Sheriff May 2026

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."

He didn't smile. But the fire in his eyes burned a little brighter.

The trouble came on a Tuesday, the kind of bone-dry Tuesday where the dust hung in the air like a held breath. A stranger rode in on a mule—not a horse, but a mule, which should have been the first sign something was off. The stranger wore a black coat despite the heat and kept his hat pulled low. He tied the mule to the rail outside the saloon and went in. Sheriff

Boone finished his sarsaparilla. He set the glass down with a soft click. "Because I know the governor," he said. "He wasn't a tall man. Couldn't stand to be around anyone over six feet. That fella was six-two if he was an inch. No way the governor would have pinned a star on someone he had to look up to."

Boone didn't answer. He just stood there, an old man in a faded shirt, his tin star tarnished almost black. But his eyes—those low-banked embers—caught the light just so, and the stranger saw something in them that made his laugh catch in his throat. The sheriff looked at her for a long moment

"I'm giving you a choice." Boone straightened up, and something in his posture changed. The softness didn't vanish—it deepened, became something heavier than anger. "You can ride out on that mule tonight, tell whoever sent you that Red Oak already has a sheriff. Or you can draw that pistol and find out why I've had this badge for forty years."

The saloon had gone quiet when Boone pushed through the doors. The stranger stood at the bar, one hand flat on the wood, the other resting easy on his hip where a revolver sat in a polished holster. He was younger than the sheriff had expected—maybe thirty—with a face that was handsome in the way a razor blade is handsome: clean, sharp, and likely to cut you. "The governor's been dead six years, Mabel

The stranger patted his coat. "Somewhere. You want to see them, you come to my office tomorrow. The one I'll be using after you hand over the keys."