Your fights are my fights.

My fights are yours.

That’s what it means to build something together.

Tears burned Ruby’s eyes.

I don’t know how to do this.

Neither do I.

Clayton’s thumb brushed across her knuckles.

But we’ll figure it out one day at a time.

That night, Ruby dreamed of her stepfather’s fists, and she woke screaming.

Clayton was there in seconds, standing in her doorway, keeping his distance, but ready.

Ruby, you’re safe.

You’re at Blackwood Ranch.

He can’t get to you here.

She was shaking so hard her teeth chattered.

I’m sorry.

I didn’t mean to wake you.

Don’t apologize for nightmares.

Clayton moved closer slowly, giving her time to refuse.

Can I come in? She nodded and he sat on the edge of her bed, not touching, but present.

Want to talk about it? No.

Yes.

I don’t know.

Ruby wrapped her arms around herself.

I keep seeing his face, keep feeling his fists, and then I wake up and for a second I forget I’m free.

And the fear is so real.

I know.

Clayton’s voice was rough.

After the war, I used to wake up screaming.

Took years before the nightmares stopped.

Did they stop? Mostly.

Sometimes they still come back, but they get easier to bear when you’re not facing them alone.

Ruby looked at him through tear blurred eyes.

I’m not alone anymore, am I? No.

Clayton’s hand covered hers.

You’re not alone.

They stayed like that until Dawn crept through the window.

Ruby’s hand and Clayton’s neither speaking, both understanding that some comfort lived in silence more than words.

When the first light touched the horizon, Clayton stood slowly.

“I’ll make coffee,” he said.

“Come out when you’re ready,” Ruby dressed with shaking hands, her body exhausted from the nightmare, but her mind oddly clear.

Something had shifted in the darkness.

Some barrier had fallen.

She’d let Clayton see her fear, and he hadn’t turned away, hadn’t called her weak, hadn’t used it against her.

In the kitchen, he handed her coffee without comment, and they drank together as the ranch woke around them.

Marcus appeared at the door, took one look at Ruby’s face, and nodded at Clayton.

“I’ll handle the morning chores, boss.

You two take your time.

” After Marcus left, Clayton sat down his cup.

You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to, but I’m here if you do.

Ruby studied the dark liquid in her mug.

My stepfather used to lock me in the cellar when I disobeyed, sometimes for days.

No light, no food, just darkness and rats.

Her voice came out flat, controlled.

That’s where I learned to be quiet, to disappear inside my own head, to survive.

Clayton’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t interrupt.

When my mother died, there was no one left to stop him.

He’d come home drunk and angry, looking for someone to blame for his failures.

I was convenient.

Ruby’s hands trembled around the cup.

I tried to leave twice before.

Both times he found me.

Both times he made sure I understood what happened to ungrateful daughters who forgot their place.

How did you finally get away? I waited until he was unconscious.

Then I took every penny my mother had hidden, packed one bag, and ran.

He caught me at the train station, tried to drag me back.

But this time, Ruby’s voice cracked.

This time, I hit him hard enough that he let go, and I didn’t look back.

Clayton reached across the table, his hand open, waiting.

Ruby placed her palm in his.

“You’re the bravest person I’ve ever met,” he said quietly.

“And that bastard will never touch you again.

I’ll make sure of it.

You can’t promise that.

If he comes looking, then he’ll find me first.

” Clayton’s eyes were hard, and I promise you, Ruby, he won’t like what he finds.

A knock at the door interrupted them.

Marcus stood there, his expression grim.

Boss, there’s someone here to see you.

Says it’s urgent.

Clayton stood, his hand moving instinctively toward the rifle.

Who? Territorial marshall.

Name’s Garrett.

Ruby’s stomach dropped.

The marshall? Why would he stay here? Clayton’s voice was calm but firm.

Let me handle this.

She watched through the window as Clayton met with a gray-haired man in a dusty suit.

They spoke for several minutes, their voices too low to hear, but the marshall kept glancing toward the house.

Finally, Clayton shook his hand and walked back inside, his face unreadable.

“What did he want?” Ruby asked.

Jake Morrison filed a complaint.

Says I assaulted him without provocation.

Says I threatened his family.

Clayton’s voice was tight.

Marshall came to get my side of the story.

