The cattle grazed fat and healthy.

The ranch hands moved with efficient purpose, tending to evening chores.

Everything they’d fought for lay before them, earned through stubborn determination and refusing to quit.

I was thinking, Yates’s arm around Olivia’s shoulders tightened.

Maybe it’s time to expand.

Buy the Peterson ranch when it comes up for sale.

Increase our herd.

Build something even bigger.

Or maybe it’s time to just enjoy what we have.

Olivia turned to face him.

We’ve spent months fighting.

Maybe now we can focus on living.

Living sounds good.

He kissed her forehead.

What does living look like to you? This right here.

You and me and this ranch we built together.

Morning coffee with Mick.

Evening rides checking the cattle.

working in that office your mother built knowing I’m part of something that will last beyond us.

She paused and maybe eventually children to pass it all to a family to fill this house with noise and chaos and love.

Yates’s face softened in a way she’d never seen before.

You want that? Children, a family with you? Yes.

I want everything with you.

the good days and the hard days and all the ordinary days in between.

I want to build a life so strong that nothing can tear it down.

I want to love you for 50 years and die knowing we created something beautiful together.

50 years might not be enough.

His voice was rough with emotion, but it’s a good start.

They stood there as darkness fell and stars emerged.

two people who’d found each other against impossible odds and built something that would last.

The ranch stretched out before them, solid and real, a testament to what stubborn determination and partnership could create.

Olivia thought about the desperate woman who’d arrived in Wyoming months ago, running from debts and danger with $7 and no hope.

That woman was gone.

In her place stood someone stronger.

Someone who’d learned that survival could transform into triumph if you refused to quit.

Someone who discovered that love wasn’t just about romance and poetry.

It was about standing beside someone through fires and lawsuits and every kind of hardship, choosing them again and again and again.

Thank you, she said it quietly.

For what? For telling me you needed a wife when I was looking for a job.

For offering me partnership when I expected nothing.

For defending me when others judged.

For teaching me what love looks like when it’s built on respect and trust instead of desperation.

She smiled.

For choosing me.

I’d choose you a thousand times over.

Yates pulled her closer.

In every lifetime, in every circumstance, I’d choose you because you’re the strongest person I’ve ever met.

And I’m honored to stand beside you.

They went inside together into the house they’d defended and rebuilt, into the life they’d created through pure stubborn refusal to be beaten.

Tomorrow would bring new challenges.

It always did on the frontier.

But they’d face those challenges the way they’d faced everything else.

together as partners, as equals, as two people who’d taken a practical business arrangement and transformed it into something extraordinary.

The Elorn Ranch stood solid under the stars, and the love that had built it would stand just as solid through every storm to come.

Because Yates and Olivia Sloan had learned the most important truth of all.

When two people refuse to quit on each other, when they stand together against every attack and obstacle, they become unbreakable and they build something that will last forever.

The

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