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.

He’d want me to be happy, to stop punishing myself, to she trailed off, then started again.

Before he died, he used to say that I worried too much about what other people thought, that I should trust my own judgment more.

Be braver.

She smiled sadly.

I think he’d tell me to stop asking what he would want and start asking what I want.

And what do you want? She looked at Daniel and something shifted in her expression.

I want to stop being afraid of the future, of change, of She broke off, shaking her head.

Of many things.

Daniel understood what she wasn’t saying.

He felt it, too.

This tentative thing growing between them, fragile as new ice, and just as dangerous to test too soon.

Fear makes sense, he said carefully, after what we’ve both been through.

But it doesn’t have to be the only thing we feel.

No, May agreed.

It doesn’t.

They stood in front of the altar, Leang’s photograph watching them with eyes captured forever in a moment of joy.

And Daniel felt the weight of the past pressing against the possibility of the future.

It wasn’t a comfortable feeling, but it was honest.

That Sunday, what would have been another day of challenges and failures, May asked Daniel to help her with something.

When he arrived at her ranch, she was standing by Hyun’s corral with a saddle in her arms.

I want to try, she said simply, not to break him or prove anything, just to see if he’ll let me close again.

Are you sure? No, but I think that’s the point.

Being unsure and doing it anyway.

Daniel helped her carry the saddle to the fence.

Hun watched from the center of the corral, alert, but not agitated.

May opened the gate slowly, and for a moment, Daniel thought the horse might bolt.

Instead, Haune held his ground.

May entered the corral alone.

Daniel stayed by the fence, ready to intervene if needed, but knowing this was something she had to do herself.

She approached Hyune slowly, speaking in soft Chinese.

The stallion’s ears swiveled toward her, tracking her movement.

When she was 10 ft away, she stopped and simply stood there, the saddle still in her arms.

I’m sorry, she said, and Daniel realized she was speaking English now for his benefit.

Or maybe just because the words needed to be said aloud.

I’m sorry I was angry with you.

I’m sorry I let those men hurt you.

I’m sorry I didn’t understand that you were grieving, too.

Haun took a step toward her.

May’s breath caught, but she didn’t move.

The stallion took another step, then another, until he was close enough to smell the saddle, to see the tears on her face.

Slowly, carefully, May set the saddle on the ground.

Then she reached out one hand, palm up, offering nothing but presents.

Hun stretched his neck forward and touched his muzzle to her palm.

The sound May made was half sobb, half laugh.

She stood perfectly still while the horse breathed against her skin, relearning her scent, remembering.

Then, moving as if through water, she raised her other hand and gently touched his neck.

The stallion didn’t pull away.

Daniel watched as woman and horse stood together in the autumn sunlight, reconnecting across a chasm of loss.

He thought about all the times he’d stood alone in his own grief, convinced he’d never feel whole again.

He thought about Sarah’s laugh, about Leang’s dreams, about all the people who’d loved them and been loved in return.

And he thought that maybe healing wasn’t about fixing what was broken.

Maybe it was about learning to hold the broken pieces gently to honor what was lost while still making room for what might come next.

May stayed in the corral for nearly an hour, just standing with Hun, touching him, speaking softly.

She didn’t try to saddle him or ride him.

She simply reconnected, rebuilding trust one gentle moment at a time.

When she finally emerged, her face was stre with tears, but luminous with something that looked like hope.

He let me touch him,” she said, as if Daniel might not have witnessed it.

“After all this time, he let me back in.

” “He never really shut you out,” Daniel said gently.

“He just needed time to find his way back.

Same as you.

” May looked at him for a long moment, and in her eyes, Daniel saw a question forming.

“But before she could ask it, the sound of hoof beats interrupted them.

” A writer was approaching from the direction of town.

Samuel Garrett on his old gray geling, moving faster than Daniel had seen him move in years.

“Daniel, Mrs.

May,” Samuel called out as he approached.

“There’s trouble in town.

Patterson’s boy got into it with some drifters at the saloon.

Things got ugly.

They’re saying there might be a hanging.

” The words hit like cold water.

Daniel and May exchanged a glance, and without discussion, both moved toward Daniel’s barn, where his horses were kept.

Tell us everything,” Daniel said as he saddled his beguilding with quick, efficient movements.

“Patterson’s boy, young Tom, the eldest.

He caught three men trying to steal from his father’s store,” Samuel explained, his words tumbling out fast.

“Called them out on it.

They took exception.

Ended up in a fight that spilled into the street.

Tom’s just a kid, barely 20, but he got some good hits in before they beat him down.

Now those drifters are saying he pulled a knife first, that it was self-defense.

They’ve got the sheriff convinced, and there’s talk of stringing the boy up before anyone can sort out the truth.

May had moved to the barn and was already leading out Leang’s old mayor, a steady sorrel that hadn’t been ridden in months.

She worked quickly, checking the saddle and bridal with practiced hands.

“You’re coming?” Daniel asked.