What did you tell him? The truth.

That Morrison’s cattle broke through our fence.

That his men were waiting to ambush us.

That Jake made threats against you.

Clayton poured himself more coffee.

Garrett knows the Morrisons, knows their reputation.

He’s not pressing charges, but he warned me to stay away from their property.

That’s it.

After everything they did? Welcome to territorial justice.

Clayton’s smile was bitter.

Men like Jack Morrison own half the county.

They don’t face consequences like regular folk.

Ruby felt anger surge through her chest.

So, he just gets away with it? I didn’t say that.

Clayton’s eyes met hers.

I said the marshall won’t do anything.

I never said I wouldn’t.

Clayton, not now.

Later.

He set down his cup.

Right now, I need to teach you to shoot.

Ruby blinked.

What? You’re on an isolated ranch with men who’ve already shown they’re willing to cause trouble.

You need to know how to defend yourself.

Clayton moved toward the door.

Come on.

An hour later, Ruby stood in the yard behind the barn, a pistol heavy in her hands.

Clayton positioned himself behind her, his arms guiding hers.

“Breathe steady, aim for center mass.

Squeeze the trigger.

Don’t pull.

” The gun kicked hard and the shot went wide.

Ruby’s ears rang from the noise.

“Again,” Clayton said.

They practiced until her arms achd and her ears buzzed, but by the end, she was hitting the target more often than not.

Clayton reloaded the pistol and handed it back to her.

This stays in your room.

Loaded.

You know how to use it now.

Don’t hesitate if you need to.

Ruby took the weapon, feeling its weight settle into something familiar.

You really think it’ll come to this? I think being prepared is better than being surprised.

Clayton’s hand touched her shoulder.

I won’t always be here.

You need to know you can protect yourself.

That afternoon, Ruby threw herself into household tasks, trying to burn off the anxiety coiling in her gut.

She was kneading bread dough when a shadow fell across the kitchen window.

She looked up to see a woman standing in the yard, petite, blonde, expensively dressed.

Ruby wiped her hands and went to the door.

Can I help you? The woman’s eyes were cold as they swept over Ruby’s faded dress and flower dusted hands.

I’m Evelyn Morrison, Jack Morrison’s wife.

I came to speak with you.

Ruby’s pulse quickened.

About what? about your situation here and what it’s doing to my family.

I don’t understand.

Evelyn stepped closer, her voice dropping to a hiss.

My son Jake is a good man, a respected man.

Your fiance attacked him, humiliated him.

All because you arrived here looking like you’d been in a barroom brawl and he decided to play white knight.

Ruby’s hands clenched into fists.

Jake insulted me, threatened me.

Clayton was defending.

Clayton Keller is a widowerower who spent 5 years alone and got desperate enough to send for a mail order bride.

Evelyn’s smile was cruel.

You think you’re special? You think he loves you? He just needed someone to cook and clean and warm his bed.

and when he gets tired of damaged goods, he’ll toss you aside like everyone else has.

” The words hit like physical blows, each one finding the soft places Ruby kept hidden, but she forced herself to stand tall.

Get off this property.

Or what? You’ll shoot me, please.

Evelyn turned to leave, then paused.

One more thing.

That bruise on your face.

Everyone in town is wondering what kind of woman arrives with marks like that.

Wondering what you did to earn them.

Maybe Clayton isn’t the hero you think he is.

Maybe he just saw someone already broken and figured she’d be easy to control.

Ruby’s vision blurred with tears, but she kept her voice steady.

Get out.

After Evelyn left, Ruby sank onto the porch steps, her whole body shaking.

The woman’s words burrowed into her brain, feeding every doubt, every fear she’d been trying to suppress.

What if she was right? What if Clayton’s kindness was just manipulation? What if she’d traded one prison for another? Ruby.

She looked up to find Clayton standing there, concern etched on his face.

What happened? Marcus said he saw Evelyn Morrison’s carriage.

She came to warn me.

Ruby’s voice was hollow.

To tell me what everyone in town is thinking, that I’m damaged goods.

That you’re desperate.

That this whole thing is a mistake.

Clayton’s expression darkened.

And you believe her? I don’t know what to believe.

Ruby stood, anger and fear warring in her chest.

I’ve known you less than a week.

