Then came the silver.
Not the metal. The men.
The preacher’s daughter, a girl named Temperance with eyes the color of tarnished copper, swore the falls spoke to her at night. Let the river take what the river wants , it whispered. She took it as prophecy. When the claim-jumpers came from the north—six hard men with shotguns and a rope—she was the one who cut the anchors on the log boom upstream. The jumpers drowned in their sleep, their tents filling with icy water before they could draw a breath. Temperance stood on the bluff and watched them die, and the falls applauded with a sound like tearing silk. Seraphim Falls
They built a saloon from salvaged wagon wheels. A brothel in a canvas tent with a wooden floor. A gallows before they built a church. The falls watched, indifferent. The water kept falling, kept hesitating, kept soaking the rocks black as old blood.
“I’m tired,” he said to the water. Then came the silver
Let the river take what the river wants.
“You didn’t see nothing,” she said. The preacher’s daughter, a girl named Temperance with
They say the water remembers.