THE LAST LETTER FROM PERDITION
By Kenneth Thomas
Some men run from ghosts. Harlan Creed delivers them.
New Mexico Territory, 1871.
Harlan Creed is a dying man with a satchel full of other people's sins.
When a former friend and fallen comrade lays nine final letters on his deathbed-each one a reckoning, a confession, a loaded gun wrapped in paper-Creed takes the ride. Not for forgiveness. Not for justice. But because finishing what others couldn't is the only thing he has left.
Each letter leads him deeper into a haunted land-one ghost, one truth, one broken soul at a time. A sheriff who buried the law. A widow who buried the wrong man. A preacher who buried his god. A boy who never got a name. And somewhere down the trail, a final message meant for Creed himself... a letter with no name, because the truth it holds was never meant to be spoken.
What begins as a mail run becomes a mythic journey through guilt, memory, and redemption-a Western soaked not just in dust and blood, but in silence, sorrow, and something holy.