Mayor DeeDee Gonzalez wasn’t one to take a half-measure. Her town’s only claim to fame was a bug outbreak with a penchant for humming and line-dancing. Mexican beagle crickets had commandeered a taco stand once more. They also interrupted a high-stakes karaoke contest at the community center. She had had enough.
The emergency meeting took place in the town hall. Chairs were hastily arranged in a circle. The table was littered with half-eaten enchiladas. The Mayor banged her gavel with a determined clatter.
“Enough is enough!”
She declared.
“These pests have overstepped their bounds. As of now, martial law is declared on all cricket activity in Ajo!”
In a matter of minutes, local retirees received “bug defense kits.” These kits featured oversized flyswatters and garden hoses. They also included homemade “cricket deterrent” spray (an odd blend of cactus juice and a hint of mint). The newly minted “deputies” marched down Main Street. The Beagle Cricket Brigade paused their evening serenade. It was as if to say, “They brought reinforcements!”
Buck, watching from the window of the Impala, smirked.
“Now that’s what you call bugging out,”
He muttered. He anticipated the chaos. It would ensue when a troop of seniors met a swarm of rhythmic insects.
How dare they! A Taco Stand? Those evil Beagle Crickets! It is only a matter of time before someone is called to main street for a shootout at high noon. But, will Buck’s aim hit something as small as a cricket in a shootout? Would the crime fighter be outmatched by crickets?Or will they challenge him to Karaoke sing off?
Buck Milford wasn’t the type to complain. He’d driven through sandstorms. He had broken up fistfights at quilt raffles. Once, he gave a field sobriety test to a goat wearing sunglasses. That day was different. The Arizona sun scorched the earth like a microwave set on vengeful. Even Buck was close to breaking.
The heat index had hit 127. A road sign melted. Melted. The “SLOW CHILDREN AT PLAY” sign now reads “OW.”
Buck had parked his cruiser under the only tree between Ajo and Yuma. It was a desperate little mesquite. It looked like it had made some poor life choices. He sipped water from his melted ice chest and tilted his hat over his forehead.
That’s when he saw Elvis.
Plain as day.
Standing next to the patrol car, wearing a powder-blue jumpsuit and holding a chili dog.
“Elvis?”
Buck mumbled.
“That you?”
Elvis gave him a nod.
“It’s hot out here, hoss.”
Buck blinked.
“I must’ve been out in the sun too long…”
Suddenly, another figure emerged from behind the tree.
Skinny. Nervous. Clutching a clipboard and a sheriff’s badge held on by Scotch tape.
“Buck! Buck, there’s been a violation!”
The man squeaked.
“A code triple-seven! Unlicensed harmonica discharge in a non-musical zone!”
Buck sat up straight.
“Barney Fife?”
It was indeed Barney Fife. Or instead, it was someone who looked, sounded, and panicked exactly like Don Knotts. This person was holding a ticket book the size of a Bible.
Barney fumbled with his pen.
“Now, now, Buck, I don’t want any trouble, but this whole desert’s outta code. These crickets! The yodeling! There’s dancing! Dancing, Buck! It’s indecent!”
Buck stood up, swaying slightly.
“Barney, are you… real?”
Barney narrowed his eyes.
“As real as a jelly doughnut on a Wednesday morning, Trooper. Now I’m gonna need you to confiscate Carl Sandlin’s banjo and suspend his taco license—right away!”
Behind them, Elvis leaned against the cruiser and took a bite of his chili dog.
“Let the boy yodel, Barney.”
“I will not!”
Barney barked.
“This is law and order, not Hee Haw Live!”
At that moment, Carl himself drove by in a dune buggy. It was covered in tinfoil and wind chimes. He waved like a parade marshal.
“I’m playin’ at dawn!”
Carl shouted.
“Bring earplugs or bring maracas!”
Barney turned purple.
“I’ll have his badge!”
Buck stared in stunned silence.
A cricket landed on his shoulder and began humming ––
“Love Me Tender.”
The next thing Buck remembered was being propped up in a folding chair outside the Ajo gas station. A bag of frozen peas was on his forehead. He had a bottle of Gatorade in each hand.
“You passed out cold.”
Said Melba, the station clerk, who also claimed to be a licensed Reiki therapist.
“Said something about Elvis, Barney Fife, and indecent line dancing.”
Buck blinked.
“I didn’t… wrestle Carl off a unicycle, did I?”
“Not today.”
Buck took a long drink, sighed, and muttered,
“I’m starting to think this desert has a sense of humor.”
A Desert with a sense of humor? Barney Fife? Elvis? Our Crime Fighter has been out in the nether regions of the Sonoran Desert too long. That, or he sees dead people. Whatever it’s going to lead to, it’s another exciting story of Arizona’s most famous crime fighter, Buck Milford!That Mexican Beagle Cricket is sorta cute, isn’t it?
If there was one thing Arizona didn’t need more of, it was heat.
But if there was one thing Arizonans couldn’t resist, it was a challenge.
Influencer Lacey Blu—a 24-year-old “solar chef” with 1.2 million followers and zero life experience—announced she’d be filming a bacon-cooking demonstration. Doing so on the hood of her Tesla at high noon. Trooper Buck Milford knew it was going to be a long day. Especially since Teslas were along way off from being invented.
“Cooking with the sun is so sustainable,”
she chirped into her phone.
“And so am I! #SizzleWithLace #SolarSnackQueen”
She parked off Highway 85 near a dead saguaro. She laid out her cookware—an iron skillet, three strips of thick-cut hickory bacon, and a side of emotional entitlement.
Buck arrived just as the bacon began to curl. He was curious about the cell phone since those too were new to this century. They were at least twenty five years from being even a brick phone.
“I’m gonna need you to step away from the car, ma’am,”
he said, tipping his hat.
“It’s 119 degrees, and your bacon grease just started a brush fire the size of a toddler’s birthday party.”
Lacey didn’t look up.
“Sir, this is my content.”
Behind her, a small flame began creeping across the sand toward a long-abandoned outhouse that somehow also caught fire. A confused jackrabbit ran out holding what looked like a burning flyer for a 1997 monster truck rally.
“Content’s one thing,”
Buck said, reaching for his fire extinguisher,
“but that yucca plant’s fixin’ to blow like a Roman candle.”
Just then, Carl Sandlin appeared on an electric scooter with a garden hose coiled like a lasso.
“I saw the smoke!”
he cried.
“Is it aliens again? Or someone makin’ fajitas?”
Buck didn’t answer. He was too busy putting out the bacon blaze while Lacey livestreamed the whole thing.
“Look, everyone!”
she squealed to her followers.
“This is Officer Cowboy. He’s putting out the fire I started! So heroic!”
Carl joined in, spraying more bystanders than actual flames.
“We got trouble, Buck! The beagle crickets are back. They were hummin’ ‘Jailhouse Rock’ this time!”
Buck finished dousing the car. He shook the foam off his arms. He wiped a trail of sweat from his forehead. It had been working its way toward his belt buckle since 10 a.m.
“Well, Carl, if the crickets are Elvis fans now, we’re all in trouble.”
The bacon was ruined. The hood of the Tesla had buckled like a soda can. And the only thing Lacey cared about was that the foam had splattered her ring light.
“You just cost me a brand deal!”
she snapped at Buck.
“I was working with MapleFix! It’s the official bacon of heatwave influencers!”