How am I supposed to know what’s real? How am I supposed to trust that you’re not just another man who’ll use me and throw me away when I’m no longer convenient? Because I’m not him.

Clayton’s voice was quiet, but fierce.

I’m not your stepfather.

I’m not Jake Morrison.

I’m not any man who’s ever hurt you.

How do I know that? How do I know you won’t change once we’re married? Once I’m trapped here with no way out.

You don’t.

Clayton stepped closer.

You can’t know.

Not for certain.

Trust isn’t built on guarantees, Ruby.

It’s built on actions, on choices, on showing up every day and proving yourself worthy.

He paused.

So, let me prove it.

Stay.

Give me time.

And if I ever give you reason to doubt me, if I ever raise my hand to you or speak to you with cruelty or make you feel trapped, you take that horse in the barn and you ride out of here.

I won’t stop you.

I’ll even give you money to start over.

Ruby searched his face for deception, for the crack that would reveal his true nature, but all she found was earnest determination.

Why? She whispered.

Why do you care so much? Because I know what it’s like to lose everything.

To have the world break you down until you can’t remember who you were before the pain started.

Clayton’s voice roughened.

When I came back from the war and found my wife dead.

I wanted to die, too.

Spent 2 years just going through the motions, not really living.

It took everything I had to build this ranch, to find a reason to wake up each morning.

He took her hands and then I got your letter.

And for the first time in years, I felt hope.

Because here was someone who understood what it meant to survive.

Someone who’d fought for her life and won.

Someone who could build something beautiful from ashes.

Tears streamed down Ruby’s face.

I’m so scared.

I know, but fear doesn’t have to win.

Clayton pulled her into his arms and Ruby let herself sink into the embrace.

We’ll take this slow.

We’ll build trust one day at a time.

And if you decide this isn’t what you want, I’ll help you leave.

That’s my promise.

They stood like that for a long time.

And when Ruby finally pulled back, something had settled in her chest.

Not certainty, not yet, but possibility.

That evening, as they sat at dinner, Clayton spoke carefully.

“I need to tell you something about my first wife.

About how she died.

” Ruby set down her fork.

“You said it was fever.

” “It was, but there’s more to it than that.

” Clayton stared at his plate.

When I left for the war, Sarah begged me not to go.

But I was young and stupid and thought I could make a difference.

thought the fight was more important than staying home.

His voice cracked.

She got sick 3 months after I left.

Neighbors tried to help, but there wasn’t much they could do.

By the time word reached me and I got leave to come home, she’d been dead for 2 weeks.

Clayton, I killed her.

The words came out flat.

Not directly, but by leaving.

By choosing war over her.

by thinking I knew better.

He looked at Ruby, his eyes haunted.

So when I say I understand regret, I mean it.

When I say I won’t abandon you, I mean it.

Because I’ve already learned what happens when you take the people you love for granted.

Ruby’s heart achd for him.

It wasn’t your fault.

You couldn’t have known.

Maybe, but I still have to live with it.

Clayton reached across the table.

I’m telling you this because I want you to understand who I am.

Not the hero Evelyn Morrison accused me of playing.

Just a man who’s made terrible mistakes and is trying to do better.

Trying to build something that matters with someone who deserves better than I can probably give.

I’m not looking for perfect, Ruby said quietly.

I’m looking for honest.

then we’re well matched.

Clayton’s smile was sad because honest is all I’ve got.

Later that night, Ruby lay in her bed, the loaded pistol on her nightstand, and thought about trust.

about how it was built in small moments.

A hand offered, a truth shared, a promise kept, about how Clayton had given her weapons and money, and the freedom to leave, making himself vulnerable in ways most men never would.

She was still thinking about it when hoof beatats thundered into the yard.

Ruby grabbed the pistol and ran to the window.

Marcus was shouting, and then Clayton was there, pulling on his boots, reaching for his rifle.

Ruby threw open her door.

What’s happening? Fire.

Clayton’s face was grim.

The Morrison place is burning.

Jack sent for help.

You’re going after everything they’ve done.

A man’s home is burning.

Ruby.

His family’s in danger.

Whatever our differences, I can’t leave them to die.

Clayton strapped on his gun belt.

Stay here.

Lock the doors.

