That partnership required constant negotiation and grace.

It was harder than Colt had expected, harder and more rewarding, and more complicated than anything he’d done before.

By January, the cabin was habitable, not finished, but livable enough that they could move in.

It was rough and drafty, and still missing half the interior walls Colt had planned, but it was theirs.

Their land, their home, their future, taking shape one board at a time.

Evelyn stood in the middle of the main room on their first night there, holding a lamp and looking around at the bare walls and unfinished floor.

It’s perfect, she said.

Colt laughed.

It’s a disaster.

It’s ours.

That makes it perfect.

They slept on a mattress on the floor that first night because the bed frame wasn’t built yet, wrapped in blankets against the cold that seeped through gaps in the walls.

But they were warm enough together, and when Evelyn fell asleep with her head on Colt’s shoulder, he thought maybe this was what home was supposed to feel like.

The work was relentless.

Colt spent his days finishing the cabin, clearing land, building fences, and preparing for the cattle he planned to buy in the spring.

Evelyn divided her time between sewing commissions and helping with the ranch work, cooking, hauling water, planting a kitchen garden, doing the thousand small tasks that kept a homestead running.

They were exhausted every night, but it was the good kind of exhaustion, the kind that came from building something real.

In February, Colt brought home their first livestock, six chickens and a rooster, purchased from a farmer who was selling off his flock before moving to California.

They’re practical, Colt explained as Evelyn eyed the chickens skeptically.

Eggs for us, eventually chicks to sell.

Low investment, steady return.

You’ve been reading those agricultural journals I borrowed from Mrs.

Henderson.

Maybe.

Evelyn smiled.

Diversification, multiple income streams.

I taught you well.

Best teacher I ever had.

The chickens were just the beginning.

By March, they had added two pigs, a milk cow named Bessie, who was temperamental but productive, and a young horse Colt was training to work cattle.

The homestead was coming together piece by piece, each addition a small victory.

But money was tight, tighter than Colt had anticipated.

Building materials, livestock, feed, household necessities.

It all added up faster than his savings could cover.

He took on day work when he could find it, hiring out to other ranchers for branding, fence building, whatever needed doing.

Evelyn’s sewing income helped, but there were months when they ate thin and went without to make sure the animals were fed.

One night in April, Colt sat at their rough huneed table, tallying their finances by lamplight.

The numbers didn’t look good.

They had enough to buy the cattle he’d planned on, but that would leave them with almost nothing in reserve if anything went wrong.

If an animal got sick, if the garden failed, if either of them got hurt and couldn’t work, they’d be in serious trouble.

Evelyn came up behind him and looked over his shoulder at the ledger.

“We can’t afford the cattle,” she said quietly.

“We can, just barely.

But we shouldn’t.

Not without a cushion for emergencies.

” Colt wanted to argue, wanted to push forward with his plans because waiting meant delaying everything he’d worked toward.

But he knew she was right.

So, what do we do? Evelyn pulled out a chair and sat down beside him.

We delay the cattle purchase.

Keep saving.

Maybe I take on more sewing work.

You hire out for a few more jobs.

By fall, we should have enough to buy the cattle and still have money in reserve.

That puts us a full year behind.

Better a year behind than bankrupt and losing everything.

She covered his hand with hers.

I know this isn’t what you wanted, but sustainable is better than fast.

Colt looked at their joined hands, at the simple gold ring she wore, at the woman who’d gone from having nothing to building a life alongside him.

“You’re right,” he said.

“We’ll wait.

We’ll build it properly together.

” So they waited.

Colt took every job he could find, helping with spring branding, building a barn for the Johnson’s, breaking horses for the Triple Bar ranch.

Evelyn expanded her sewing business, staying up late to finish extra commissions, building a reputation as the best seamstress in the county.

The money came in slowly, but it came.

By July, they had a cushion.

By September, they could afford the cattle.

Colt bought 15 head of mixed cattle from a rancher downsizing his herd.

Not premium stock, but healthy animals with room to grow.

He drove them home with help from two hired hands.

And when those cattle walked onto Harlo land for the first time, Colt felt something shift inside him.

This was real.

This was happening.

After 5 years of working toward this moment, he was finally a rancher.

