The Stone Marked With A Cross Exposed The Sheriff Who Stole Two Orphans’ Mine-yumihong

I did not open the door.

Not right away.

Sheriff Bram knocked once more, slower this time, as if the whole town belonged to his knuckles.

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My hand stayed around Rosa Vale’s envelope. The paper felt thin enough to tear and heavy enough to bury a man. Across the kitchen, the lantern flame leaned hard toward the wall. The flat stone with the scratched cross sat on my table like a warning from the dead.

“Isaac,” Bram called again. “No need to make this unfriendly.”

That was how he always spoke before a man lost something.

I moved without lifting my boots from the floor. The house smelled of lamp oil, old coffee, and cold ash from the stove. Every board in that kitchen knew my weight, and I knew which ones complained. I stepped around the loose plank by the pantry, slid Rosa’s envelope beneath the false bottom of Margaret’s sewing chest, and laid three folded shirts over it.

Then I picked up the stone.

The mud on its bottom was not dry all the way through. Whoever had brought it had been near the Vale mine after sundown.

Not yesterday.

Tonight.

When I opened the door, Sheriff Silas Bram stood on my porch with two deputies behind him and moonlight shining off his badge. His hat was clean. His gloves were clean. His smile was the kind men wore when they had already decided what the truth would be.

He looked past my shoulder before he looked at me.

“Evening,” he said.

“It’s past evening.”

His eyes moved over my kitchen table. The lantern. The empty cup. The stone in my hand.

“You been keeping company?”

“No.”

One deputy shifted his rifle higher. Leather creaked. A horse blew steam into the dark behind them.

Bram smiled wider.

“Two little girls were seen near your place. County wards. Runaways. Hungry children can get confused about who is safe.”

I set the stone on the table where he could see the scratched cross.

His smile stopped moving for half a second.

Only half.

“Funny thing,” I said. “I heard you already sent those children to Cheyenne four months ago.”

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