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A Novel
by Eleanor Henderson
"Enough!" Juke said now, spitting the tobacco into the dirt. He'd walked to the barn for his sickle and now he cut down Genus before he'd been dead ten minutes. "I can't stand to see a man hang all night."
That might have been the end of it, but Freddie thought folks in town should get a look at the body. Juke had gone back to the house by the time Freddie tied Genus's bound wrists to the rear of his Chevrolet truck and drove back down the Twelve-Mile Straight, continued into Florence where the road became Main Street, then, at the far edge of town, left him in the middle of the street in the mill village. In fact, everyone had gone home by then. No men had jumped into the back of the truck, and no joyful shots were heard as the vehicle made its way into town; Mancie Neville's hound had not chased the body down the road, tearing an ear from his head; the mill workers had not rushed from their homes to claim a finger; Tom Henry had not fallen from the truck and broken his left armif you asked him later, he'd tell you he'd fallen from his hayloft. If you asked folks the next morning, as the sheriff did, where they were at midnight, you'd learn that they were home in their beds, every last one of them, sleeping like babies.
Excerpted from The Twelve-Mile Straight by Susan Henderson. Copyright © 2017 by Susan Henderson. Excerpted by permission of Ecco. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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