Buck gave her a long, flat stare.
“You can mail your complaints to the Arizona Department of Common Sense.”
That night, the local paper ran the headline:
INFLUENCER IGNITES BACON BLAZE; TROOPER BUCK SAVES CACTUS AND PRIDE — Saguaro Sentinel, pg. 3 next to coupon for 2-for-1 tarpaulin boots.
The Mexican beagle crickets showed up that night, as always. This time, they hummedRing of Fire.
Buck had just finished adjusting the old police scanner. It had been playing reruns of Hee Haw for the last hour. Suddenly, his radio crackled to life.
“Unit 12, please respond. Caller at mile marker 88 reports a suspicious hovering object. Caller believes it is extraterrestrial. Or a reflective commode. Please advise.”
Buck sighed and reached for his hat, which had molded to the dashboard like a forgotten tortilla.
“Lord help us,”
he muttered.
“If this is Carl again, I’m asking for hazard pay.”
Carl Sandlin, local yodeler and self-certified UFOlogist, had a unique reputation. It’s one you earn from a lifetime of heatstroke. Add to that expired beef jerky. Lastly, he had a mother who named him after her favorite brand of tooth powder.
Buck shifted the Impala into drive and pulled away from the shade of a sagging mesquite tree. The tires made a sound like frying bacon as they peeled off the scorched asphalt.
When he reached mile marker 88, Carl stood there. He was shirtless, shoeless, and sunburned. Carl was waving a fishing net wrapped in tin foil like a broken butterfly catcher.
“There it is, Buck!”
Carl bellowed.
“Hoverin’ just above my taco stand for forty-five minutes. Scared off my lunchtime crowd. Even the iguanas cleared out!”
Buck squinted toward the horizon. Sure enough, something metallic shimmered in the distance. It wobbled slightly in the heatwaves, casting a strange, shiny glow.
“You mean that thing?”
Buck asked, pointing.
Carl nodded so hard his hat flew off.
“Absolutely. That’s either an alien escape pod or a deluxe Porta-John.”
Buck pulled binoculars from his glove compartment, which were so fogged up with heat condensation they doubled as kaleidoscopes. After rubbing them on his sleeve, he focused in.
“…That’s a new solar-powered PortaCooler,”
he said finally.
“The highway crew’s been installing them for the road workers. It’s got misting fans, Bluetooth, and a cactus-scented air freshener.”
Carl squinted, unimpressed.
“You sure it ain’t Martian technology? Smells like sassafras and bad decisions over there.”
Buck stepped out of his patrol car, the soles of his boots sticking to the pavement with every step.
“Carl, unless the Martians are unionized and drive state-issued work trucks, I’m pretty sure they’re not putting in restrooms. Those restrooms aren’t off Route 85.”
Just then, as if to punctuate the point, a group of Mexican beagle crickets marched across the road. All in unison. All humming the Andy Griffith Show theme at exactly 2:15 p.m.
Carl froze.
Buck froze.
Even the misting PortaCooler froze up and made a high-pitched wheeze like it, too, was creeped out.
Carl whispered,
“You reckon they’re trying to send a message?”
Buck tipped his hat back and said,
“Only message I’m gettin’ is that we need stronger bug spray… and fewer heat hallucinations.”
The crickets finished their tune, executed a perfect pivot, and disappeared into the desert brush.
Carl crossed his arms.
“I still say that cooler’s alien.”
Buck opened the door to his cruiser and called over his shoulder.
“Well, if they are aliens, they’re better at plumbing than our city council.”
He chuckled as he pulled away, leaving Carl saluting the shimmering cooler like it was the mother ship.
They told him Newvale was easy to navigate—just a grid of neatly intersecting streets, all named with letters and numbers. A1 to Z26, crosscut by 1st to 99th. Clean. Logical. Unmistakable.
That’s what made it so disorienting when Jonah realized he was lost.
He turned down H12 Street, or maybe it was H21. The signage shimmered under a weak afternoon sun. Every block held the same slate-gray buildings with mirrored windows. Every corner had a coffee shop called “BeanSync,” identical inside and out. The same barista. The same music looping—something jazzy and off-tempo that made his nerves vibrate.
He pulled out his phone to get his bearings. No signal.
No GPS. No bars. Just a cheerful little message: “Welcome to Newvale! You are here.” The map spun in place, mocking him.
He asked a woman passing by, dressed in a green trench coat.
“Excuse me, which way to Central Station?”
She stopped, smiled with blank politeness, and said,
“Just follow H Street until you reach 12.”
“I’ve already passed twelve blocks.”
She nodded, like that made perfect sense, then walked off.
He turned the corner again—there was “BeanSync,” again. The same man spilled his coffee at the same outside table. The same dog barked twice, then ran to the same hydrant.
Jonah checked the street sign: H12.
He spun around.
So was the last corner.
He began to walk faster, then jog. He changed directions at random—A Street to W Street to Q16. All the same buildings. Same people, repeating like shadows in a broken projector.
Finally, panting, he stopped inside yet another BeanSync.
“Do you serve anything besides Americano?”
He asked the barista.
She smiled.
“Just follow H Street until you reach 12.”
His heart sank.
Behind the counter, a door creaked open. A man stepped out—rumpled, eyes twitching, holding a half-empty cup.
“You’re new?”
the man said.
“Lost?”
“Yes! How do I get out of here?”
The man leaned close.
“You don’t.”
Jonah backed away.
“What do you mean?”
“The city loops. It doesn’t end. It just resets.”
“That’s not possible.”
“Neither is ten identical–baristas named Kira.”
Jonah turned to look. The barista waved cheerfully.
Back outside, he ran. He tried screaming. No one noticed. Or rather, they all noticed in the same way—heads turned in perfect rhythm, brows raised identically, disinterest coordinated like choreography.
It was dark by the time Jonah found a bench.
Across the street, a woman in a green trench coat asked a passerby,
“Excuse me, which way to Central Station?”
Jonah watched the man smile politely and answer,
“Just follow H Street until you reach 12.”
The woman nodded and walked off.
The bench creaked beside him.
A man sat down. Rumpled. Cup half-full.
“You’re new?”
he asked.
Jonah nodded slowly.
The man sighed, sipping.
“It’s not a city. It’s a maze. It just wears the mask of civilization.”
Jonah looked up. Above the buildings, a flickering billboard blinked to life:
Professor Incredible and the Formula of All Things
Nobody paid much attention to Professor Incredible.
He was a quiet, peculiar man with wild hair and socks that rarely matched. He taught chemistry at the Third-Rate University of Northern Something. His lectures were confusing. His labs were explosive. His office smelled faintly of lemon cake and regret.
One Tuesday afternoon, Professor Incredible was mixing compounds to cure hiccups in parakeets (don’t ask). He tripped over his cat and accidentally spilled three unlabeled vials into a teacup. When he came to after the small puff of smoke cleared, he sipped the tea. Of course, he did. He then scribbled down what he felt was a rather pleasant aftertaste.
That night, he slept peacefully for the first time in years. His arthritis vanished. So did his neighbor’s yappy dog’s aggression. So did the neighborhood’s potholes. So did his runny nose. Something was… different.
The next day, two bickering students visited his office arguing over which was better—crunchy or creamy peanut butter. Absentmindedly, the professor handed them a flask of the leftover formula and said,
“Here. Split this and shake hands.”