If anyone comes who isn’t me or Marcus, shoot first and ask questions later.

He was gone before she could argue.

Ruby watched from the window as he and three ranch hands rode hard toward the orange glow on the horizon.

Fear clawed at her throat.

What if it was a trap? What if Jake Morrison had set this whole thing up to lure Clayton away? The hours crawled past.

Ruby paced the floor, the pistol heavy in her hand, every shadow making her jump.

When dawn broke, with no sign of Clayton, she began to seriously worry.

She was about to saddle a horse and go looking when riders appeared on the horizon.

Clayton dismounted slowly, his face blackened with soot, his clothes singed.

But he was alive.

“Is everyone all right?” Ruby asked, relief flooding through her.

The family’s safe.

Lost the barn and half the house, but no one died.

Clayton swayed slightly, exhaustion written in every line of his body.

Fire started in the hay storage, spread fast.

Was it an accident? Don’t know.

Jack thinks so, but Jake wasn’t there when it started.

Clayton’s eyes met hers.

He’d ridden out earlier alone.

Didn’t come back until the fire was already raging.

Ruby’s blood ran cold.

You think he said it? I think Jake Morrison is the kind of man who’d burn down his own father’s house if it served his purposes.

What those purposes might be, I don’t know yet.

Clayton headed toward the house, but I intend to find out.

In the kitchen, Ruby cleaned the soot from his face and hands while he told her the details.

How the fire had nearly killed Jack’s youngest daughter.

How Clayton had gone into the burning house twice to make sure everyone was out.

How Jake had appeared afterward, his clothes clean, his face showing no signs of smoke or ash.

“You could have died,” Ruby whispered, her hands trembling on the washcloth.

“But I didn’t.

” Clayton caught her hands.

I came back like I promised.

Clayton, if something had happened to you, it didn’t.

He pulled her close and Ruby felt the steady beat of his heart beneath her cheek.

I’m here.

We’re both here.

That’s what matters.

But Ruby couldn’t shake the fear.

She’d started to care for this man.

Started to believe in the possibility of something good.

And the thought of losing it terrified her because caring meant vulnerability meant opening herself up to pain in ways she’d sworn she’d never do again.

That afternoon, a rider came from town.

The territorial marshall wanted to see both Clayton and Ruby.

Someone had filed a new complaint, and this time it involved her directly.

What kind of complaint? Clayton’s voice was dangerous.

The writer shifted uncomfortably.

Says Miss Dawson is wanted in Boston for theft and assault.

Says there’s a warrant.

Ruby’s world tilted.

That’s impossible.

I didn’t steal anything.

The money was my mother’s.

Your stepfather claims otherwise.

The writer handed Clayton a folded paper.

says you took $500 from his safe and attacked him when he tried to stop you.

Says he’s been looking for you for months.

Clayton read the document, his expression darkening with every line.

This is garbage.

No judge would issue a warrant based on this.

Maybe not, but the marshall has to investigate.

The writer looked at Ruby with something like sympathy.

Ma’am, you’ll need to come to town and give your statement.

Clear this up proper.

Ruby’s hands went numb.

Her stepfather had found her, had reached across a continent to drag her back.

And now she’d have to face the possibility that everything she’d run from would catch up anyway.

I’ll go with her, Clayton said immediately.

And I’m bringing a lawyer.

Bos, you don’t have to.

Yes, I do.

Clayton’s arm went around Ruby’s shoulders.

She’s mine to protect.

That means from everything, including the law.

The ride to Fort McDow felt like walking toward a gallows.

Ruby sat rigid in the wagon, her hands clenched so tight her nails bit into her palms.

Clayton drove in grim silence, but every few minutes his hand would find hers, squeezing briefly before returning to the rains.

“What if they believe him?” Ruby’s voice came out barely above a whisper.

What if they send me back? They won’t.

You can’t know that.

Clayton pulled the wagon to a stop right there in the middle of the road.

He turned to face her fully.

Listen to me.

I don’t care what some piece of paper says.

I don’t care if the territorial marshall himself orders it.

You are not going back to Boston.

You are not going back to that man over my dead body.

That’s what I’m afraid of.

Ruby’s eyes burned.

I won’t let you die for me, Clayton.

I won’t be the reason you.

