Daniel stood and turned toward home, but he paused to look back at the neighboring ranch one more time.

The lamp was lit in May’s window, a small warm point in the darkness.

He thought about the black stallion, trapped by grief and fear.

He thought about the woman in the red dress, punishing herself for crimes she didn’t commit.

He thought about himself, two years a widowerower, still learning how to live in a world that had moved on without him.

And he thought about what might happen if three broken things stopped trying to fix themselves and just learn to exist together in all their sharp and unhealed edges.

It wasn’t a solution.

It wasn’t even a plan.

But as Daniel walked home under the watching stars, he thought it might be enough.

The morning after May canceled the challenges, Daniel woke to find frost on the windows and silence where there should have been distant voices.

Sunday had come again, but this time there would be no riders, no spectacle, no men treating grief like a game to be won.

He made coffee and stood on his porch, watching smoke rise from May’s chimney in a thin gray line.

The valley was quiet except for the wind moving through the dry grass, a sound like whispered secrets.

He wondered what she was thinking, alone in that house with a decision made and the weight of an empty day ahead.

By the time he reached the creek, she was already there.

But she wasn’t sitting peacefully as she usually did.

She was standing at the edge of the water, her arms wrapped around herself, staring toward her ranch with an expression that made Daniel’s chest tighten.

“Second thoughts?” he asked gently.

May shook her head.

“No, not about stopping the challenges.

” She turned to look at him and he saw fear in her eyes.

But now I don’t know what comes next.

For 6 months, every Sunday I knew exactly what would happen.

Men would come, they would fail, and I would stand there and watch.

It was terrible, but it was something.

Now, there’s just nothing.

Daniel understood that particular kind of vertigo, the moment when you stepped off the edge of grief’s rituals and realized you had no idea how to fill the space they left behind.

He’d felt it the first time he’d woken up and forgotten just for a second that Sarah was gone.

The joy of that forgetting had been immediately swallowed by the crash of remembering.

And for weeks afterward, he’d been terrified of those blank morning moments.

Nothing is harder than something, he said.

Even when the something hurts.

Yes.

May’s voice was barely above a whisper.

Exactly that.

They stood in silence for a while.

The sun was climbing higher, burning off the frost, turning the world from silver to gold.

A hawk circled overhead, riding thermals Daniel couldn’t see, and he watched it until it disappeared beyond the ridge.

“I need to check my cattle today,” he said finally.

“North pasture.

It’s good riding country up there.

You can see three valleys from the high point.

You want to come? Might help to get away from the ranch for a bit.

” May look surprised.

I don’t ride anymore.

Not since Leang died.

We can walk if you prefer.

It’s only about 2 mi.

She hesitated and he could see her weighing it.

The comfort of isolation against the risk of something new.

Finally, she nodded.

“All right, but I need to change into proper clothes first.

” “I’ll wait here,” Daniel said.

She returned 20 minutes later, wearing dark cotton trousers and a heavy jacket, her long hair braided and pinned up.

Without the red dress, she looked younger, less like a monument to loss and more like a woman trying to find her footing in unfamiliar terrain.

They walked along this creek first, following it upstream, where the water ran faster and clearer over smooth stones.

Daniel pointed out landmarks, an old lightning struck pine that served as a boundary marker, a cluster of rocks where he’d once found arrowheads, the remains of a line cabin from the early days when this valley had been open range.

You know this land well, May observed.

Spent two years learning it, Daniel said.

Sarah used to say I talk to the dirt more than I talked to her.

He smiled at the memory.

She wasn’t entirely wrong.

Leang was the same way.

He could look at soil and tell you what would grow there, what wouldn’t.

He knew every inch of our land.

Her voice caught slightly.

I never paid enough attention.

I was always looking at what was missing instead of what was there.

And now, now I’m trying to see it the way he did, but it’s hard.

Everywhere I look, I see his work, his hands, his vision.

I don’t know where I fit in any of it.

They climbed steadily as they talked, the land rising beneath them in long, sweeping folds.

The air grew thinner and cleaner, carrying the scent of sage and pine.