They did.
Instantly, they blinked, smiled, and calmly agreed that both were wonderful in different ways. Then they shared a sandwich.
The formula, it turned out, only worked if applied by two people in conflict—who disagreed with equal passion. It didn’t pick a side. It didn’t declare a winner. Instead, it softened anger, lifted empathy, and melted stubbornness into understanding. It didn’t erase problems; it made people care enough to solve them together.
Soon, world leaders were sipping the formula while discussing borders. Rival fans hugged at sporting events. Siblings divided closets in peace. Traffic moved smoother. Even social media got a little less… cruel.
Professor Incredible was offered a Nobel Prize, but declined.
“The formula was an accident,”
he said.
“What matters is what people do with it.”
And so, the world changed—not because the formula was magic, but because people finally heard one another. Understood each other. Worked side by side.
All it took was a little chemistry—and two people willing to try.
Old Man Teller always said, “You don’t need a weather app when the trees are talkin’.” Most folks in town rolled their eyes. They dismissed the words as just another tale from a man with more years behind him than teeth. But Maggie believed him—always had.
Each morning, before the sun stretched across the Oklahoma horizon, Maggie walked down to the creek behind her farmhouse. The tall cottonwood trees stood like ancient guardians. She’d place her hand on the bark and close her eyes. She’d listen. She listened not just with her ears, but with her skin, her breath, her bones.
One autumn, the cottonwoods began shedding their leaves earlier than usual. Not the vibrant yellow fall kind, but pale and crisp, like they’d been drained of color. The crickets were fewer, and the frogs that usually croaked a lullaby at dusk had gone strangely silent. A stillness settled in the evenings—not peaceful, but hollow, like a breath being held too long.
Teller nodded solemnly when Maggie brought it up. “Means drought’s comin’. The earth’s tightening its belt.”
Sure enough, by December the ponds were cracked at the edges and even the cattle seemed quieter. Yet it wasn’t just the drought. Coyotes started howling at midday. Raccoons were foraging in broad daylight. Wild plum bushes flowered in January—six weeks early.
Nature, it seemed, was shouting.
In spring, the winds changed direction. Not from the south like usual, but from the east—harsh, dry, and persistent. That’s when Teller warned the town council: “There’s fire in that wind. Better get ready.” They didn’t listen. But when the wildfires crept dangerously close in May, only Maggie’s house stood untouched. She’d cleared brush months ago, just as the cottonwoods had told her to.
The next year, people started listening more. They noticed the ants building their hills higher before rain. The deer migrating sooner. Even the sky’s color at dusk began to carry meaning again.
Nature doesn’t send memos or push notifications. But it tells you everything—if you’re willing to sit still, pay attention, and speak its language.
And as Old Man Teller liked to remind them, with a wink, “The land was here long before you. Trust it to know what’s comin’.”
“The Curious Friendship of Happy Goines and Sorrow Downs”
Happy Goines and Sorrow Downs
There once was a boy named Happy Goines. Not a soul could understand why he was always so terribly sad. His name sparkled like sunshine, but his face wore clouds. He dragged his feet to school. He sighed during recess. He stared out windows like he was watching for something that never came.
No one knew what made Happy so downcast. His parents loved him. His teachers were kind. But he always seemed to carry some invisible weight.
That is, until the day he met Sorrow Downs.
Sorrow was a new kid, just moved to town from a place no one could pronounce. He had the kind of grin that made your face smile back before you even realized it. His laugh was sudden and contagious. Even his freckles looked cheerful.
The teacher introduced him to the class. She said his name aloud—“Class, this is Sorrow Downs”. Everyone waited for a gloomy face or quiet voice. But instead, Sorrow waved both hands and said, “Nice to meet you! I love your shoes!” even though he hadn’t looked at anyone’s feet.
The kids chuckled. Except for Happy, who simply blinked.
At lunch, Sorrow sat across from Happy. Sorrow plopped a jelly sandwich on the table. It looked like a gold trophy.
“You look sad,” Sorrow said matter-of-factly.
“I am,” Happy replied.
Sorrow tilted his head. “But your name’s Happy.”
“I didn’t choose it,” Happy said with a shrug.
Sorrow grinned. “Well, I didn’t choose mine either. Imagine being named Sorrow and feeling like I do! Every day feels like a birthday to me!”
Happy cracked the tiniest smile.
“Tell you what,” Sorrow said, pulling a folded paper from his pocket. “Wanna try trading names for a day?”
Happy blinked. “We can’t just—”
“Why not? Who’s stopping us?” Sorrow stood on his chair and declared, “I am Happy Goines today! And this,” he said pointing down, “is Sorrow Downs!”
Some kids giggled. One clapped.
From that moment, something began to shift.
All day long, “Happy” Sorrow told jokes, made up songs, and danced down the hall. And “Sorrow” Happy, for the first time in ages, felt joy in laughing with someone. It was a different experience from laughing at something.
The two became inseparable.
They swapped shoes, lunches, and names whenever they felt like it. One day they were “Joy and Misery.” Another day, “Up and Down.” They learned that feelings didn’t always have to match what people expected.
One day Happy asked, “Aren’t you ever sad, Sorrow?”
Sorrow thought for a moment. “Sometimes. But I don’t stay there. I just let the sad walk beside me until it’s ready to go.”
And Happy nodded like it was the truest thing he’d ever heard.
As the months passed, Happy wasn’t always happy, and Sorrow wasn’t always cheerful. But together they built a friendship where feelings were safe. Names didn’t define you. A good laugh could turn an ordinary Tuesday into something extraordinary.
You might hear two boys shouting new names if you walk past the old schoolyard now. They could be called Sunshine and Thunder, or Giggles and Grumps. They laugh like the whole world belongs to them.
It sat on the back porch, just outside the screen door. It was an old wooden shelf, weather-worn and slightly crooked. Everyone in the family knew it as “the pie shelf.”
Nobody remembered who gave it that name. Maybe it was Grandma. She used to cool her pies on it every Sunday afternoon. That was back when a breeze still found its way through the kitchen windows. There were always two pies—one for dinner and one “just in case someone dropped by.”
That shelf saw more life than most furniture in the house. Birthday cakes cooled there. Jars of canned peaches lined up in neat rows. Once, a baby kitten was found curled up in the corner, fast asleep next to a lemon meringue.
Years later, after Grandma had passed and the house had new owners, the pie shelf remained. Weathered, yes. Empty, often. But it stood—quiet and proud—like it was waiting for one more pie to be set on top.
When I visited the house last fall, I found it just the same. I brushed off the dust. Then, I straightened one of the legs with a folded napkin. For no reason at all, I baked an apple pie and set it right there on the top shelf.
I didn’t expect visitors. But just before sunset, a neighbor from years ago strolled by, drawn by the scent. He laughed when he saw the pie shelf.
“Some things,”
he said,
“don’t ever really leave us.”
We each took a slice and sat there on the porch, sharing stories of the people who came before us. For a brief moment, it seemed as though they were still here. They felt just inside the screen door, waiting for us to come in.
Sunrise sparkled through the trees, casting golden streaks through the ridge of the canyon as a new day began. The dogs had curled up around Benji during the long night after the wildcat screams. Sleep had eluded him, but at least their warmth had kept the cold at bay.