Then don’t think of it as dying for you.

Think of it as living for us.

His hand cuped her face.

I’ve spent 5 years just existing.

You make me want to fight again, to build again, to believe there’s something worth protecting in this world.

That’s not a burden, Ruby.

That’s a gift.

Before she could respond, he urged the horses forward again.

Fort McDow appeared on the horizon, and with it the weight of everything she’d run from.

The marshall’s office was a small adobe building at the edge of town.

Marshall Garrett stood outside, his expression unreadable.

Beside him stood a thin man in an expensive suit, his face sharp and calculating.

Miss Dawson, the stranger said, I’m Wesley Carver, attorney at law.

I represent your stepfather, Edmund Dawson.

He’s been very worried about you.

Ruby’s stomach turned.

Worried? That’s what he calls it.

He calls it paternal concern for a troubled young woman who stole from him and fled across the country.

Carver smile didn’t reach his eyes, but I’m sure there’s been some misunderstanding.

Why don’t we go inside and sort this out like civilized people? “Not without my lawyer present,” Clayton said.

Carver’s eyebrows rose.

“And who might that be?” “Me.

” A new voice cut through the tension.

A woman stroed toward them, tall and imposing in a severe black dress.

Her gray hair pulled into a tight bun.

Catherine Wells, I represent Miss Dawson’s interests.

Clayton blinked.

Mrs.

Wells, I wasn’t expecting.

You sent word you needed a lawyer, Mr.

Keller.

I came as fast as I could.

Catherine’s eyes were sharp as she assessed the situation.

Now, shall we discuss this fabricated warrant, or are we going to stand in the street all day? Inside the marshall’s office, they arranged themselves on opposite sides of a scarred wooden table.

Marshall Garrett sat at the head, looking like he’d rather be anywhere else.

Let’s make this simple, Carver began.

Edmund Dawson has sworn testimony that his stepdaughter, Ruby Dawson, stole $500 from his personal safe on the night of February 15th.

When he attempted to stop her, she struck him with a blunt object and fled.

He’s prepared to drop all charges if she simply returns the money and comes home.

No.

Ruby’s voice was steady despite the fear coursing through her.

That money belonged to my mother.

She left it to me in her will.

A will that conveniently disappeared after your mother’s death.

Carver opened a leather case and produced documents.

Mr.

Dawson has searched extensively for this alleged will.

It doesn’t exist because he destroyed it.

Ruby leaned forward.

2 days after my mother died, he burned every paper she’d kept.

I saw him do it.

Convenient claim.

Do you have proof? Do you have proof I stole anything? Catherine Wells interjected smoothly.

Because from where I’m sitting, this looks like a desperate man trying to control a woman who had the courage to escape an abusive situation.

Carver’s expression hardened.

Those are serious accusations, Mrs.

Wells.

Do you have evidence of this alleged abuse? I have a witness, Catherine gestured to Ruby.

Miss Dawson’s injuries were documented by Dr.

Miller upon her arrival in Fort McDow.

Fresh bruising consistent with physical assault, split lip, cracked ribs.

Shall I continue? Injuries she could have sustained anywhere from anyone.

From her stepfather, Clayton’s voice was dangerous, who has a history of violence that half of Boston knows about but won’t speak of because he owns a shipping company and has money.

Carver smiled.

If Mr.

Dawson is such a notorious abuser.

Surely there would be police reports, witnesses willing to testify.

Something beyond hearsay and convenient timing.

Ruby felt the trap closing.

He was right.

Her stepfather was too careful, too connected.

He’d always hurt her where the bruises wouldn’t show.

Always waited until they were alone.

Always made sure no one would believe her over him.

Marshall Garrett, Catherine said quietly.

I’d like to review this warrant.

May I see the original document? The marshall slid a paper across the table.

Catherine studied it for a long moment, then looked up with something like triumph in her eyes.

This warrant was issued by Judge Harrison in Boston.

Correct.

Yes.

Carver confirmed.

Interesting.

Because Judge Harrison died 3 months ago.

Heart failure.

Catherine tapped the document.

This signature is a forgery.

The room went silent.

Carver’s face pad slightly, but he recovered quickly.

That’s impossible.

I received this directly from from Edmund Dawson, I presume.

Catherine’s smile was cold.

