there was no need to rush.

Bo held the first letter between two fingers.

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The blue thread had slipped loose in his palm. My name sat on the page in Hector’s pretty handwriting, all curls and promises. Rose, my dearest Rose. The ink had faded at the fold marks, rubbed thin by how many nights I had opened it under a boardinghouse lamp back east.

Bo did not read it aloud.

He only looked at the signature.

Hector cleared his throat. “Now, Callahan, no need to make theater over a woman’s misunderstanding.”

Bo’s eyes lifted.

The whole meal house shrank around that look. The bacon grease in the air. The hot pepper in the soup. The fly trapped against the window. Even the cook behind the counter stopped wiping the same plate.

Sheriff Amos Reed stepped inside at 7:34 p.m., bringing dust, leather, and the cold smell of evening with him.

His gaze moved from Bo to me, then to Hector.

“Mrs. Whitmore,” the sheriff said, removing his hat. “You mind if I see those letters?”

My fingers twitched against the table.

Bo did not hand them over. He looked at me first.

That was the first strange kindness. Not the soup. Not the bread. Not even the roof he had almost offered. He waited for my permission as if my word mattered in a town that had spent all day stepping around me.

I nodded once.

Only then did Bo pass the bundle to the sheriff.

Hector laughed, but it had no teeth left in it. “You lawmen take love letters now?”

The sheriff untied the thread. “Only when they carry a name I’ve been hunting for six months.”

The woman in yellow lowered her fan.

Hector’s smile flattened.

Six months.

The number landed harder than his insult outside. My $47 had not been a single act of cruelty. It had been one coin in a long pocket.

Sheriff Reed read the top letter, then the second. His thumb paused over the signature each time. H. Finch. Hector A. Finch. Your devoted future husband.

“You used your full name,” the sheriff said.

Hector lifted one shoulder. “A man may write to a widow.”

“A man may,” the sheriff answered. “But not five widows in five towns, promising marriage, taking passage money, then disappearing with their savings.”

The cook whispered something behind the counter. One of the men at the next table pushed his chair back with a scrape.

I saw Lowell again in pieces.

The red brick mill at dawn. My hands plunged into wash water until my fingers cracked. The bell screaming through fog. Thomas coughing into a cloth while I counted coins into a cracked teacup. The newspaper folded beside my supper plate, Hector’s advertisement circled in pencil by a woman at the boardinghouse who said the West made fresh starts for those brave enough to take them.

Hector had written like a man who knew loneliness by name.

He had asked about my favorite hymn. He had remembered Thomas’s death date. He had called me courageous. He had said a woman who worked hard deserved a porch, a stove, and a husband who came home sober.

I had believed him because every sentence sounded like shelter.

Now that shelter stood across from me in a gray hat, with my stolen watch chain shining on his vest.

The sheriff set the letters down.

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