“Tom Patterson is barely more than a child,” May said.

and his mother lent me flower when I had none last winter.

Of course, I’m coming.

” Within minutes, all three of them were mounted and riding hard toward town.

The cold air stung Daniel’s face, and his mind raced ahead, trying to think of what they might face when they arrived.

Thornfield wasn’t a lawless town, but it wasn’t civilized either.

Justice here was often quick and brutal, and a scared sheriff could be swayed by a loud crowd.

If those drifters had friends, if they’d managed to turn public opinion against young Tom.

They rode through the valley as the sun began its descent toward the western mountains.

Three riders racing against both distance and time.

And Daniel couldn’t help but think that this morning had started with hope and healing, with a woman reconnecting with her horse and tentative plans for a spring garden.

Now they [clears throat] were riding toward violence and the threat of death.

Because that was the other truth about this valley.

That beauty and brutality existed side by side, and you never knew which one would find you first.

They smelled the smoke before they saw the town.

Not the clean smoke of cook fires or hearths, but something thicker, angrier, the smell of a crowd working itself into fury.

As they crested the final rise, Thornfield spread out below them in the fading light, and Daniel’s stomach tightened at what he saw.

The main street was packed with people, far more than should have been there on an ordinary Sunday evening.

Torches flickered in the growing darkness, casting wild shadows against the buildings.

And in the center of it all, just visible through the crowd, a young man stood with his hands bound, his face bloodied, while three hard-looking strangers argued loudly with Sheriff Coleman.

“We need to get closer,” Daniel said, spurring his horse forward.

They rode straight down the middle of the street, and the crowd parted reluctantly to let them through.

Daniel felt the weight of dozens of eyes on them, curious, hostile, uncertain.

Beside him, May sat straight in her saddle, her face composed despite the tension radiating from her shoulders.

On his other side, Samuel kept up a steady stream of greetings to people he knew, using familiarity as a weapon against mob mentality.

Sheriff Coleman looked relieved when he saw them approaching.

He was a decent man, Daniel knew, but not a strong one.

The kind of law man who could handle Saturday night drunks, but wilted in the face of real trouble.

Daniel.

Samuel.

Coleman’s eyes flicked to May, and Daniel saw him struggle with how to address her.

Ma’am, glad you’re here.

This situation’s getting out of hand.

What happened? Daniel dismounted, keeping his voice calm and level.

The worst thing you could do with an angry crowd was add more anger to the mix.

One of the drifters stepped forward before Coleman could answer.

He was tall and rangy with a scar that ran from his left eyebrow to his jaw and eyes that had seen too much violence to be phased by more.

What happened is this little bastard tried to kill us.

We were minding our own business in the saloon when he came at us with a knife, calling us thieves.

We defended ourselves, nothing more.

That’s a lie.

The shout came from young Tom Patterson, his voice cracking with desperation.

Blood ran from a cut above his eye and his right arm hung at an odd angle.

I saw them coming out of my father’s store through the back door.

They had our goods in their hands.

Tobacco, ammunition, cash from the strong box.

I confronted them and they attacked me.

I never drew a knife until one of them pulled one first.

The boy is lying to save his own skin, another drifter said.

This one was shorter with a cruel twist to his mouth.

We got witnesses who will say different, bos.

What witnesses? Samuel demanded.

Who saw what happened? A few men in the crowd shifted uncomfortably, but no one spoke up.

Daniel noticed that most of the faces he recognized, the respectable towns people, the ranchers and merchants were hanging back, while the front of the crowd was filled with drifters, gamblers, and the kind of men who appeared when trouble was brewing and disappeared when honest work needed doing.

The boy started it,” the scarred drifter said again.

“And in a fair fight, a man’s got a right to defend himself.

Now, the way I see it, attempted murder is a hanging offense, and justice should be swift.

” A murmur of agreement rippled through parts of the crowd.

Daniel felt the situation tilting toward violence, momentum building like water behind a dam.

Hold on.

Daniel’s voice cut through the noise, quiet, but carrying.

Nobody’s hanging anybody until we’ve sorted out the facts.

And who the hell are you? The scarred man demanded.

Daniel Cross.

I ranch north of here and I’m saying we take a breath and think this through.

We don’t need some rancher telling us how to handle town business.

The shorter drifter said, but there was calculation in his eyes now.

He was measuring Daniel, trying to decide if he was a threat.

Maybe not, Daniel agreed.

But you also don’t need a lynch mob when there’s a sheriff standing right here with a jail that works just fine for holding prisoners until a proper trial can be arranged.

“A trial could take weeks,” someone in the crowd called out.

“We can’t have criminals just sitting around eating our food and wasting our time.

” “Better than hanging an innocent boy,” May said.

Her voice was clear and strong, and the unexpectedness of a Chinese woman speaking up in the middle of a mob caused a momentary silence.

The scarred drifter’s eyes narrowed.

“This ain’t your concern, woman.

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