By the time they reached the high point Daniel had mentioned, they were both breathing hard, but the view was worth it.

Three valleys spread out below them like a map drawn in grass and stone and shadow.

To the east, Thornfield sat small and distant, barely more than a collection of toy buildings.

To the west the mountains rose in jagged peaks, already white with early snow.

And to the north the land rolled on forever, empty and endless and beautiful.

“Oh,” May said softly.

It was all she said, but it was enough.

They sat on a flat boulder, passing a canteen of water back and forth, saying nothing.

Daniel had learned that May didn’t need conversation to fill silence.

She was comfortable with quiet in a way that reminded him of himself.

It was one of the things he’d come to value about their mornings together.

I used to hate this view, May said eventually.

When Leang would bring me up here, I’d look at all that emptiness and feel like I was disappearing into it, like I’d become so small the world would forget I existed.

And now she considered the question, her eyes scanning the valleys below.

Now I think maybe that’s not such a terrible thing.

Being small, being forgotten, maybe it means you’re finally free to be whatever you choose instead of whatever everyone expects.

Daniel nodded slowly.

Sarah believed in making noise.

She thought if you were quiet, people would walk right over you.

But after she died, I found I didn’t have any noise left in me.

For a long time, I thought that meant I was broken.

He paused.

But maybe I was just learning a different way of taking up space.

By being silent, by being steady, present, not trying to fill every moment with something big.

He looked at her.

You do that, too.

You know, you’re one of the most present people I’ve ever met.

May blinked, clearly surprised.

I always thought I was running away from memory, from pain, from the future.

Maybe you can do both.

Be present and be running.

At least until you figure out where you’re actually trying to go.

She smiled at that.

A real smile that reached her eyes.

You have a strange way of making complicated things sound simple, Daniel Cross.

That’s because most complicated things are simple at the core.

We just add all the other layers ourselves.

They sat on the boulder until the sun was high overhead, talking about everything and nothing.

May told him about growing up in a village outside Guangjo, about learning English from missionary teachers, about the terror and excitement of getting on a ship to America with nothing but a small trunk of belongings.

Daniel told her about growing up on a struggling farm in Missouri, about Sarah’s determination to head west, about the first time he’d seen this valley and known it would be home.

Their stories wound around each other like the creek they’d followed up the mountain, separate but parallel, occasionally touching, always flowing in the same direction.

When they finally stood to head back down, May paused and looked at him.

Thank you, she said.

For this, for getting me away from the ranch.

Anytime, Daniel said.

And he meant it.

The walk back down was easier, gravity pulling them forward, their legs remembering the path.

But as they approached the creek where they’d started, May suddenly stopped.

Do you hear that? Daniel listened.

At first, he heard nothing unusual.

Wind, water, birds.

Then he caught it.

the high distressed sound of a horse calling out.

They both started running.

By the time they reached May’s ranch, the source of the sound was obvious.

Haun was in the corral, but he wasn’t alone.

A young mayor had somehow gotten into the enclosure, probably jumped the fence on the eastern side where the rails were lower, and the stallion was frantic.

He was circling the mayor head high, calling out with a sound that was part warning, part desperation.

“That’s Mrs.

Patterson’s mayor,” May said, breathing hard.

“She must have broken loose from their property.

” The mayor was clearly terrified of the agitated stallion.

She huddled against the far fence, eyes rolling white, while Hayun paced between her and the gate like a sentry guarding a prisoner.

“We need to separate them before someone gets hurt,” Daniel said.

“You have a rope?” May ran to the barn and came back with two coils of good rope.

Daniel took one and studied the situation.

Hi Yun was too worked up to approach directly and the mayor was too scared to respond to normal coaxing.

I’ll try to get the mayor’s attention, Daniel said.

Draw her toward the gate.

Can you keep Hya distracted on the other side? May hesitated.

I haven’t been in the corral with him since Leang died.

You don’t have to go in.

Just stand by the fence on the far side.

Maybe call to him.

He knows your voice.

She nodded, her face pale but determined.

