What He Wanted #2
“Eleanor said the land trust is ready to file the conservation easement.” I focus on the logistics, though my fingers remain tangled in the wool of his shirt. “But we still have the outstanding clinic bills. And the back taxes.”
“Max Lawson is in town,” Wyatt nods, his brow furrowing.
“He runs the software company down in the valley. He’s helped the shelter before.
If we can get him to look at the books, he might know how to structure a nonprofit.
We can set up a donor base. But we need time.
If Cascade pushes the variance through today, the road goes in, and the land trust won’t touch it. ”
“Then we don’t let them get the variance.” I set my jaw, the counselor-calm register returning, but this time, it isn’t a shield to hide behind. It’s a weapon to use. “We have the legal right to refuse. If Brock Sterling wants a fight, we’ll give him one in front of the whole town.”
Wyatt’s lips curve into a tiny, rare smile, a flash of warmth that makes my stomach flutter. “I like it when you look like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like you’re about to talk a wolf off a cliff.” He drops his hand to trace the edge of my jaw, his thumb lingering on my bottom lip.
I lean into the touch, the last of the storm’s chill melting between us.
But we don’t go down the mountain that day.
The county commission meeting is postponed due to the switchback slide, and by the time the road crews clear the drifts, the immediate urgency softens into a steady, quiet rhythm.
Weeks bleed into one another, the mountain holding us in deep—storm following storm across the high passes, the white quiet stretching from one short day into the next.
I stay. I don’t return to Denver, though my rental car sits cleared of snow by the gate. Instead, I work my remote crisis shifts from Jesse’s old desk, the satellite link hums as a constant background thread while I talk soldiers through their darkest moments.
But the nights aren’t empty anymore. We sleep in the same bed, our bodies falling into a quiet, familiar reclamation every night, a silent language of healing that doesn’t need to name the ghosts we’re guarding.
During the day, I help Wyatt in the clinic, holding Dolly for her drops, feeding the recovering pups, and learning the hard, tire-out routine of the runs.
One cold, bright morning, the pale winter sun shines off the snowpack, and I sit on the porch steps, watching Jason work a dog in the plowed yard.
He’s guiding Barnaby through a basic retrieve, his movements patient and deliberate.
Beside him, Thomas, a local veteran who has been coming up to help with the runs, stands with his hands shoved deep in his pockets, his shoulders hunched with a tense, defensive guard I recognize all too well.
Jason says something quietly, then hands the lead to Thomas. The big dog immediately sits, leaning his heavy shoulder against Thomas’s knee. I watch Thomas’s shoulders slowly drop, his chest rising in a deep, long-overdue exhale as he reaches down to scratch the dog behind the ears.
The sight hits me with the force of a revelation. In my headset in Denver, I talked to soldiers who were isolated, drowning in their own heads, desperate for anything to keep them anchored. Here, in the runs, are rescues that need a purpose, a pack to belong to.
“They’re a lock and a key,” I murmur, not realizing Wyatt has stepped out onto the porch until he slides a mug of chicory coffee into my hands.
“What?” he asks, leaning his hip against the cedar railing.
“The dogs. And the vets.” I turn to him, the pieces falling into place so fast the words crowd my throat.
“Look at Thomas. The vets I talk to on the hotline—they’re white-knuckling the dark because they’re terrified of their own minds.
These dogs are waiting for someone to lead them.
What if we train the shelter’s rescues as PTSD service dogs?
For the handlers who come back wrong. The vets who can’t sleep. ”
Wyatt stares down at the meadow, his grey eyes widening as the idea settles. His hand tightens on his mug. “Jesse wanted this place to save handlers. He willed the land to keep them safe. But he didn’t have a plan for how to do it.”
“We do it as a nonprofit.” I lean forward, my heart hammering with a sudden, fierce hope. “That way it’s protected. It outlives us, and it keeps Cascade from ever touching the meadow. We train them here, you condition and certify them, and Jason runs the training.”
Wyatt looks at me, the hard angles of his face softening into a quiet, intense pride.
“I have the land. I have the medical skill. But I don’t know the first thing about incorporation or funding models.
But Max Lawson does. And Lucas knows how to coordinate with the veteran groups.
We bring the model. We ask them to help us build the structure.
” He reaches down, his large hand cupping the back of my neck, his thumb tracing my jaw. “Let’s do it.”
The slow burn of our relationship deepens, rooted in the clinic floorboards and the long white weeks of the mountain winter. We have weeks of quiet, weeks of building this vision together, until the world outside finally breaks back in.
It starts on a quiet morning, three weeks deep into the white heart of the mountain winter.
The sharp, digital chime of my laptop on the desk shatters the quiet of the office.
It’s a rapid, insistent sequence of beeps, the signal that a new, high-priority email has landed in my inbox. I flinch slightly, Wyatt’s hands dropping from my hips as I turn toward the screen.
The sender name makes my stomach turn cold.
Sender: Legal Department (Cascade Development)
Subject: URGENT: Notice of Purchase of Debt and Intent to Foreclose - Calhoun/Marsh Property
I click the email, the blue light of the screen reflecting off the frosted windowpane. Wyatt steps up beside me, his shoulder brushing mine, his gaze locking onto the text.
Dear Ms. Coleman and Dr. Calhoun,
Please be advised that Cascade Development, through its subsidiary Ridges Holdings LLC, has acquired the outstanding mortgage note and property tax liens on the property located at 412 Silverleaf Road (the Angel’s Peak Shelter and Clinic) from First Colorado Bank, effective March 6, 2026.
The total outstanding balance, including accrued interest, penalties, and back taxes, is $251,480.00.
As our final acquisition offer was not executed by the designated noon deadline, we have exercised our right under the emergency acceleration clause of the commercial lien. We hereby demand payment of the full balance within forty-eight (48) hours of this notice.
If payment is not received in full by March 8, 2026, at 12:00 PM, Cascade Development will proceed with immediate foreclosure and eviction proceedings. The property will be seized and auctioned to satisfy the debt.
A formal copy of the petition has been filed with the county court.
I stare at the screen, the legal jargon printing itself onto my brain like a brand.
Forty-eight hours.
They aren’t waiting for the easement variance.
They aren’t waiting for the county board meeting.
By buying the debt directly from the bank, they’ve bypassed the easement entirely.
If we don’t have a quarter of a million dollars in forty-eight hours, they’ll take the land, the clinic, and the shelter.
They’ll clear the pines, scrape the meadow flat, and build their condos.
There won’t be a damn thing the county board or the land trust can do to stop them.
I look at Wyatt.
The page of Jesse’s letter is still tucked in his breast pocket, but the warmth of his smile has vanished. His face is granite-hard, his grey eyes turning to ice as he stares at the glowing text.
“They bought the note.” Wyatt’s voice drops to a gravel-quiet register that’s colder than the wind outside.
“Forty-eight hours.” My hand trembles as I reach out to touch the glass. “We don’t have two hundred fifty thousand dollars.”
“No.” He turns toward the door, his boots heavy against the pine floorboards. “We don’t.”
He stops in the doorway, looking back at me, his silhouette dark against the white light of the clinic corridor. The letter is in his pocket, but the ghost of my cousin’s warning hangs in the air between us.
“Get your coat, Bella. We’re going down the mountain.” Wyatt’s voice is flat and unyielding.