Chapter Two
Deadwood, South Dakota
Three Years Later
The morning sun cast long, golden fingers across the dry plains, and Nora squinted against its glare as she tightened the last nail into the fencepost, but even then, the post barely held.
She sat back on her heels, wiping sweat from her brow with the back of her glove.
The fencing hammer hung heavier than it used to, or maybe she was just more tired than she let on.
Somehow, it had been three years since the accident took her parents. Three years of holding the ranch together with threadbare rope and stubborn grit. Some days she seemed to make progress. Other days, like today, she felt like someone patching holes in a sinking ship.
A puff of wind kicked up dust and sent it swirling across the pasture. In the distance, the cattle stood idle and disinterested, their silhouettes framed against the low hills. The fence was temporary, a crude patch over a winter-ruined stretch, but it would hold for now.
The ranch had aged in strange ways. Some corners seemed frozen in time, like the porch swing that still creaked with no one in it; others wore thin from overuse.
Paint peeled faster than Nora could keep up, hinges groaned louder, and the barn doors never quite shut the way they should.
It was still home, yes, but it carried a tiredness now, the kind that settled into wood and soil and bone.
Everything just feels like it’s holding its breath. Same as me.
Nora stood and rolled her shoulders. From here, she could just make out the house, a squat shape of white clapboard and red roof, still standing tall against the years.
Inside, she knew, Mary Jane was probably underfoot in the kitchen, asking June endless questions about flour or frogs or where the sun went at night. Nora smiled to herself.
June Dawson had worked as a cook at her family’s ranch for decades; the woman had practically raised her.
And now, she was doing the same for Mary Jane.
She had a sweet way about her, gentleness and warmth, but underneath that softness was steel.
More than one ranch hand had learned the hard way not to cross June when it came to “her girls.”
Nora slung the hammer into the canvas tool bag and turned her back to the house, dust trailing her boots. She tried not to think too far ahead. The ranch books still didn’t balance, and the pasture needed reseeding. But Mary Jane would be having her sweets. And June would have coffee on.
The rest can wait.
She had just hoisted the tool bag into the back of the wagon when the distant thud of hooves broke the quiet, and Nora froze. Her spine stiffened before she even turned.
“Good mornin’.”
There he was. Nash Colter, coming up the ridge like he already owned the land beneath his horse’s hooves.
He sat tall in the saddle, broad-shouldered and square-jawed, with that arrogant stillness that only men born into power seemed to possess.
His dark blond hair was slicked back beneath a wide-brimmed hat, not a strand out of place.
His pale blue eyes scanned the horizon with the calm detachment of someone who believed everything in sight was his for the taking.
Even from here, Nora could see that unpleasant smirk tugging at the corners of his mouth.
He always wore it like it was part of his uniform, right along with his polished boots, spotless black coat, and silver spurs that gleamed even in the dust. A man playing dress-up as a gentleman, masking coldness underneath.
Nora set her jaw and stepped forward, hands on her hips, boots planted in the dust. “What do you want, Nash?”
He slowed his horse to a stop just a few yards away, his eyes sweeping over her like he was assessing the price of something. “You already know,” he said. His voice was smooth, like honey laced with poison.
She didn’t blink. “Not interested.”
His smile twitched. It wasn’t gone. However, it was tighter now. “Nora, I’ve made you a generous offer. One any sensible woman would take.”
“You mean the one where you pay off my debts and I spend the rest of my life shackled to a man I despise?” She folded her arms. “Really generous of you.”
For a moment, he just stared at her. The silence stretched; it was heavy and slow, like the moment before a rattler strikes.
Then he tilted his head a little. “You might want to reconsider,” he said quietly, “before something happens to this place. Hard winter. Maybe a fire. Or another… accident. You never know out here.”
Nora’s blood ran hot, but she didn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing it. Taking a step forward, she forced herself to keep her voice cold and steady. “You're threatening me, Colter?”
He raised his hands in mock innocence. “Of course not. Just concerned. Would be a shame, after all your hard work.”
She stepped close enough now to see the cruelty behind those eyes, the flicker of frustration when charm didn’t work on her.
“You listen to me,” she said, low and sharp. “I’d rather lose every acre of this land than tie myself to a man like you.”
Nash’s expression darkened. “Stubbornness can be dangerous out here, Nora. Especially for a woman alone.”
“I’m not alone.”
Nash held her gaze a beat longer, then tugged the reins and turned his horse. “Think it over,” he called over his shoulder. “I’d hate to have to ask again.”
Nora didn’t say another word. She just watched him ride off, as dust curled behind him like smoke.
He’ll be back. No doubt about that. But so will I. And I’ll still be saying no.
***
Nora slammed the door behind her harder than she meant to. The loud crack echoed through the old house like a gunshot.
Flour dusted the air in the kitchen, glowing in the sunlight that filtered through the curtains. Mary Jane stood on a stool by the counter. She had her small hands deep in a lump of dough, face smudged with white. “Nora, look! When I grow up, I’ll be a cook, just like June!”
June was beside her with her sleeves rolled up, and her silver-streaked hair tied back in a kerchief.
She was tall, broad-shouldered, with a quiet steadiness about her, her strong hands shaping the dough as if the rhythm steadied her.
Now, the cook’s sharp eyes caught the storm on Nora’s face in a single glance.
“What happened?”
Nora let out a breath and yanked off her gloves, tossing them on the table. “He was here again.”