While she moved into position, Daniel climbed carefully over the fence on the side closest to the mayor.

He moved slowly, keeping his body language soft and non-threatening.

“Easy, girl,” he murmured.

“Nobody’s going to hurt you.

We’re just going to get you home.

” The mayor’s ears flicked toward him, but she didn’t move.

Behind him, he could hear Hyun’s breathing, harsh and rapid.

The stallion was watching every move Daniel made, ready to charge if he perceived a threat.

Then May’s voice rang out, clear and strong, speaking in Chinese.

Daniel didn’t understand the words, but the tone was unmistakable, gentle, soothing, familiar.

It was the voice of someone calling a loved one home.

Hun’s head swung toward her.

For a moment, he stood perfectly still, every muscle tense.

Then he took a step toward the far fence, toward May.

Daniel didn’t waste the opportunity.

He moved quickly but smoothly, getting the rope around the mayor’s neck and leading her toward the open gate.

She resisted for a second, then seemed to understand and followed him.

Within moments, they were both outside the corral, and Daniel was closing the gate behind them.

Hyun stood in the center of the enclosure, his sides heaving, watching May.

She stood at the fence, her hands gripping the top rail, tears streaming down her face.

“You came to me,” she whispered.

“You heard me, and you came.

” The stallion took another step toward her, then another.

Slowly, cautiously, he approached the fence until he was close enough that May could have reached out and touched him.

She didn’t.

She just stood there crying and speaking softly in Chinese, while the horse, who’d refused all contact for 6 months, stood within arms reach and listened.

Daniel quietly led the mayor away, giving them space.

He’d return her to the Patterson ranch later.

Right now, something more important was happening, and he wasn’t going to interrupt it.

He was halfway to his own property when May caught up with him.

Her face was flushed, her eyes red, but there was something light in her expression that he’d never seen before.

“He remembered,” she said, slightly breathless.

“My voice, the words I used to say to him.

He remembered.

” “Animals don’t forget the people who matter to them,” Daniel said gently.

“I thought he hated me.

I thought he blamed me for Leang’s death.

He was scared just like you were.

Sometimes fear looks a lot like hate.

May pressed her hands to her face, and for a moment, Daniel thought she might break down completely.

Instead, she took a deep breath and lowered her hands, composing herself with visible effort.

“I think,” she said carefully, that I’ve been wrong about many things.

About what Haun needed, about what I needed.

She looked at Daniel about being alone.

You don’t have to be alone, Daniel said quietly.

Not if you don’t want to be.

Is that what we’re doing? Not being alone.

I think so.

If that’s all right with you.

May nodded slowly.

It’s more than all right.

It’s She struggled for the word.

Necessary.

Like water or air.

I didn’t realize how much until now.

They stood in the long grass between their properties, the afternoon sun warm on their faces, and something unspoken passed between them.

Not romance.

It was too soon for that, too fragile, but recognition.

The understanding that they were both trying to survive the same storm, and maybe surviving was easier when you weren’t doing it alone.

I should return this mayor, Daniel said finally, gesturing to the animal grazing peacefully beside him.

And I should check the fence line, see how she got in.

May paused.

“But tomorrow morning, the creek.

” “I’ll bring the coffee,” Daniel said.

That night, Daniel lay in bed and thought about the look on May’s face when Hyune had responded to her voice.

It was the look of someone discovering they hadn’t lost everything after all.

That something they’d thought was gone forever might still be retrievable if they were brave enough to reach for it.

He thought about Sarah, about the fight they’d had, about all the words he’d never said.

For two years, he’d carried the weight of those unspoken things, convinced they mattered.

Convinced they’d made a difference in the end.

But maybe they hadn’t.

Maybe Sarah had known he loved her despite the argument, despite his pride, despite all his failings.

Maybe love didn’t require perfect words or perfect timing.

Maybe it just required showing up day after day and trying.

The thought was both comforting and terrifying.

The next week brought the first real cold.

Frost covered the ground each morning, and ice formed along the creek’s edge in delicate crystalline patterns.