Who forged a warrant to kidnap his stepdaughter and drag her back to Massachusetts under false legal pretenses.

That’s a federal crime, Mr.

Carver.

I hope you have a good explanation for your part in this.

Carver stood abruptly.

I was acting in good faith based on my client’s representation.

Your client is a criminal.

Marshall Garrett’s voice cut through the room like a blade.

And you just tried to use my office to help him commit that crime.

Get out of my town, Carver, and tell Edmund Dawson that if he sets one foot in Arizona territory, I’ll arrest him on site.

Carver gathered his papers with shaking hands and fled.

The moment the door closed behind him, Ruby’s legs gave out.

Clayton caught her before she hit the floor, pulling her into his arms.

“It’s over,” he murmured into her hair.

“He can’t touch you.

Not here.

Not ever.

” But Ruby couldn’t stop shaking.

He’ll try again.

He won’t give up.

He never gives up.

Neither do I.

Clayton pulled back to look at her.

And now we have something he doesn’t.

Legal proof that he’s willing to break the law to get you back.

Which means if he tries anything else, he’s the one who will face consequences.

Catherine Wells approached them.

Her expression softer now.

Miss Dawson, I’m going to file a formal complaint with the territorial court.

Your stepfather’s actions constitute harassment, fraud, and attempted kidnapping.

Even in Massachusetts, that won’t stand.

She paused.

But I need you to be prepared.

Legal battles take time.

He may try other tactics before we can shut him down completely.

What kind of tactics? hired men, private investigators, more forged documents.

Catherine’s eyes were kind but honest.

Men like Edmund Dawson don’t accept defeat gracefully.

He’ll escalate before he surrenders.

Then let him come.

Clayton’s arm tightened around Ruby.

He’ll find out what happens when he threatens what’s mine.

After they left the marshall’s office, Ruby felt like she could finally breathe again.

But the relief was short-lived.

As they walked toward the wagon, Jake Morrison stepped out of the saloon, his face still bearing the bruises from Clayton’s fists.

Well, well, the mail order bride and her guard dog.

Jake’s words slurred slightly.

He’d been drinking.

Heard you had some trouble with the law, Ruby.

Seems like trouble follows you everywhere.

Clayton moved to step between them, but Ruby held his arm.

Don’t.

He’s not worth it.

Listen to your woman, Keller.

Jake grinned.

She knows when she’s outmatched.

The only thing outmatched here is your intelligence against a fence post.

Ruby’s voice was steady.

Now move.

We’re leaving.

Jake’s smile faded.

You think you’re safe because Keller plays hero? You think that makes you special? He stepped closer and Ruby could smell the whiskey on his breath.

Women like you are all the same.

Damaged, desperate, a dime a dozen, and men like you are predictable.

Ruby met his gaze without flinching.

You talk big when you’ve been drinking.

You threaten women because you can’t handle men.

You hide behind your father’s name and money because you’ve got nothing of your own worth respecting.

She paused.

I’ve dealt with better bullies than you, Jake Morrison.

You don’t scare me.

For a moment, something dangerous flickered in Jake’s eyes.

Then Clayton’s hand moved to his gun belt, and Jake backed away.

“This isn’t over,” he muttered.

“Yes, it is,” Clayton’s voice was quiet.

“Because the next time you speak to her, the next time you even look at her, I won’t stop at bruises.

” “Are we clear?” Jake stumbled back into the saloon without answering.

Ruby’s hands were shaking, but she kept her head high until they reached the wagon.

“That was either very brave or very stupid,” Clayton said as he helped her up.

“Probably both,” Ruby sank onto the seat.

“But I’m tired of being afraid.

Tired of letting men like him think they have power over me.

” “You were magnificent.

” Clayton climbed up beside her, something like pride warming his voice.

Absolutely magnificent.

They were halfway back to the ranch when they saw the smoke.

Dark columns rising from the direction of Blackwood Ranch, thick and ominous.

No, Clayton urged the horses faster.

No, no, no.

They crested the final hill, and Ruby’s heart stopped.

The barn was engulfed in flames, smoke pouring from the structure.

Marcus and the ranch hands fought the fire with buckets, but it was clearly a losing battle.

Clayton didn’t even wait for the wagon to stop completely before he jumped down and ran toward the flames.

