He Gave The Replacement Bride 14 Days To Prove Herself — The Ride Home Changed Everything-QuynhTranJP

The wagon was waiting behind the livery when I stepped out with Mrs. Hart beside me and my trunk already strapped in the back.

Caleb Turner stood near the horses with one hand on the reins, hat tipped low against the afternoon glare. Up close, he looked even more solid than he had in the parlor doorway, as if the land had carved him from the same rough materials it used for fence posts and mountain ridges. His shirt sleeves were rolled to the forearms. Dust clung to his boots. He looked like a man who had no patience for waste, ornament, or second chances given lightly.

“Mrs. Hart says you’re still determined,” he said.

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“I said I was coming.”

His eyes flicked to my trunk, then back to my face.

“Once we leave town, the ranch is two hours out. No easy ride back if you change your mind before supper.”

“I won’t.”

Mrs. Hart squeezed my arm. “If he works you to death the first day, you send word and I’ll come fetch you myself.”

Something that might have been amusement touched Caleb’s mouth.

“Yes, ma’am.”

He offered me his hand to climb into the seat. His palm was callused, warm, and careful despite its strength. Not gentle in a decorative way. Gentle in a useful one. He did not hold on longer than necessary, but the brief pressure of his hand around mine stayed with me after I sat down.

The wagon rolled out of Clearwater Ridge under a sky so wide it made the town behind us look like a toy set down in the dirt. The road was little more than a pair of wheel-cut lines through grass and sage. Dry stems scraped the wagon’s underside. The harness creaked. One of the horses snorted every few minutes, tossing its head when flies landed near its eyes.

For a while, neither of us spoke. I watched the valley widen and then lift toward the darker line of foothills. The air carried the scent of sun-warmed grass, horse leather, and distant water. Caleb drove like he did everything else—quietly, without wasted motion.

Finally he said, “Why did you really come?”

I turned toward him. “I already told you.”

“You told me why your father sent you.” He kept his attention on the horses. “I asked why you came.”

That question sat between us longer than I liked.

The wagon wheel struck a rut. My shoulder knocked the wooden side. I steadied myself and looked out toward the mountains.

“Because if I stayed,” I said, “I would’ve spent the rest of my life being useful to other people and invisible to myself.”

That got his attention. I felt it before I saw it.

He glanced at me then, once, direct and unreadable.

“Invisible.”

“My sister was the one people turned toward. I was the one they handed work to. I got tired of being the answer to every problem that didn’t earn thanks.”

“And you think a ranch will fix that?”

“No.” I looked down at my hands in my lap. “But it might give me something honest. Better an honest burden than a pretty lie.”

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