Daniel and May met as usual, but now they came prepared with heavier coats and gloves, and they stayed a little longer each time, as if reluctant to return to their separate solitudes.

May talked about Hun more now, how she’d started spending time near the corral, not trying to touch him, but just being present.

how the stallion would watch her from a distance, sometimes approaching the fence when she spoke in Chinese, sometimes staying far away.

“It’s like we’re learning each other again,” she said one morning, “As if we’re both different people now than we were before.

” “You probably are,” Daniel said.

“Grief changes everything, even the things you think should stay the same.

Did it change you after Sarah died?” Daniel considered the question.

I think it stripped away a lot of things that didn’t matter.

made me quieter, more careful with my words.

Sarah was always the talker, the one who filled rooms with energy.

Without her, I had to figure out who I was in the silence.

And who are you? I’m still figuring that out.

He looked at her.

But I think I’m someone who values the quiet now.

Someone who doesn’t need noise to know he’s alive.

May smiled.

I think that’s a good person to be.

They were sitting closer than usual, shoulders almost touching, sharing warmth against the cold.

Daniel was acutely aware of her presence.

The way she wrapped her hands around her coffee cup.

The way she tucked stray hair behind her ear.

The way her breath made small clouds in the frigid air.

I’ve been thinking, May said suddenly, about the ranch, Leang’s ranch.

She paused, correcting herself.

My ranch? I’ve been thinking I want to make it something different.

Not erase what he built, but add to it.

Make it mine, too.

What did you have in mind? I’m not sure yet.

But I know I can’t keep it as a museum to his memory.

That’s not living.

That’s just existing in the past.

She looked at him.

You said once that Sarah wanted you to buy your ranch, that it was her vision.

It was.

Do you still run it the way she would have wanted? Daniel thought about that.

No, he admitted.

I tried to at first, but I’m not Sarah.

I don’t have her ambitions or her energy, so I made it smaller, simpler, something I could manage on my own.

Did that feel like betraying her? At first, yes.

But then I realized she’d wanted me to have a life here, not to preserve her vision perfectly.

She’d have understood that plans change, that people adapt.

May nodded slowly, as if confirming something she’d already suspected.

I think I need to give myself permission to do the same thing, to change things, to make mistakes.

You don’t need permission, Daniel said.

It’s your land, your life.

But it feels like I do, like I’m asking forgiveness from someone who can’t grant it.

Then maybe you need to forgive yourself instead.

The words hung in the cold air between them.

May looked away, blinking hard.

And Daniel gave her the space to compose herself.

It was something he’d learned in their morning meetings.

When to push and when to wait, when to speak, and when to simply be present.

I want to plant a garden, May said finally.

In the spring, vegetables, herbs, flowers, things that grow and change and live.

She smiled slightly.

Leang always said the growing season was too short here, that it wasn’t practical.

But I don’t care about practical anymore.

I care about things that bloom.

I’ll help, Daniel offered.

If you want, you would do that? Sure.

I’m not much of a gardener, but I can dig holes and haul dirt with the best of them.

May laughed, a sound that was becoming more common now.

Then, yes, I would like that very much.

Over the following days, their routine expanded.

They still met at dawn for coffee and conversation, but now Daniel found himself staying longer, helping with small tasks around May’s ranch.

A fence that needed mending, a door that hung crooked, a water trough that had cracked in the cold.

He noticed things about her property that he hadn’t seen from a distance.

The careful way Leang had designed the barn for maximum efficiency.

The Chinese character is carved into the doorframe of the house, protection symbols, May explained, meant to keep evil spirits away.

The small altar in the corner of the main room with Leang’s photograph surrounded by offerings of fruit and incense.

I know it seems strange to you, May said when she caught him looking at the altar.

This tradition of honoring the dead.

It doesn’t seem strange, Daniel said.

Just different from what I know.

In my culture, we believe the dead are still with us, still part of the family.

We feed them, talk to them, include them in important decisions.

She touched the photograph gently.

But sometimes I wonder if I’ve included Leang so much that I’ve left no room for anyone else, even myself.

What would he want, do you think, if he could tell you? May was quiet for a long moment.

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