The Rancher’s Brass Key Exposed Why My New Husband Had Hunted Me Across Arizona-yumihong

Jedediah Torne’s face changed before he said a word.

The moon caught him standing in the dirt outside the barn, one gloved hand resting on his saddle horn, his wedding coat still buttoned neat across his chest like he had only stepped away from a reception, not chased his wife across miles of desert. Two men sat behind him on horses, rifles angled across their thighs. Their hats hid most of their faces, but the metal on their spurs winked every time the horses shifted.

Then Jedediah saw Elias Rourke.

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The soft smile he had worn all day disappeared.

Not slowly.

It dropped from his face like a mask cut loose.

Elias stood in the open gap of the barn door with the rifle low against his hip, not pointing, not shaking, not trying to look larger than he was. The lantern behind him threw his scar into a dark line from cheek to jaw. His thumb still rested near the brass key at his belt.

Jedediah’s horse snorted. Leather creaked. Somewhere behind me, fever sweat cooled under the torn lace of my dress.

“Rourke,” Jedediah said.

The name came out flat.

Elias tilted his head. “You remember after all.”

One of the riders shifted. “Boss?”

Jedediah lifted one hand without looking back. The rider went still.

I pushed myself higher against the hay bales, pain stabbing up my calf. The folded deed papers scratched against my ribs where I had hidden them. My mouth tasted of rust and boiled cloth. The wound throbbed with every heartbeat, but I could not look away from the doorway.

Because Jedediah was afraid.

Not angry. Not insulted. Afraid.

He had never looked at me that way. He had looked at me like a thing already purchased, already shelved, already named. Even in the bedroom when he gripped my arm, he had been calm.

Now his jaw worked once before he spoke.

“This is private,” he said. “My wife is confused. Feverish, clearly. Send her out, and I will forget I saw you.”

Elias gave a small dry laugh.

“You forgot me once. It didn’t take.”

The air inside the barn tightened. Dust drifted in the lantern light. I heard the tiny tick of cooling metal from the pan where the cholla spine lay beside the knife.

Jedediah’s eyes cut past Elias and found me in the shadows.

“There you are,” he said, and the old smoothness returned to his voice. “Clara, sweetheart, come here before this man hurts you worse than he already has.”

My fingers curled into the hay.

Elias did not turn around.

“She’s bleeding because she crossed twelve miles of your land trap barefoot,” he said. “Not because of me.”

Jedediah’s eyes sharpened.

Land trap.

That word landed between them like a match dropped in oil.

“You have no idea what you’re interfering with,” Jedediah said.

“I know exactly what you married her for.”

I heard my own breathing turn uneven.

Elias knew.

Before I had told him about the deed file. Before I had explained the 80 acres. Before I had found the words for what had happened after the bedroom door closed.

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