Jackie the Snake Fighter
Benji checked his backpack. Two cans of Vienna sausages. Two bottles of water. Not much, but enough if he rationed carefully. He didn’t know how long it would be before he saw civilization again. He jumped to his feet. He kicked dirt over the glowing embers of the fire. Then he spotted an old bucket lying in the grass. He fetched water from the same spot where he’d seen the wildcats drink and thoroughly doused the coals.
He whistled and called out,
“Okay, guys! Let’s find our way out of here!”
The dogs were now rested after the brutal meeting with the hogs the day before. They let out a few excited barks. They circled around him. They were ready.
“Jackie!”
Benji called out, his voice clear and hopeful.
“Let’s get going and take us home, girl!”
It was Jackie’s moment to lead.
She barked once, turned, and began moving with purpose down a faint trail. Her nose worked the ground like a compass, tracing the path with quiet certainty. She paused now and then to sniff, confirming her route, then pressed ahead.
Benji followed without hesitation.
“Good girl, Jackie. Take us home.”
As they retraced their steps, Benji noticed something he’d missed before. The chaos of the hog attack had distracted him from exploring further. Just east of where that meeting occurred, he saw something new. It was something he’d only ever heard described in hushed tones: the Bottomless Pits.
He turned to the dogs.
“Come on, guys. We’re close. I need to see this.”
He approached the edge of a steep cliff. It was seventy-five feet straight down to a deep, green pool below. The surface was fed by water trickling from the mouth of a sand rock ridge. “That’s a natural spring,” Benji murmured to himself, “surrounded by vegetation and carved into the canyon by wind and rain.” The erosion had shaped the space into something mysterious and timeless. There was no telling how far the pit actually went.
He stood there, staring into the depths. He imagined what happened to those who had entered “No Man’s Land” and never returned. No sane person would ever try a descent.
The dogs looked at each other, almost as if wondering whether this was going to turn into their next mission. They seemed relieved when Benji turned back and said, “Okay, Jackie. Take us on home.”
Their return journey was quieter, more deliberate. The woods themselves seemed to exhale—less ominous now, more at peace, as if the danger had passed.
Eventually, the familiar rise of Miller Hill came into view. Beyond it stood the barn, and flickering on the porch was the warm, welcome glow of a light. As they emerged from the tree line, Benji spotted people in the clearing. A search party—his father among them, his mother as well. They had been looking everywhere… except in the place no one dared go.
Benji’s dad stepped ahead quickly, his face a mix of relief and frustration.
“Son,”
he said,
“you knew that area was off-limits. No one goes back there. Why did you?”
Benji, still trembling slightly from nerves and exhaustion, answered quietly,
“I wasn’t looking for anything, really. But now I know what’s back there.”
His father narrowed his eyes.
“What? What did you find? No one ever comes back.”
Benji looked him in the eye.
“Feral hogs. Wildcats bigger than our dogs. And pits that look bottomless. I figure the people who disappeared… they didn’t make it out because they were walking in the dark. They either fell in—or the hogs got to them.”
The searchers stood silently for a moment, absorbing his words. Then came relief, and the reunions began.
Benji made a point to thank everyone who’d come looking for him. One by one. Then, he helped lift each of the dogs into the back of his father’s pickup. This time, he insisted they ride up front.
Oggy, Bruiser, and Jackie settled into the cab like visiting royalty, each peering out the windows with pride and dignity. They had saved Benji, and he knew they deserved far more than a truck ride.
The truck rolled down the familiar dirt road toward home. Benji sat in the open bed under the early morning sun. He leaned back. He opened his last two cans of Vienna sausages. Then, he drank from one of his remaining bottles of water. He was there, alone in the quiet. The wind brushed his face. The trees grew smaller behind him. He finally relaxed.
He had made it out of No Man’s Land.
Benji would never forget what he found there. But even better, he wouldn’t forget how his three pals had worked together to take care of him. And when he got home he would tell his dad about the dogs doing the great things they did. He also wanted to repay his canine friends in some way. In Chapter 5, Benji repays them and that is how the story ends in an unexpected way.
How can this story end in any unexpected way? A boy and his dogs have made it out of No Man’s Land. They are safe, aren’t they? We all are, aren’t we? Or are we? What Chapter five holds will have you asking questions of your own. It looks like the dogs will still be looking for a tree or two come Chapter Five!
Let’s get back to our story. –– Benji stood in the middle of the woods, heart racing, with three feral hogs growling and snorting nearby. Jackie had lost the scent trail. She couldn’t find the way home. Benji had just thrown away his only peace offering: the beef jerky. The hogs tore through the jerky in seconds. Benji and the three dogs tried to figure out what direction to go. But, now those hogs had regained interest in something more satisfying—the boy.
Oggy circled and snapped at the first boar, trying to keep it distracted. Jackie stood stiff and alert. She barked furiously at the second one. Her tail was rigid and her fur was raised. She positioned herself between the beast and Benji.
Bruiser, Dad’s Shadow
But it was Bruiser who took the lead.
With a thunderous bark, he lunged at the second boar. The clash was brutal. Bruiser’s sheer size and strength gave him an edge. Still, the wild boar was enraged and dangerous. It slashed with its tusks.
Benji screamed,
“No! Bruiser!”
But Bruiser didn’t back down. He planted his feet and forced the boar back with muscle and fury. Oggy darted in to nip at the animal’s hind legs while Jackie’s relentless barking finally drove the creature into retreat.
Within moments, the two remaining boars, startled and overwhelmed, turned tail and vanished into the trees.
Bruiser limped back, a fresh gash on his shoulder. Benji dropped to his knees and wrapped his arms around him, whispering,
“You saved us. You’re the bravest dog in the world.”
The three dogs surrounded Benji, panting heavily—not from fear, but from duty fulfilled. They had done their job.
The sun had dipped lower now, and the smell of distant cooking reminded Benji of home. He hoped Jackie would catch a scent that would guide them back—but no such luck.
They were still stuck in No Man’s Land.
Benji sighed and looked at his companions.
“Well, boys… looks like we’re gonna be here for a while. As well find a safe place to rest.”
The fading daylight painted the woods in long shadows. The path behind them had become a confusing tangle of trees and underbrush.
“I don’t know where we are,”
Benji admitted.
Oggy was licking his sore paws. Bruiser winced with every step. Jackie stood alert—ears perked, head rotating like a radar dish, listening for signs of danger.
Benji reached into his backpack and pulled out his trusty binoculars. Scanning the area, he spotted something—a cave etched into the canyon wall, not far off. It resembled an ancient hollow carved out of sandstone by the water long ago. If they can reach it safely, it can make a decent shelter for the night.
He pulled out a handkerchief. He tore it in half. He tied one piece to a high branch to mark the location.
Oggy took point. Bruiser limped beside Benji. Jackie stuck close this time and carefully marked her trail. They made their way to the cave.
Ten minutes later, they arrived at the entrance. The cave was shallow and quiet, with no signs of animal tracks inside. It looked safe—for now.
Benji gathered dead wood from the forest floor and built a small fire at the cave’s entrance. As the flickering flames grew, casting dancing shadows, the four of them settled in.
But Benji had a surprise.
He hadn’t given all the food to the hogs. He had two cans of Vienna sausages tucked in his backpack. They were beneath a rolled-up poncho. His dad always said to keep them in case of emergencies.
