The storm didn't kill Silas Vane.
The town did.
Sheridan, Wyoming was built on optimism and buried under debt. By the winter of 1891, the cattle market has collapsed, the banks have fled, and survival belongs to whoever controls the ledgers. When a penniless man is left to freeze in the street during a blizzard, the Territory dispatches John Mercer, a former marshal turned government auditor whose job is to balance accounts no one else dares to open.
Mercer arrives to find a town that functions like a machine. A weak sheriff. A fearful populace. And Elias Crowder, the financier who owns the land, the freight routes, the courts, and the silence. Nothing illegal enough to stop. Nothing clean enough to forgive.
As the snow closes the mountain passes, Mercer begins to dismantle the system piece by piece, uncovering vanished surveyors, rigged tax assessments, and debts designed to end lives. But justice in Sheridan is expensive, and violence is a currency Crowder has spent before.
Trapped by winter and surrounded by men who profit from suffering, Mercer must decide how far he's willing to go. Because in a town written in red ink, the final balance may only be settled in blood.
Sheridan is a dark, atmospheric Western thriller about power, corruption, and the price of looking away.