They Put a Repair Bill Beside His Beer and Called the Old Man Guilty

Chapter 1: A Wet Invoice Under Neon Lights

The paper hit the bar before Donald Carter saw the hand that threw it.

It skidded across the wet wood, caught the bottom of his beer glass, and stopped with one corner soaking in the pale ring of spilled lager. Red neon from the beer sign trembled across the plastic sleeve around it. Blue light from the jukebox cut over the top line in sharp flashes.

REPAIR ESTIMATE: $9,860.00

Donald kept his hand around the glass but did not lift it.

The Crossbar had gone too quiet.

A moment before, there had been pool balls cracking in the back, a burst of laughter from the high tables, the dry cough of an old speaker trying to push out a country song through too much smoke and dust. Now the only sound was the cooler behind the bar humming under the bottles.

Scott Green stood on the other side of Donald’s shoulder, close enough that his black leather vest brushed the back of the barstool. He was not a young man, exactly, but he had the strength and impatience of someone who still believed volume counted as proof. His arms were bare under the vest. His jaw was tight. He smelled of cold air and motor oil.

“You see that number?” Scott asked.

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