The Permit Folder Hit The Asphalt Before The Sheriff Learned Who Owned The Rally-eirian

Sheriff Vance’s hand froze halfway to his radio.

The red diner neon blinked across his badge, then disappeared, then blinked again. For three seconds, nobody moved. Not Deputy Miller. Not the waitress with the tray at the diner door. Not the line of riders sitting on idling bikes across the highway, their exhaust rolling low over the asphalt like gray breath.

The only sound was my brother’s voice coming through my phone speaker.

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“Jonah,” Eli said, calm as a man asking about lunch, “put the event director on.”

Vance stared at the wet registration packet in my hand. His mirrored sunglasses hid his eyes, but they couldn’t hide the color leaving the skin around his mouth.

The event director, Carol Reeves, crossed the last lane of traffic with two Arizona state troopers behind her. She was fifty-six, five foot three, and built like every clipboard in America had personally disappointed her. Her gray hair was pinned under a straw rally hat. Her white blouse stuck damp to her shoulders from the heat. In her arms was the master permit folder, thick as a phone book, marked with colored tabs, county stickers, insurance seals, and one blue ribbon tied around the final sponsor agreement.

She stopped beside Vance and looked down.

One of my permit pages was under his boot.

“Sheriff,” Carol said.

That one word was not loud. It did not need to be.

Vance lifted his boot slowly.

The page curled up from the asphalt, wet at one corner, streaked with road grit. Deputy Miller bent like he meant to grab it, then stopped when the taller trooper shifted half a step forward.

Carol turned to me.

“Jonah Mercer?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Primary applicant, registered permit holder, sponsor liaison, and emergency contact for the Copper State Motorcycle Rally?”

I held out the packet.

“Yes, ma’am.”

Her jaw tightened once. She took the paper from me carefully, like it was evidence, not paperwork.

Vance cleared his throat.

“Carol, this is not what it looks like.”

The waitress at the diner door finally lowered the tray. Glasses clicked against each other. The sound carried farther than it should have.

Carol did not look at him.

“Sheriff, what exactly does it look like?”

Vance’s lips pressed thin. “We had a disorderly individual refusing to comply.”

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