He popped open a can. Instantly, three sets of ears perked up.
Benji smiled and shared the sausages with the dogs, eating slowly and grateful that they had something to eat. But he couldn’t help wondering: How are we going to get out of this mess?
As night fell, the forest faded into darkness. The stars lit up the sky, and the wind rustled the trees outside. The cave offered shelter from the breeze, and the dogs took turns keeping watch while Benji dozed beside the fire.
At around three in the morning, a sharp, blood-curdling scream echoed through the canyon.
All three dogs leaped up, growling and tense. Benji jolted awake. The fire had burned down to glowing coals.
Another scream—closer this time.
Benji grabbed a long stick and jabbed it into the embers, trying to spark a flame. The dogs stood bristling, their fur raised, eyes locked on the darkness beyond.
This is the most dangerous moment yet—except maybe for the hogs.
Benji fumbled through his backpack and found a small flashlight. He switched it on and swept the beam across the canyon.
There, near a shallow watering hole, stood two full-grown wildcats—the biggest Benji had ever seen. Easily 130 pounds each. But the barking, the firelight, and the beam of the flashlight startled them. They bolted, disappearing into the trees.
Benji sat back down, heart pounding. Sleep was impossible now.
Thinking to himself –––
Was something else out there?
Has anyone even started looking for him yet?
He’d never been gone this long.
He sighed and pulled the blanket around him tighter.
“When I get back,”
he whispered to himself
“I’m gonna be in big trouble. For good this time.”
But for now, he is still in No Man’s Land.
And he is lost.
They called it No Man’s Land for a reason. Legend has it, no man who ever entered those woods was seen again. That little detail? It’s something Benji overlooked when planning his latest adventure. Rumor has it. No search party will go in after him. No one’s willing to take the chance they will not come back either. So maybe Benji ought to start thinking about an extended stay. Is anyone even organizing a search? Or will they just do a flyover, check a few boxes, and call it good? Check back tomorrow as the story continues—because things in No Man’s Land are only getting stranger.
The trail that day led into Cottonwood Hollow. It was a deep gully nestled between two ridges. The area was thick with ancient trees and the scent of cool, damp earth. Benji had finally summoned the courage to enter what the kids around the farm called “No Man’s Land.”
Oggy Doggy, The Best Friend A Family Ever Had
Oggy darted ahead, barking sharply as he flushed out a covey of quail.
“Good boy!”
Benji laughed, breaking into a jog behind him.
Bruiser trotted beside him, his heavy paws crunching over dry leaves. Every time a twig snapped, his muscular body tensed. If the wind shifted, he was ready to protect until he decided there was no danger.
Jackie moved like a ghost, glancing back from time to time, her black-and-white tail swaying gently. She paused here and there to mark tree trunks, just in case they needed help finding the way back.
About halfway through the Hollow, Oggy let out a sharp yip and froze—body crouched low, fur bristling.
Benji halted.
“What is it, boy?”
Then he saw it. A feral boar was rooting near the creek bed. Its coarse hair rose. Its tusks caught the last golden light of the afternoon. Oggy growled, weaving left and right, trying to distract it.
Bruiser stepped in front of Benji and barked once—low and commanding. The boar noticed the big dog and paused, nostrils flaring.
“Back up… slowly,”
Benji whispered.
They had only taken a few steps when Jackie barked behind them. Benji spun around.
A second boar had crept up from the rear.
Trapped.
Benji’s heart pounded. Feral hogs? He’d never seen any this close to the farm before. His dad’s hogs were penned and docile. These? These had tusks. And just as panic set in, a third hog emerged from the brush, snorting and stomping.
Think, Benji. Think.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a pouch of beef jerky—the snack he’d saved for later. Tearing it open, he waved a piece in the air.
The hogs’ heads turned toward the scent. Without wasting a second, Benji hurled the entire pouch as far as he can into the underbrush.
It worked.
All three hogs charged the pouch, squealing and shoving as they fought over the jerky.
Benji snapped his fingers. The dogs hustled back to his side, and together, they crept away.
But now, the sun was dipping low behind the ridge. Shadows stretched across the Hollow, and the light had grown dim. In the chaos, Benji had lost track of their path.
Everything looked the same.
He called softly,
“Jackie, take us home.”
Jackie trotted out, sniffing at nearby logs and bushes, searching for the scent trail she had left. But her markings were gone—wiped away. The boars, rubbing against the trunks and rolling in the undergrowth, had erased everything she’d left behind.
She circled wider, nose to the ground—but still, nothing.
Benji stood in the middle of the woods. Three feral hogs were still growling and grunting in the distance. They were gathered around a torn bag of jerky.
This wasn’t the bedtime story anyone wanted to hear. Was Benji going to stand there—or scoot?Benji doesn’t have beef jerky. What will he and his pals eat for supper if they have to spend the night in the woods?Check back tomorrow. Read Chapter Three to see if he finds his way out.Or will the boy and his dogs get hungry!
Bruiser, Oggy and Jackie, three friends that protected Benji.
Every day at exactly 3:35 p.m., the yellow school bus rumbled down the dusty country road. Its brakes squealed in protest. It stopped at the gate of the Miller farm. Waiting by the fence—tails wagging, ears alert—stood three loyal dogs: Oggy, Bruiser, and Jackie.
Oggy, a wiry shepherd-collie mix, zipped back and forth like a bolt of lightning, always the first to move. Bruiser was a proud and imposing German shepherd. His stare could make thunder retreat. He sat like a sentry. His eyes were fixed on the distant tree line. Jackie was a small but wise rat terrier. She lay in the shade, her head tilted. It was as if she was listening to the wind for stories.
Benji stepped off the bus. His backpack bounced and his heart was full of energy. He called out,
“Who’s ready for a hike?”
The dogs barked in harmony. Their daily ritual had begun—school ended, and the adventure began.
The woods, hills, and winding creeks beyond the Miller farm stretched wild and untamed. They were alive with beauty and mystery. There was a kind of danger only country kids and creatures could sense. Benji’s father trusted the dogs with more than just companionship. They each had a job:
Oggy, ever eager, raced ahead to flush out snakes, spook wild hogs, or alert the team to anything unusual. Bruiser stayed at Benji’s side, calm and formidable—his job was protection. Jackie had a sharp nose and clever instincts. She always brought up the rear. She tracked every step and memorized the path home.
Together, they were more than a team. They were guardians: a boy and his dogs, bound by loyalty, instinct, and love.
They had explored nearly every trail across the farm. But there was one place they had never dared to enter.
Benji called it No Man’s Land.
Even the cattle avoided it. Horses snorted and veered away from its edges. Dense with tangled brush, towering trees, and sheer, jagged cliffs, it lay beyond the farthest bend of the creek. You couldn’t see more than a few yards into it, even when standing on the embankment across the water. It was as if the woods had secrets they weren’t ready to share.
Sometimes, the team would gather at that high bank and stare into the thicket. Benji would speak softly as if trying not to disturb whatever is listening.
“What’s back there?”
he’d wonder aloud.
“Nobody’s ever gone in. But one day, we’ll be brave enough to cross that creek and find out.”
He told the dogs his plan: the safest way in would be through Cottonwood Hollow. If they cut through the grove, they would reach No Man’s Land without being seen from the road—or the house.
Before they set off, a familiar sound echoed across the pasture—the dinner bell.