Evelyn met him at the fence line, climbing up to sit on the top rail and watch the cattle mill around their new pasture.

“How does it feel?” she asked.

“Terrifying.

What if I can’t make this work?” “Then we’ll figure something else out.

But Colt, you will make it work.

I’ve watched you plan every detail, study every angle, prepare for every contingency.

This is going to succeed because you won’t let it fail.

We won’t let it fail.

We won’t let it fail.

She agreed.

They sat on that fence rail as the sun set, watching their cattle graze, and Colt thought about how far they’d both come.

From that first Sunday walk when Evelyn could barely look at him without calculating risk to this moment where they were building something neither of them could have built alone.

Winter came hard that year.

Early snow in October.

Temperatures that dropped below zero and stayed there for weeks.

The cabin that had seemed adequate in summer showed every gap and crack in winter’s merciless cold.

Colt spent his days caring for livestock, breaking ice on the water trough, hauling feed through snow drifts that sometimes came up to his chest.

Evelyn kept the fire going, cooked meals that stretched their supplies, and continued taking sewing commissions, even though her fingers went numb from cold in the drafty cabin.

In December, Bessie the cow stopped giving milk.

Colt found her in the barn one morning lying down and breathing hard, her eyes dull with pain.

>> [clears throat] >> What’s wrong with her? Evelyn asked, standing in the barn doorway wrapped in every shawl she owned.

Don’t know.

Could be a dozen things.

Colt ran his hands over the cow’s side, feeling for abnormalities.

I need to get the veterinarian from town.

That’s a 2-hour ride in this snow.

You’ll freeze.

If I don’t go, we might lose her.

And if we lose her, we lose the milk income and any calves she might have given us.

Evelyn was quiet for a moment.

Then I’m coming with you.

No, it’s too dangerous.

Colt Harlo, we don’t have time to argue about this.

If you’re going, I’m going because if something happens to you out there, you’ll need someone to get you home.

He wanted to argue.

Wanted to protect her from the dangerous ride through a blizzard.

But he also knew that stubborn set to her jaw knew that she’d made up her mind and nothing would change it.

Fine, but you ride behind me, and if I say we need to turn back, we turn back.

agreed.

They made the ride to town through wind that cut like knives and snow that made it impossible to see more than a few feet ahead.

Twice Colt was sure they’d taken a wrong turn and gotten lost.

But Evelyn’s sense of direction was better than his, and she guided them back on course both times.

Dr.

Mitchell, the veterinarian, took one look at them, half frozen and desperate, and agreed to make the house call despite the weather.

He followed them back to the ranch, examined Bessie, and diagnosed a twisted gut that needed immediate treatment.

“She’ll probably make it,” he said, mixing up a drench to pour down the cow’s throat.

“You caught it in time.

Another day and I’d be telling you to slaughter her for meat.

” The treatment cost them $15 they couldn’t afford to spend.

But Bessie recovered, started giving milk again a week later, and Colt knew they’d made the right choice.

That night, huddled close to the fire with Evelyn pressed against his side, Colt said, “Thank you for coming with me today.

Where else would I be?” “Safe and warm inside instead of risking your life in a blizzard.

We’re partners, Colt.

That means we face things together.

The good and the bad and the absolutely terrifying rides through snowstorms to save stubborn cows.

” He kissed the top of her head.

“Best partner I could ask for.

Only partner you’ve got, only one I want.

By February, Evelyn realized she was pregnant.

She knew before she told Colt.

Had known for weeks, actually, but kept it to herself while she processed what it meant.

A baby would change everything.

Change their finances, their plans, their entire future.

She broke the news on a Sunday afternoon while they were checking fence lines, looking for damage from the winter storms.

I’m expecting, she said abruptly, not looking at him.

Colt stopped walking.

You’re what? Expecting.

Pregnant.

Going to have a baby.

She forced herself to meet his eyes.

Probably sometime in August, if my calculations are right.

For a long moment, Colt just stared at her.

Then a smile spread across his face, wide and genuine, and full of a joy so pure it made Evelyn’s chest tight.

We’re having a baby, he said like he was testing out the words.

We’re having a baby, she confirmed.

Are you happy about it? Happy? He picked her up and spun her around, laughing like a fool.