June’s mouth drew into a thin, hard line. “What did that snake want this time?”
“The same old thing,” Nora muttered, rubbing the back of her neck. “Tried to make it sound like he’s doing me a favor. Then hinted that my ranch might ‘accidentally’ burn down if I don’t say yes.”
June set down the wooden spoon she’d been using and crossed her arms. “I swear, one of these days I’m going to chase that man off with a skillet.”
Mary Jane, oblivious, giggled and said, “A skillet to the butt!”
Nora tried to laugh, but it came out tight and tired. She walked over and kissed the top of her little sister’s head. “Don’t let June hear you say that too loud, sweetheart,” she murmured. “She might actually do it.”
“No!” Mary Jane grinned wider, her hands deep in dough.
“Yes!” Nora gave another kiss to Mary Jane and leaned against the wall. Her gaze turned to the rise and fall of the bread beneath June’s practiced hands, breathing in the smell of flour and warmth and yeast. For a moment, the kitchen wrapped around her like a soft blanket.
Suddenly, the front door burst open without a knock, and a familiar voice rang out. “Anybody home, or did I just hear a man ride off with Nora’s last nerve?”
Nora smiled before she could stop herself.
Sadie Maddox, the Sheriff’s younger sister, strode into the room with her right hand resting against the pistol on her hip.
Her wild, dark hair swept back like she’d just outrun a dust storm.
She grinned when she saw Nora, but her eyes were already scanning Nora’s face as if reading a map.
“Don’t start,” Nora warned.
Sadie ignored her. “Let me guess…him again?”
Nora just nodded.
Sadie pulled out a chair, plopped down, and snatched a piece of dough from the edge of the bowl, ignoring June’s swat. “You know what your problem is? You keep trying to run a ranch, raise a kid, and hold the world together with nothing but spite and fence wire. You need a man around here.”
Nora raised a brow. “Is this your subtle way of suggesting I marry Nash Colter?”
“Hell, no.” Sadie snorted. “I’m saying maybe it’s time to look into one of those mail-order grooms. Pick one with good intentions and strong shoulders.”
Mary Jane perked up. “Does he come in a box? Like peaches?”
Nora groaned, covering her face. “Please stop.”
But Sadie was grinning. “I’m serious. You don’t have to do it all on your own. And don’t give me that look—I’m not saying you need saving. I’m saying maybe you deserve some help.”
Nora opened her mouth to argue, but nothing came out. Just a pause. A flicker.
She didn’t want to admit it, but the thought had been creeping in lately. Not marriage. Not love. Just…relief. Someone to help carry the weight. Someone to stand on the other side of the fence line and say, I’ve got it today. Now, however, she shoved the thought down.
“No mail-order grooms. Not now. Maybe not ever.”
Sadie shrugged, clearly not buying it. “Suit yourself. But when you come around, I’ll help you pick one. You can’t trust June, she’ll just choose someone who might sound polite and have a nice smile.”
“I’d pick someone who doesn’t make her life harder,” June protested. “Although that rules out most men.”
Nora turned back toward the counter, rolling up her sleeves to help her favorite girls prepare a meal.
The smell of bread, the sound of Mary Jane humming, Sadie’s laughter, everything helped dull the sharpness that Nash had left behind.
But the seed was there now. Buried deep, planted.
And like most things out here, it wouldn’t take much sun or pressure to make it grow.
***
That night, the house was quiet, save for the faint crackle of the fire and the soft creak of the rafters settling in the wind.
Nora eased the bedroom door shut behind her.
The faint scent of lavender was still hanging in the air from the sachet June had tucked under Mary Jane’s pillow.
Her little sister was asleep, curled like a kitten beneath the quilt.
One hand clutched the worn hem of her blanket; the other one still bore a faint dusting of flour.
Nora lingered there for a breath, then turned away.
She made her way to the parlor, where the fire was burning low and the stack of bills waited on the side table like a snake coiled in the dark. She didn’t sit right away. She just stood there, staring down at them. The ink seemed darker tonight, the numbers larger.
Finally, she sank into the armchair and pulled the pile into her lap.
The paper crackled like dry leaves in her hands.
She flipped through them slowly: feed, lumber, doctoring, repairs.
The roof on the south side of the barn was buckling.
And the last two cattle sales hadn’t brought in near what they should have.
Her thumb rested on the corner of a brittle ledger page, but her mind had drifted elsewhere.
You don’t have to do it all on your own, Sadie had said.
Nora leaned her head back. Her eyes closed briefly. Again, it wasn’t that she wanted a man. She didn’t want anyone to come in thinking they could run the place, or make decisions for her, or tell her what a woman ought to be doing.
But what if…what if there was someone out there who’d help, for real?
Someone who could mend fence lines without trying to take the reins? Someone Mary Jane could look up to? Someone who wouldn’t flinch when things got hard?
Her eyes opened again. The fire was down to embers now, but she didn’t move to stoke it. She didn’t want to give up anything—not her freedom, not her home, not her pride. But if she didn’t make a choice soon, she might lose all three anyway.
It really is high time I did something…
Nora let out a long breath, one hand resting on the top of the bills, the other pressed to her chest as if she could hold the weight in place for just a little longer.
Maybe…maybe there’s another way.
And though she wouldn’t admit it out loud, she found herself wondering what it might be like to open a letter and find hope written in a stranger’s hand.