Its clang was sharp and sure, and the dogs didn’t need to be told twice. The four companions turned for home. They momentarily forgot their trail. The promise of a warm meal and kind voices led them back.
They didn’t cross into No Man’s Land that day.
But they would.
And when they did, they’d uncover something none of them would ever have imagined.
Those dogs need to be fed. And it’s a good thing Benji got them home in time for ‘supper.’ Check back for Chapter Two. We’ll find out if the Team gets brave enough to hike into No Man’s Land!
In the summer of 1963, the hottest thing in the small town of Hickory Bluff wasn’t the weather—it was Mrs. Bonnie Ledbetter’s yard.
She’d just returned from a week in Florida. She unveiled her latest acquisition with grand ceremony. In one hand, she held a glass of instant iced tea. Her latest acquisition was a pair of bright pink plastic flamingos. They were staked proudly beside her birdbath like sentinels of suburbia.
“They’re classy,”
she declared.
“Very Palm Beach.”
This declaration ignited a cold war of lawn decor on Dogwood Lane.
Mr. Gilmore, her neighbor, responded with a gnome holding a fishing pole. Mrs. Thornton countered with a ceramic frog playing a banjo. By August, the entire block looked like a cross between a garden center clearance bin and a fever dream.
But it was eleven-year-old Joey Timmons who took things to the next level.
Armed with a flashlight, a wagon, and a deep appreciation for chaos, Joey launched what he called “Operation Lawn Flamingo.” On a moonless night, he crept from house to house, relocating Mrs. Ledbetter’s flamingos in increasingly absurd places. One was discovered straddling the mailbox. The other was found lounging in the birdbath, wearing doll sunglasses.
Mrs. Ledbetter was baffled but undeterred. She blamed squirrels.
Joey’s nightly missions escalated. The flamingos were soon photographed perched on the church steeple, tied to Mr. Gilmore’s TV antenna, and once—legend says—riding tandem on a neighbor’s Schwinn. Each time, they were quietly returned to the yard by sunrise.
But one morning, they were gone.
Panic swept Dogwood Lane. Mrs. Ledbetter posted hand-drawn fliers. Mr. Gilmore offered a $5 reward. The town paper ran a headline: “Fowl Play Suspected in Flamingo Heist.”
Days later, on Labor Day, the mystery was solved. A float in the town parade rolled by, sponsored by the hardware store. There they were—Bonnie’s flamingos—crowned with tinsel, waving from a kiddie pool atop a hay wagon.
Joey Timmons was soaked in sweat and joy. He rode behind them in a cowboy hat. He was grinning like a kid who had just outwitted the world.
Mrs. Ledbetter crossed her arms and muttered,
“Well, I suppose they are getting some sun.”
After the parade, she let Joey keep one of the flamingos. The other still stood guard in her yard until the day she died.
Joey’s been mayor of Hickory Bluff for twelve years now.
Some say he still keeps the flamingo in his office.
Chapter Ten: Stand Still, and the Dust Will Bury You
By dawn, the desert wind carried more than heat. It took silence—the kind that comes before thunder.
Chester Finch stood on the steps of the half-burned church at the edge of Serenity’s main street. His badge was pinned high and proud. His ribs ached. His coat was torn. But his eyes were sharp, and the ledger in his hands could end a dynasty.
The Marshal had pulled his moped from hiding and had it juiced up for duty. The Vespa GTS (300cc) moped shone as slick as the day it was new. It had US Marshal emblems on it and had been stowed inside the jail’s secret compartment. A hiding place that Chester designed the night he arrived in town.
Chester looked out over the gathering.
Wren was there, her arm in a sling, a rifle strapped across her back.
Petal stood beside her, bruised but alive, clutching a satchel full of Cain’s secrets.
Julep Jake leaned against the doorframe, sharpening his miniature whittled guillotine.
“A town’s only worth the blood it takes to keep it,”
He said.
“Reckon we’re due.”
Even Buck Harlan was the old stagecoach driver who hadn’t spoken more than ten words in a decade. He stood with a shotgun across his knees.
And behind him came the others—storekeepers, grooms, forgotten women, broken men.
Cain had ruled them. Gallow had hunted them.
But now –– now they remembered their names.
Chester raised his voice.
“I’m no savior. I’m no sheriff. I’m just the last man they sent when no one else would come.”
He held up the badge.
“But I say this badge still means something. Not because it’s brass. Not because the government gave it to me. But because I’m willin’ to bleed for it.”
He threw the ledgers down onto the church steps.
“These are Cain’s sins. Every payment, every name, every blackmail note, every fix. And when this town turns that over to the federal office, I just wired—they’re gonna come. Not with a whisper. With subpoenas and dogs.”
A beat of silence.
Then a single voice called out:
“And Gallow?”
Chester turned.
“He’ll come. Tonight, maybe. It could be sooner. He’ll bring fire.”
He looked to Wren.
“But fire don’t mean nothin’ if you’ve got water and grit.”
Wren nodded once.
“We stand.”
The townsfolk murmured.
Then they shouted.
Then they began to build.
Barricades. Traps. Makeshift outposts from overturned wagons and scrap wood. Petal turned the saloon into a war room. Julep Jake strung piano wire across alleys. Even the bell tower rang for the first time in years, warning off the vultures.
The Last Hour
Cain, watching from The Assembly, saw the town rise against him and knew he’d lost the crown.
He poured a final drink, set it aside, and vanished through a trapdoor in the fireplace, bound for nowhere.
The Arrival
Gallow came at sunset, just as expected.
He walked straight down the main street—unarmed, unhurried—like he owned time.
But this time, time fought back.
The first tripwire knocked him off balance. A spotlight lit him up. A warning shot clipped his boot.
He crouched, ready to vanish into shadow—until he saw Chester.
Standing in the street. Moped beside him. Rifle in hand.
“You’re outgunned,”
Gallow called.
“Nope,”
Chester said.
“I’m out-cowed.”
The townsfolk emerged—on roofs, behind crates, on balconies.
Gallow took a step. Then another.
Chester held firm.
And Wren, from the bell tower, raised her rifle.
The shot rang out.
Gallow stumbled. Not dead. Just marked.
He turned—bleeding, seething—and ran.
He vanished into the dust from which he’d come.
And the town never saw him again.
Epilogue: A New Kind of Quiet
Serenity changed.
The ledgers made it to Washington. Petal was deputized. Wren chose to stay and built the first real school the town had seen in thirty years. Julep Jake finally finished his guillotine and gave it to a museum in Tulsa.
As for Chester Finch?
He stayed, too.
He never left Serenity.
Not because he had to.
But sometimes, the worst places can create the most profound kind of peace.
Even if you get there on a moped.
The Town Called Serenity
A hero did not save it.
It was saved by the last man willing to stay when everyone else ran.
So the moped was hidden away in the jail’s secret spot—one no one else even knew existed. Good thing Chester made it out alive, or that Vespa would’ve turned into a time capsule! More importantly, this story is a great reminder: the bad guys never truly win.
Braddock Cain sat alone in The Assembly, a chessboard in front of him, half-played.
It was something he did when the whiskey wore off, and the world got too quiet. He played both sides of the board. He always made sure black lost.
Tonight, black wasn’t losing.
He moved a knight, sat back, and scowled.
The vault trap should have buried Finch and the girl. He’d received no word from Poke, which was unusual. Too unusual.