I’m terrified and thrilled and completely unprepared, but yes, I’m happy.

Are you? Evelyn let herself smile.

Yes, scared out of my mind, but happy.

We need to build a cradle and we should add another room to the cabin.

and Colt, we have 6 months.

We have time.

6 months isn’t enough time.

There’s so much to do.

Watching him mentally rearrange their entire lives to accommodate this baby, Evelyn felt something settle in her chest.

A certainty that maybe, just maybe, everything was going to be all right.

The pregnancy was hard.

Evelyn spent the first 3 months violently sick, unable to keep down anything but weak tea and dry bread.

Her sewing income dropped because she couldn’t work through the nausea, which meant they had even less money than before.

But Colt picked up the slack, took extra jobs, stretched their food further, took over tasks Evelyn usually handled so she could rest.

He built the cradle from scrap lumber, carved it smooth so there were no rough edges, and painted it with whitewash he’d traded labor for.

Mrs.

Henderson and the other women in town rallied around Evelyn in ways that surprised her.

Mrs.

Murphy brought over fabric scraps for baby clothes.

Mrs.

Patterson shared her mother’s recipe for settling stomach sickness.

Even the church ladies who’d once looked through Evelyn like she was invisible now stopped to ask how she was feeling and offer advice.

You’re part of the community now, Mrs.

Henderson explained one afternoon while helping Evelyn cut patterns for baby gowns.

You’re not just that poor girl from the boarding house anymore.

You’re Colt Harlo’s wife.

You’ve built a business.

You’re starting a family.

You’ve earned your place here.

Evelyn blinked back tears.

Pregnancy had made her emotional about everything and realized it was true.

Somewhere along the way, without her noticing, she’d stopped being an outsider.

She belonged to Broken Creek now, and Broken Creek belonged to her.

The baby came on a sweltering August afternoon, 3 weeks earlier than expected and significantly more dramatic than anyone had planned.

Evelyn’s water broke while she was in the garden picking beans.

Colt was checking cattle in the far pasture and didn’t hear her initial call.

By the time he came back for lunch and found her gripping the fence rail through a contraction, her face white with pain, the baby was well on its way.

“Get Mrs.

Henderson,” Evelyn gasped.

“Now.

” Colt rode faster than he’d ever ridden, burst into Mrs.

Henderson’s house wildeyed and incoherent and somehow conveyed that Evelyn was in labor and needed help immediately.

Mrs.

Henderson, bless her practical soul, grabbed her medical kit and followed without hesitation.

The labor lasted 8 hours.

8 hours of Evelyn’s screams that Colt could hear even outside the cabin.

Eight hours of pacing and praying and cursing himself for doing this to her.

Eight hours of the most profound helplessness he’d ever experienced.

Finally, as the sun was setting, he heard a new sound, thin and outraged and unmistakably alive.

A baby’s cry.

Mrs.

Henderson appeared at the door, exhausted, but smiling.

You can come in now.

You have a daughter.

Colt walked into the cabin on shaking legs.

Evelyn lay in their bed, sweaty and pale and more beautiful than he’d ever seen her, holding a tiny bundle wrapped in one of the blankets she’d sewn during her pregnancy.

Meet Margaret,” she said softly.

“Maggie for short.

” Colt approached slowly, afraid to disturb this moment.

“The baby, his daughter, was impossibly small with a scrunched red face and tiny fists waving in the air.

” “She’s perfect,” he whispered.

“She’s loud and demanding and probably going to make our lives infinitely more complicated,” Evelyn said.

“But she was smiling, just like her father.

” “Can I hold her?” Evelyn carefully transferred the baby into his arms.

Maggie immediately started fussing, but Colt just held her close, marveling at this tiny person he and Evelyn had created.

“We made this,” he said in wonder.

“We did.

We made a whole person.

” “We did, and now we have to keep her alive, which is going to be significantly harder than making her.

” But Evelyn was smiling, and Maggie was healthy, and Colt felt like his heart might explode from the sheer enormity of what he was feeling.

The first months of parenthood were a special kind of chaos that no one could have prepared them for.

Maggie was collicky, which meant she screamed for hours every evening, no matter what they tried.

Evelyn was recovering from childbirth and couldn’t do heavy work.

