A Chained Wife, A Hidden Ledger, And The Town That Looked Away-lbsuong

I saw him drag his wife through Prescott in chains, and at first the most frightening thing was not the iron around her wrist.

It was how many people saw it and stayed still.

The afternoon was hot enough to make the courthouse windows shine white.

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Dust hung over Whiskey Row in a thin brown veil, stirred by wagon wheels, horse hooves, and the restless wind that came down the street whenever the desert had something ugly to carry.

Gideon Rusk rode into town a little after two, though he had not come looking for trouble.

Men like Gideon rarely had to look for it.

It found them.

He was nearing the courthouse well when the street changed.

The sound came first.

Not a gunshot.

Not a scream.

A scrape.

Iron dragging over packed dirt.

Then a low cry followed it, thin and exhausted, the kind of sound a person makes after pain has already taken the strength out of them.

Gideon drew back on the reins.

His bay gelding snorted dust from its nostrils and tossed its head, as if even the animal understood something wrong was crossing the road.

The crowd had already gathered, though no one would admit later that they had gathered.

They were just standing there, they would say.

They had only looked up for a second.

They had not known what to do.

But Gideon saw them.

The barber in his doorway with a towel hanging from one hand.

The dry goods woman under the awning with her fingers pressed to her mouth.

A preacher moving across the street with his eyes fixed on the dirt, walking faster than his dignity allowed.

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