Boone took a sip of his sarsaparilla. Set the glass down. "Tell me something, son. You know what a sheriff actually does?"
The town of Red Oak had seen one sheriff in forty years. Elias Boone took the badge when he was twenty-five, his jaw sharp as a hatchet and his eyes full of fire. Now, at sixty-five, the fire had banked to a low, steady glow, and the jaw had softened into jowls that quivered when he laughed—which wasn't often.
Boone walked to the bar, slow, favoring the knee that had never healed right after a fall from a horse in '92. He ordered a sarsaparilla. The bartender, a nervous man named Clive, poured with a shaking hand. Sheriff
He saw a man who had already buried his wife. A man who had outlived two deputies and three horses and a son who took after his mother's reckless heart. A man who had nothing left to lose except the one thing he'd never learned to live without: the right to stand between trouble and the people who couldn't stand against it themselves.
The stranger turned. His star caught the light—brass, not tin, and engraved with the state seal. "Your badge?" He smiled, and it didn't reach his eyes. "I don't see your name on it, old-timer. I see a town that's been sleeping. I'm here to wake it up." Boone took a sip of his sarsaparilla
Clive the bartender let out a breath he seemed to have been holding since Tuesday began. "Sheriff," he said, "how did you know he was lying?"
He tipped his hat to the room and walked out into the dust-choked light, the old tin badge catching the sun just once—a small, defiant gleam—before he disappeared into the shadow of the jailhouse porch. You know what a sheriff actually does
"Enforce the law."
The sheriff looked at her for a long moment. Then he took down his hat from the peg by the door. His fingers, gnarled as oak roots, brushed the brim once, twice, a habit from decades past. "The governor's been dead six years, Mabel."
A few men laughed—the kind of laughter that comes from the throat, not the belly, because they weren't sure yet which way the wind was blowing.
"The governor," Boone said, "has been dead for six years. You tell whoever gave you that badge that if they want Red Oak, they can come and take it. But they'd better bring more than a mule and a smile."
Copyright © 2022 TIK Piston Taiwan All Right Reserved. Designed by Eshow