A low, sharp knock came at the door—three short raps.
Then silence.
His eyes narrowed.
“Enter,”
He growled.
The door creaked open, and the man who stepped inside wasn’t Poke. Wasn’t anyone from Serenity? His clothes were clean, military-cut. His boots were dustless. He didn’t wear a hat—but his shadow felt longer than the room allowed.
“Mr. Cain,”
The stranger said.
“I presume.”
Cain stood, hand already on the grip of his pistol.
“You don’t walk into this room without an invitation.”
“I didn’t walk,”
The man replied.
“I arrived.”
He stepped ahead and set a file down on Cain’s table. The name ASHWOOD was stamped in red across the top.
Cain didn’t move to open it.
“You’re Gallow,”
He said flatly.
“That’s what they used to call me,”
The man replied.
“In certain circles. Not the ones you buy into.”
Cain sat back slowly.
“What do you want?”
Gallow smiled faintly.
“Let’s call it… clarity. You’ve grown fat on rot, Cain. But rot attracts insects. I’m here to burn the carcass clean.”
Cain let out a cold laugh.
“You think you can walk into my town and—”
Gallow was suddenly in front of him.
Cain hadn’t even seen the movement.
A knife gleamed under Cain’s chin.
“I don’t think,”
Gallow whispered.
“I replace. You’ve become a liability to men far above either of us. The vault was never your property. The tapes, the ledgers, the names—you were supposed to manage them, not flaunt them.”
Cain’s eyes narrowed.
“You’re not just here for Finch.”
“I’m not here for Finch at all,”
Gallow said softly.
“He’s just a broken piece. You’re the engine.”
He pulled the knife away and tucked it back into his sleeve.
“I won’t kill you tonight. That would be –– premature. But I will leave you with a choice.”
Gallow tapped the Ashwood file.
“Burn this. Leave town. Or wait for me to come back.”
Then he was gone.
Cain sat still for a long time, listening to the echo of Gallow’s departure. When his hand finally moved, it wasn’t for his gun.
It was for the bottle.
Elsewhere in Serenity
Poke’s body was found behind the saloon—face down, no bullet wound, no blood.
Just two coins were placed over his eyes.
Wren and Chester stood over him in silence.
“Gallow’s here,”
Wren said.
“And he’s not working for Cain. He’s cleaning the house.”
Chester looked toward the west horizon, where dust clouds rolled in from the direction of the rail line.
He pulled the badge from his coat and stared at it.
“Time to decide,”
He muttered.
“Do I play Marshal—or outlaw?”
Well now, Gallow is certainly making his presence known! And Cain clearly has a big decision to make—but will he actually leave town? If so, he better start packing snacks for the road. But if he’s thinking about staying, he’ll want to give Jonathan Lawson a call. He should secure himself a Colonial Penn Life Insurance policy. It’s unfortunate Poke didn’t think ahead. Maybe those two coins over his eyes are enough to cover a plot in the nearest potter’s field.
As for Marshal Chester Finch, he’s defied the odds and made it to Chapter Ten. And it looks like this final chapter will finally answer the big mystery: the moped. Where has it been? Who hid it? Why wasn’t it tampered with? What was it originally bought for? And when did Chester decide it would be his official Marshal’s ride?
All of this—and more—will be revealed in Chapter Ten. ~ WE Hope ~
The blast had sealed the main vault door and collapsed part of the tunnel behind them. Smoke choked the air. Brick and metal groaned under stress. Chester blinked through blood and dust, pulling Wren up from the rubble.
“You alright?”
He asked, coughing.
“Been worse,”
Wren muttered, cradling her left arm.
“Dislocated, not broken. I’ll pop it back.”
Chester pulled out a penlight and scanned the room.
“No exit. That was the only way in.”
Wren smiled through the pain.
“You thought it was.”
She limped to the far wall. A section of decorative tiling was there—old, Spanish-style. It jutted out from the stone like it didn’t belong. She knocked three times in a rhythm that echoed deeper than it should have.
A hollow click responded.
“Cain didn’t build the vault himself. He took it from a man who did. The original owner had escape routes.”
She traced a tile shaped like a broken star and twisted it counterclockwise. With a faint hiss, the tile wall slid inward, revealing a narrow stone chute, half-collapsed and riddled with centipedes.
Chester stared into the black.
“I don’t suppose you brought rope,”
He said.
“Nope.”
“Alright then,”
He grunted, and they vanished into the dark.
In the Streets Above
Petal stood at her shop counter grinding roots when the front door exploded inward.
She ducked instinctively, drawing her old revolver, but it was too late.
Two men in black tactical gear moved in fast, grabbed her arms, and yanked her across the counter. The third figure entered last—calm, silent.
Mr. Gallow.
He picked up a vial from the shelf, sniffed it, and set it down.
“I’ve read your name,”
He said, voice flat.
“You’re a known associate of Wren. Harboring her. Aiding a rogue federal.”
Petal spat blood and smiled.
“You got a badge?”
“No. I have jurisdiction.”
He signaled.
The men dragged her out.
They disappeared down the street. Julep Jake watched from his cell window. He was whittling a miniature guillotine from an old broom handle.
“And now the harvest begins,”
He muttered.
The Long Climb
Chester and Wren emerged two hours later through a rusted maintenance grate behind the abandoned Serenity Theater. They were scratched, covered in brick dust, and exhausted—but alive.
Wren wiped grime from her face.
“He set us up. Knew we were coming.”
Chester nodded grimly.
“Means we rattled him.”
She held up the two ledgers she’d saved—one in each hand.
“He loses if these go public.”
Chester took them, tucking them into his coat.
“Then let’s make sure they do.”
Suddenly—gunfire cracked in the distance. Three pops.
Wren froze.
“That was near Petal’s.”
Chester’s face hardened.
“We’re not the only ones he’s playing.”
They moved quickly down the alleys. Even as they ran, Wren stopped cold. She saw the mark scorched onto the alley wall: a circle with a horizontal line through it.
She grabbed Chester’s arm.
“That’s not Cain’s symbol.”
“What is it?”
Wren’s voice dropped to a whisper.
“It’s Gallow’s.”
Chester turned, scanning the rooftops.
“Then we’re out of time.”
What exactly did the symbol mean? Chester had the answer—or at least a regulation book with the answer—tucked away in the saddlebags on his moped. The problem? He didn’t bring it with him. And it’s too far to walk back now. Truth is, he hasn’t laid eyes on that moped since he rolled into town. So, is it hidden so well that he forgot where it is? Or is he protecting a strategic location he’s not ready to reveal? With only two chapters left, the Marshal better get moving!
Two nights later, Chester and Wren moved through the back alleys of Serenity like smoke.
The plan was simple: infiltrate the vault below The Assembly using the abandoned mine shaft Wren had mapped out. Inside, Cain kept more than just gold and guns—he kept records. Blackmail. Ledgers. Evidence.
Evidence that could break him!
Wren led them to a rusted grate hidden behind the collapsed ruins of an old hardware store. Beneath it: a shaft covered in rotted boards and bad intentions.
“Down there?”
Chester asked.
“Unless you’d rather try the front door.”
They climbed down slowly, their boots sinking into decades of dust and discarded bones. Lantern light flickered over graffiti scratched into the stone. Old names. Gang signs. Some symbols are older than either of them recognized.