Ruby followed, her mind racing.

This wasn’t an accident.

This was deliberate.

“The horses!” Marcus shouted over the roar of the fire.

“We got most of them out, but there’s still three trapped in the back.

” Without hesitation, Clayton ran toward the burning barn.

Ruby screamed his name, but he was already inside, disappearing into the smoke and flame.

Time stretched impossibly thin.

Ruby stood frozen, watching the doorway, waiting for him to emerge.

One minute passed, then two.

The heat was intense, even from where she stood, and the structure was starting to collapse.

Boss.

Marcus moved toward the entrance, but Ruby grabbed his arm.

You can’t.

If you both die.

Then Clayton appeared, leading two terrified horses, his face blackened with soot.

He tied them quickly to the fence and turned back toward the barn.

Clayton, no! Ruby ran after him.

It’s going to collapse.

There’s one more.

He pulled free from her grip.

I’m not leaving her to burn.

He disappeared back into the inferno.

Ruby counted heartbeats, each one an eternity.

The roof groaned ominously.

Beams began to crack and fall.

Then Clayton burst through the doorway with the final horse just as the entire back half of the barn collapsed inward.

The force of the implosion sent him sprawling forward and Ruby rushed to his side.

“Are you hurt? Talk to me.

” Clayton coughed, his lungs heaving, but he managed a grim smile.

I’m fine.

Horses are safe.

That’s what matters.

But as the fire finally began to die down, revealing the charred skeleton of what had been their barn, Ruby saw something that made her blood run cold.

On the remaining wall, painted in crude letters, was a message.

Damaged goods belong in the trash.

Marcus saw it, too.

Boss, this wasn’t an accident.

No.

Clayton’s voice was dangerously calm.

It wasn’t.

Ruby stared at the message, each word a knife to her chest.

Someone had done this because of her.

Had destroyed Clayton’s property, endangered his animals, risked his life, all because she dared to escape, to start over, to believe she could have something better.

This is my fault.

she whispered.

“No.

” Clayton grabbed her shoulders, forcing her to look at him.

“This is the fault of whoever set this fire.

Don’t you dare take responsibility for someone else’s cruelty.

But if I hadn’t come here, then I’d still be alone, eating beans from a can with nothing to wake up for except empty land and empty days.

” Clayton’s eyes blazed.

“You didn’t bring this trouble, Ruby.

You exposed it, made these people show their true colors, and now we know exactly who we’re dealing with.

Jake Morrison, Marcus said grimly.

Has to be.

The paint’s still wet.

Maybe, Clayton released Ruby and walked toward the ruined barn.

Or maybe someone who wants us to think it’s Jake.

Either way, whoever did this made a mistake.

What kind of mistake? Clayton picked up a charred piece of wood, examining it carefully.

They left evidence.

Look here.

He pointed to distinct marks on the beam.

This fire was set with kerosene poured in three places, judging by the burn patterns, and there are footprints here in the dirt, fresh, leaving toward the Morrison property.

Ruby felt something shift inside her.

The fear began to transform into anger.

These people thought they could terrorize her, destroy everything she’d started to build, and walk away without consequences.

They thought she’d run again, prove them right about her being damaged and weak.

“What do we do?” she asked.

Clayton’s smile was cold.

“We gather evidence.

We document everything.

And then we make sure whoever did this faces justice.

” He paused.

The legal kind for now.

They spent the rest of the afternoon collecting evidence, footprints, paint samples, the kerosene can they found hidden in nearby brush.

Catherine Wells arrived at sunset, summoned by Marcus, and she examined everything with a lawyer’s careful eye.

This is enough for charges, she said finally.

More than enough, but you’ll need the marshall to investigate properly.

I’ll ride to town first thing tomorrow, Clayton said.

But the marshall came to them instead, arriving just after dark with two deputies, and the news he brought made Ruby’s stomach drop.

“Jake Morrison is dead,” Garrett said heavily.

“Found him an hour ago, shot in the back on the road between his ranch and yours.

” “His father’s claiming you did it, Keller.

” Clayton’s face went pale.

That’s impossible.

I’ve been here all day.

We were in town with you this morning.

then came straight back when we saw the smoke.

