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Lone Rancher Bought Her From Her Parents — But He’d Secretly Loved Her for 7 Years

‘The truth is Harold Beckman is a vicious bastard who hurts women for sport. The truth is your father was going to hand you over tomorrow. The truth is I couldn’t let that happen.” “Why not?” “I’m nothing to you.” Something crossed Grayson’s face, an emotion too quick to name. “You’re not nothing.” “You don’t know me.” “No.” he agreed.

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“I don’t, but I know Beckman and I know what he does to women nobody protects. His jaw tightened. My wife used to volunteer at the church. She’d help the women who showed up with nowhere else to go. Most of them came from Beckman’s house. What they told her he stopped. She died trying to help one of them escape.

Beckman’s men ran them off the road. Carriage went over an embankment. The rain filled the silence. I’m sorry. Evelyn said finally. It was 3 years ago. That doesn’t make it hurt less. Grayson looked at her then, really looked and something in his expression shifted. No. It doesn’t. He went back to tending the horses and Evelyn stood in the rain trying to reconcile this new information with the transaction she’d witnessed that morning.

If he was telling the truth if his wife had died because of Beckman then maybe this really was about rescue. Maybe she’d stumbled into the one version of the story where the stranger wasn’t the villain. Or maybe he was just a better liar than most. Grayson finished with the horses and pulled two bedrolls from his pack.

He handed her one along with a tin of jerky and hardtack. It’s not much, he said. We’ll get real food tomorrow when we reach Guthrie Station. Evelyn took the food suddenly aware of how hungry she was. She hadn’t eaten since yesterday. Thank you. You don’t have to thank me for basic decency. In my experience basic decency is pretty rare.

Then you’ve been living around the wrong people. She almost smiled at that. Almost. They ate in silence, the rain drumming steadily on the rocks above. Evelyn spread her bedroll on the driest patch of ground she could find and sat down, every muscle screaming. Grayson stayed standing keeping watch on the horses and the dark prairie beyond. You should sleep, he said without turning around.

I’ll keep watch. What if I don’t trust you? Smart. You shouldn’t. Not yet. He glanced back at her. But I’m going to keep watch whether you sleep or not. Might as well rest while you can. Evelyn pulled her mother’s shawl tighter around her shoulders. What’s your ranch like? Big? Remote? Good water? Better grass? Built the house myself after the land run. Nothing fancy, but it’s solid.

Do you have staff? Some. A foreman, couple of hands, a woman who cooks and keeps house. Good people. They’ll leave you alone unless you want company. And what exactly will my role be? You never said. Grayson was quiet for a long moment. Whatever you want it to be. That’s not an answer. It’s the only one I’ve got.

He turned to face her fully. Miss Mercer, I didn’t bring you to my ranch to work you like a servant or He stopped, jaw tightening. I brought you because leaving you in that house felt wrong. What happens next is your decision. You want to leave once we get there, I’ll give you money and a horse and send you anywhere you want to go.

You want to stay, you stay. But you’re not obligated to me. Not now. Not ever. Why should I believe you? You shouldn’t. But time will prove it one way or another. Evelyn studied him in the dim light. This quiet, careful man who spoke like he’d thought about every word before it left his mouth. He didn’t sound like he was lying.

But then, the best liars never did. I’m going to hold you to that, she said. Good. She lay down using her carpet bag as a pillow and pulled the bedroll around herself. The ground was hard and cold. The rain was loud. And everything about this situation was terrifying. But somehow, despite all of that, exhaustion won.

Her last thought before sleep took her was that Caleb Grayson’s eyes were the color of a winter sky and just as impossible to read. She woke to silence and pale dawn light. The rain had stopped. Grayson sat with his back against the rocks, arms folded, eyes closed. Not asleep exactly, she could tell by the tension in his shoulders, but resting.

Evelyn sat up slowly, trying not to make noise. Failed. Grayson’s eyes opened immediately. “Morning,” he said. “Did you sleep at all?” “Enough.” “That’s not an answer.” The corner of his mouth twitched. Might have been a smile. “You’re persistent.” “I’m practical.” “If you fall off your horse from exhaustion, I don’t know the way to your ranch.

” “Fair point.” He stood, stretching carefully. “We should move.” “Want to make Guthrie by noon.” They packed in comfortable silence, or at least it should have been comfortable. Evelyn kept catching herself watching him, looking for signs of deception or danger. But Grayson just did what needed doing.

Tack the horses, check the gear, handed her jerky for breakfast without comment. Normal. He acted completely normal, like buying women out of debt was just another Tuesday morning. The ride to Guthrie station took 4 hours. The town appeared on the horizon like a promise. Wooden buildings, dirt streets, the kind of rough frontier settlement that existed because the railroad needed it to.

They stopped at a hotel restaurant that smelled like bacon and coffee and salvation. Evelyn realized she was starving. Grayson got them a table in the back and ordered enough food for four people. When it arrived, eggs, bacon, biscuits, gravy, coffee, Evelyn almost cried. “Eat,” Grayson said, pushing the plates toward her.

“We’ve got a long ride ahead.” She didn’t need to be told twice. They ate in silence for a while until Evelyn’s hunger faded enough for curiosity to take over. “Can I ask you something?” “You can ask, doesn’t mean I’ll answer. Why aren’t you married? Grayson’s fork paused halfway to his mouth. Excuse me? You’re wealthy, you own half of Oklahoma territory.

You’re not She stopped, feeling her face heat. You’re not bad looking, why haven’t you remarried? That’s bold. You did just purchase the right to dictate my entire future. I think I’ve earned bold. I didn’t purchase anything. Semantics. He set his fork down considering her. I loved my wife, when she died I didn’t see the point in replacing her.

But 3 years? Time doesn’t heal everything, Miss Mercer. Sometimes it just makes the wound easier to carry. His gray eyes met hers. I built my ranch because I needed something to do with my hands besides drink myself to death. It worked, mostly. But sharing it with someone else, that wasn’t part of the plan. Then why am I here? Because some things matter more than plans.

The honesty in his voice made her chest tight. Evelyn looked down at her plate, suddenly unable to meet his gaze. I don’t know how to do this. Do what? Trust someone. Believe they might actually be decent. She forced herself to look at him. Everyone I’ve ever trusted has hurt me. My father, my stepmother, even my mother by dying and leaving me with them.

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