Money was tighter than ever because Evelyn had to pause her sewing business to care for the baby.

They took shifts.

Colt would handle the early morning so Evelyn could sleep.

Evelyn would take the afternoon so Colt could work the ranch.

They both walked around in a sleep-deprived fog, snapping at each other over trivial things, apologizing, and trying again.

But there were good moments, too.

Maggie’s first smile, which made all the sleepless nights worth it.

The way she’d grab Colt’s finger with her tiny hand and hold on like she’d never let go.

Watching Evelyn nurse the baby in the rocking chair Colt had built, singing soft lullabibis in a voice he’d never heard her use before.

By October, they’d found a rhythm.

By November, Maggie was sleeping through most nights.

By December, Evelyn had started taking sewing commissions again, working with the baby sleeping in a basket beside her.

On their second wedding anniversary, Colt came in from the barn to find Evelyn had made a special dinner.

Nothing fancy, just their usual fair, but served on the good plates they rarely used.

“What’s the occasion?” he asked.

“Two years married, still standing, still together.

That seems worth celebrating.

Colt pulled her into his arms, careful not to wake the baby sleeping in her cradle nearby.

Best two years of my life.

Even with all the struggles.

Especially with all the struggles, because we faced them together.

Evelyn kissed him soft and sweet.

And Colt thought about that first Sunday walk when he’d been so afraid of saying the wrong thing, of pushing too hard, of losing her before he really had her.

Now she was his wife, the mother of his child, his partner in every sense of the word.

“I love you,” he said.

“I love you, too, even when you’re impossible.

Especially when I’m impossible.

” She laughed, and the sound filled their small cabin with warmth.

By the spring of 1885, the ranch was turning a profit.

Not a large profit.

They weren’t going to get rich anytime soon, but enough that they could meet their obligations and even save a little.

The cattle herd had grown to 25 head.

Evelyn’s sewing business had a 6- week waiting list.

They’d added another room to the cabin and were planning a proper barn for next year.

And one morning in April, Evelyn told Colt she was pregnant again.

“Already?” Colt said, looking at Maggie, who was just starting to walk and getting into everything.

“Apparently?” “Are you happy about it?” Evelyn thought about it honestly, overwhelmed, tired, just thinking about it.

But yes, happy.

You same.

Terrified and thrilled in equal measure.

We’re getting good at that combination.

They were somehow without either of them quite noticing when it happened.

They’d built a life not the life Colt had originally imagined when he dreamed of owning land that had been a solitary dream about independence and self-sufficiency.

This was better.

Messier and harder and infinitely more complicated, but better because he wasn’t alone anymore.

Neither of them was.

They had each other.

They had their daughter.

They had another baby on the way.

They had 20 acres of good land, a growing herd, a business that worked, and a future that looked solid.

Most importantly, they had respect.

Colt had learned to see Evelyn as a full partner, to trust her judgment, to ask her opinion before making decisions that affected them both.

Evelyn had learned to accept help without seeing it as weakness, to trust that Colt meant what he said, to believe in a future that didn’t require her to be completely self-sufficient, to feel safe.

It wasn’t perfect.

They still fought about money, about priorities, about whose turn it was to deal with a crying baby at 3:00 in the morning.

But they’d learned to fight fair, to apologize when they were wrong, to compromise when both of them were right.

They’d learned to be married, and that was harder and more valuable than anything else they’d learned.

On a Sunday in May, they walked their old path along Willow Creek.

Maggie balanced on Colt’s shoulders, grabbing at his hat and giggling.

The cottonwoods were green again, the creek running high with snow melt, everything alive and growing.

“Do you remember our first walk here?” Evelyn asked.

How could I forget? You barely spoke to me.

Looked at me like you were calculating how fast you could run if necessary.

I was terrified of you.

I know.

Took me a while to figure out it wasn’t me specifically you were afraid of, just what I represented.

And what did you represent? Risk, change, the possibility that things might get better, which was almost scarier than things staying the same because at least you knew how to survive the same.

Evelyn took his hand.

I’m glad I took the risk.

Me, too.

Maggie grabbed at a low-hanging branch, missed, and laughed at her own failure.

She was fearless in a way neither of her parents had ever been, and Colt hoped she’d stay that way.

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