The Runaway Woman Who Found More Than Work At A Wyoming Ranch-felicia

Evelyn Carter reached the ranch gate with dust on her skirt, blood in her boots, and a fear so old it had started to feel like another bone in her body.

The Wyoming wind moved low through the grass, scraping dry stalks against one another until the whole prairie seemed to whisper at her to turn back.

She did not turn back.

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Three days on foot had taught her what pain sounded like.

It sounded like leather rubbing skin raw.

It sounded like breath catching whenever the road dipped and rose and showed her nothing but more land ahead.

It sounded like the small, stubborn scrape of a woman who had already decided that going back was worse than dying where she stood.

Behind her was St. Louis.

Behind her was her father’s sickroom, and the shame of leaving before she could say goodbye properly.

Behind her was Edgar Mallerie, her stepfather, a man who believed every frightened silence was consent and every locked door was a challenge.

Ahead of her stood a ranch house, plain and solid, with smoke lifting from the chimney.

There was a red barn, a corral, a few horses shifting in the early light, and a wooden gate beneath her hand.

Evelyn had rehearsed the words until they no longer sounded like hope.

I can cook.

I can clean.

I can mend.

I just need somewhere to stay.

The barn door opened before she could say them.

The man who stepped out was broad through the shoulders and worn by weather, with a face that did not soften easily.

He looked thirty-five, maybe more.

His hands were rough from work.

His eyes were steady in a way that made her want to lie and tell the truth at the same time.

She did not know his name yet.

Jonah Reed saw the blood-dark edges of her ruined boots.

He saw the way she held the fence, not like a guest, but like the wood was the only thing keeping her upright.

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