The Blacksmith’s Lie That Stopped A Marshal In Cedar Hollow-rosocute

The first lie Gideon Rusk ever told in Cedar Hollow did not sound like a lie.

It sounded like a door being barred against a storm.

Rain had been striking the roof of Bellamy’s General Store all afternoon, hard and steady, until every sound inside seemed to come from under water.

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The horses outside stamped in the mud.

The porch boards shivered with every gust.

Inside, the place smelled of flour, lamp oil, wet coats, bitter coffee, and the sour patience of people waiting for weather to pass.

Old Mr. Bellamy was tying off a flour sack with twine.

Mrs. Pratt was choosing coffee with one eye on her son, who had a piece of penny candy tucked inside his cheek.

Two cattlemen leaned near the shelves, laughing too loudly at something neither of them cared about.

Then the side door opened so hard it struck the wall.

A young woman stumbled through it.

For one moment, the storm seemed to follow her in.

Rainwater ran from her hair and down her face.

Mud climbed her skirt nearly to the knees.

Her blue dress had been torn at the side, and one hand pressed tight against her ribs where blood had darkened the cloth.

She was heavyset, round-faced, and breathing in small broken pulls, as if every breath had to be stolen.

No one knew her name yet.

No one knew where she had come from.

But the people of Cedar Hollow knew trouble when it landed on their floor.

And trouble, in a small town, was treated like sickness.

Folks stepped away from it.

The woman reached for the counter.

Her fingers missed the edge.

“Please,” she whispered.

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