The Fire in Our East Field Exposed the Ranch Hand Hale Trusted Long Before He Trusted Me-QuynhTranJP

Firelight flashed over Hale’s knuckles as he held the silver lighter open in his palm.

D. McCall.

The engraving caught orange from the burning grass and threw it back at us in a hard little gleam. Behind us, men were beating at the edge of the fire with wet burlap sacks. Horses were striking their stall doors. Smoke rolled low and bitter across the pasture, thick with kerosene and burnt weed seed.

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Dusty came up breathing through his mouth, one bucket hanging from his hand. Ash had settled into the crease above his lip. He stopped when he saw what Hale was holding.

Only for a second.

Then his face shifted back into something looser.

“Could be anybody’s,” he said. “Men borrow fire all the time.”

Hale did not look at him right away. He kept his eyes on the lighter, thumb resting against the hinge, jaw working once.

“You don’t smoke,” I said.

Dusty’s head turned toward me.

His stare landed flat and mean.

“Didn’t know the kitchen came with detective work.”

The wind changed. Heat rolled over our boots, then pushed away again. A half-burned grasshopper twitched beside the post and went still.

Hale shut the lighter with a clean metal snap.

“Eli,” he said without raising his voice, “take the horses out of the east stalls. Laramie, drag the pump cart over here. Nobody leaves the yard.”

That last sentence settled harder than a shout.

Dusty shifted his grip on the bucket.

“You think I set this?”

Hale turned to him at last.

“I think somebody fired shots at my fence, ran one man east, and lit dry grass in a drought. That somebody dropped your lighter.”

Dusty gave a short laugh with no humor in it.

“Then somebody wants me blamed.”

His words were aimed at Hale, but his eyes kept flicking back to me, as if he had already decided who the easier target would be.

Men stamped out the last orange tongues creeping through the grass. By 10:21 p.m., the line of blackened ground had stopped moving. Smoke hung over the east field in long gray bands. Hale sent two hands to count cattle at the lower pasture, another pair to check the barn roof for sparks, and one boy to ride for Deputy Harn.

Then he handed me the lighter.

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