They crawled through two hundred yards of tight rock. They ducked under fallen beams and crossed a flooded tunnel chest-deep in cold water. Finally, they came to a narrow corridor with smooth brick walls.
“This was built after the mine closed,”
Chester said.
“Cain built it,”
Wren confirmed.
“To smuggle in shipments during the lockdown years. It goes straight to his vault room.”
Chester’s hand rested on his revolver.
“We go in quiet. No guns unless we’re cornered.”
They reached the door—an iron-bound, reinforced, and sealed structure with an old code lock. Wren pulled a tiny folded paper from her coat.
“Petal gave me this,”
She said.
“It’s the combination. She wrote it down after Cain got drunk and showed off.”
Chester raised an eyebrow.
“I’m beginning to like that woman.”
Wren punched in the numbers. The lock hissed. The door creaked open.
Inside, the vault glimmered like a serpent’s nest: stacks of cash, boxes of documents, safes within safes.
But the prize wasn’t money.
It was the black books.
Wren went for the ledgers. Chester opened a crate and pulled out a collection of old film reels labeled with names—judges, mayors, even a U.S. senator.
“This is it,”
He whispered.
“This is Cain’s Kingdom in a box!“
“This is Cain’s kingdom in a box.”
But then, from behind them—a faint click.
Wren froze.
“Did you hear—”
Chester tackled her just as the explosion hit.
The vault door slammed shut.
Dust and debris rained down. A trap. It had been rigged.
From above, in a hidden observation room, Braddock Cain watched through a spyglass.
He turned to Poke and said,
“Let them cook. They wanted into my house. Now they can die in it.”
But neither he—nor Chester—knew that Wren had already mapped another way out.
And worse, Mr. Gallow had just entered Serenity.
Cain’s Kingdom In A Box? Sounds like evidence that sews up this case! But, now Mr. Gallow is in town, and this brings a whole new suggestion for more trouble. Or a solution. It is too early to tell. Maybe Mr Gallow came for the moped. What if the Marshal’s service issued the moped to Chester, and they want it back?
The file on Chester Finch wasn’t stored in any digital archive. It was handwritten, double-sealed, and stored in a fireproof vault in Washington, D.C., under a codename known only to four men who still remembered it.
Operation Ashwood.
Eight years ago, Chester was part of a black-bag unit inside the U.S. Marshal Service—officially unrecognized, unofficially unstoppable. The team was created to root out systemic corruption in rural American towns with privatized law enforcement and cartel-backed leadership. The mission was simple: infiltrate, destabilize, expose.
Ashwood’s first three targets were textbook. The fourth—Gulch County, Texas—was different.
Chester had made the call. He exposed the sheriff, three council members, and a judge and brought them down with a clean sweep.
But the blowback was lethal.
Three of Chester’s team were ambushed at the exit. A safe house was burned down—with a whistleblower’s daughter inside. The press got hold of fragments, but the whole truth? That was buried in a sealed report and heavily redacted.
Chester took the blame. Not officially. But quietly. They let him keep the badge—under the condition that he’d never be given another high-profile operation again.
Until now.
Serenity was never meant to be his assignment. Someone had slipped his name into the dispatch. Someone with a more extended memory than the agency admitted to.
And now Gallow, the last surviving Ashwood “fixer,” was on the trail.
Now, remember this is only a pause between Chapters Five and Seven. This moment is to clarify what was happening. It serves to show what brought Chester Finch to these parts. When Chapter Seven opens, it will seem like only a few days have passed. That will be just enough time for Finch to remember his past, whether he likes it or not. Still, there is no word where he has left the moped. Surely, it would have been used as a bargaining chip with him by now.
The bell above Petal’s shop rang twice—slow and deliberate.
That was the signal.
Wren waited until the third cloud passed over the moon before sliding off the schoolhouse roof. She moved like a whisper down the alleyway, avoiding the creaky boards and broken glass with practiced ease. She paused behind the horse trough near the sheriff’s office and whistled once—two notes, flat and low.
Chester was sitting inside the dim jailhouse with his boots propped up on a barrel. His bruised rib was bandaged with a strip of curtain. He heard the sound and stood up.
He opened the door.
Wren stepped into the lamplight. She was small and wiry, wrapped in an oversized coat that had seen better days. Her eyes were dark and deliberate, scanning the room, the exits, the Marshal.
“I watched you fight the Gentlemen,”
She said without greeting.
Chester gave her a nod, cautious but not cold.
“You’re the girl from the roof.”
“I’m the girl from everywhere,”
She replied.
He gestured to a stool.
“You hungry?”
She hesitated, then sat.
“I want something else.”
“Alright.”
“I want Cain gone.”
Chester leaned back against the wall, arms crossed.
“That makes two of us. But wantin’ it and surviving it are two different things.”
Wren pulled her notebook from her coat and opened it. She showed him a crude map—of underground tunnels, secret entrances, schedules.
“I’ve been tracking his movements for six months,”
She said.
“He’s gotten sloppy. He trusts the wrong people. There’s a weak point—down in the old mines under the vault. He thinks no one remembers it exists.”
Chester raised an eyebrow.
“And you want to hit him there?”
“I want to expose him first. Show Serenity what he is. Not just a tyrant. A liar. A coward. I can get you inside. You have to decide if you’re willing to break the rules you came here to enforce.”
He looked at her for a long moment.
“You ever worked with a marshal before?”
“No,”
Wren replied.
“You ever work with a kid who knows where all the bodies are buried?”
Chester smiled.
“Can’t say that I have.”
She closed the notebook.
“Then we’re even.”
They shook hands—hers small and cold, his calloused and warm. In that moment, something changed. Not in Serenity. Not yet.
But it had started.
Meanwhile –––
Five miles west of Serenity, in a ravine that didn’t show on most maps, a boxcar shuddered to a halt. It stopped on rusted rails.
A figure stepped out—tall, dressed in black, face hidden beneath a wide-brimmed hat. Beside him, four others disembarked—mercenaries, by the look of them. Not local. Not from this state. Not from this country, maybe.
They called him Mr. Gallow.
No one knew if that was his real name. He didn’t speak often, but when he did, people obeyed—or disappeared.
Gallow held up a leather-bound dossier stamped with the faded seal of the Bureau of Internal Affairs. Inside was a photo of Chester Finch, clipped to a thick file marked:
“CLASSIFIED – OPERATION ASHWOOD.”
He flipped the page and revealed a second file—one that bore the name Braddock Cain.
And then a third.
Subject: WREN (Alias Unknown).
Status: Missing / Witness Protection Violation.
Gallow smiled faintly.
He turned to his team and said only two words.
“Kill quietly.”
They vanished into the desert night like wolves on the scent.
Back in Serenity
Petal watched the train lights fade on the horizon, her face tense.
She reached behind the counter, pulled out a dusty revolver, and said to herself,
“They’re all waking up now.”
And somewhere, far below, in the tunnels beneath Serenity, a clock that had long stopped ticking began to turn again.
So, Chester’s past is coming back to haunt him. What exactly are contained in the files OPERATION ASHWOOD Files? And, how much of it did Chester do or not do? He now cares less about the moped. If the contents of the file sees light of day, what would it mean for our Marshal? The man trying to cleanup this dirty town? And the tunnels, are another thing? Just a quick way to get about town or something more sinister?