I know and I told Jack Morrison that, but he’s demanding I arrest you anyway.

Says you had motive and opportunity.

Says you threatened his son multiple times.

Garrett’s expression was pained.

I have to take you in, Clayton.

Just until we sort this out.

No.

Ruby stepped forward.

He didn’t do this.

He couldn’t have.

I’ve been with him every moment since we left town.

I believe you, ma’am, but I still have to follow procedure.

Garrett turned to Clayton.

Don’t make this harder than it has to be.

Clayton’s jaw clenched, but he nodded.

Fine, but Ruby stays at the ranch with protection.

Marcus and two deputies will stay with her, Garrett promised.

She’ll be safe.

As they led Clayton away in handcuffs, he looked back at Ruby.

Trust me, he said.

This will work out.

I promise.

But watching him disappear into the darkness, Ruby felt the foundation of her new life cracking beneath her feet.

Someone had murdered Jake Morrison.

Someone had framed Clayton, and someone wanted to destroy everything she dared to hope for.

Marcus touched her shoulder gently.

Come inside, ma’am.

It’s not safe out here.

Ruby let him lead her into the house, but her mind was racing.

Something didn’t add up.

Jake had been killed on the road between the ranches, shot in the back.

That meant he’d been running from something or toward something.

She thought about the fire, the painted message, the timing.

Jake had been in town when they were there, drunk and angry.

But by the time they got back to the ranch, the barn was already burning, which meant either Jake had left town immediately after their confrontation and come straight here, or someone else had set the fire and wanted them to blame Jake.

And now Jake was dead, and Clayton was under arrest, and whoever was really behind all this was still out there.

Ruby walked to her room and picked up the loaded pistol from her nightstand.

Catherine Wells had told her that Edmund Dawson might send hired men, that he’d escalate before surrendering.

What if this wasn’t about the Morrison’s at all? What if her stepfather had found another way to hurt her? Another way to drag her back to Boston by destroying everything she’d built here? A knock on the door made her spin around, gun raised.

Marcus stood there, hands visible, expression calm.

Easy, ma’am.

Just me.

Thought you might want some coffee.

Ruby lowered the weapon.

Thank you, but I’m not thirsty.

Then maybe you want to talk.

Marca sat down uninvited because I’ve been working for Clayton Keller for 5 years and I know when something doesn’t add up and this whole situation it stinks.

What do you mean? I mean, Jake Morrison was a coward and a bully, but he wasn’t stupid.

He wouldn’t drive out to set fire to our barn alone.

Too risky.

He’d bring men, make sure he had protection.

Marcus leaned forward.

And that message on the wall, too personal, too specific.

Jake didn’t know you well enough to know what words would hurt most, but someone else might.

Ruby’s blood ran cold.

You think my stepfather is here in Arizona? I think someone wants Clayton out of the way and you vulnerable.

And I think we need to figure out who before they make their next move.

Ruby stared at Marcus, her mind racing through every interaction since she’d arrived.

If my stepfather is here, why not just take me? Why burn the barn? Why kill Jake Morrison? Because kidnapping you outright would bring the law down on him.

But if Clayton’s locked up for murder and you’re alone and scared and a helpful stranger offers you protection, Marcus let the implication hang in the air.

He’d make me come to him willingly.

Ruby’s stomach turned.

Make me think I had no other choice.

Exactly.

And once you’re back in Boston, who’s going to believe the hysterical woman over the respected businessman? Marcus stood.

We need to figure out who he’s hired, who’s been helping him.

A knock at the door made them both freeze.

One of the deputies stepped inside, his young face anxious.

Ma’am, there’s a man here asking for you.

Says he’s from the territorial court.

Has papers.

Ruby’s hand moved to her pistol.

What kind of papers? Says it’s about your mother’s estate.

Says there’s money owed to you.

Everything in Ruby screamed trap.

But Marcus was already moving toward the door.

Let me see these papers first.

The man waiting in the yard was middle-aged, unremarkable, dressed in a dusty suit.

He smiled when he saw Ruby, the expression not quite reaching his eyes.

Miss Dawson, I’m Thomas Fletcher, executive of estates for the territorial court.

I’ve been trying to reach you for weeks.

He held out an envelope.

It’s about your mother’s will.

It was found in the Boston courthouse records.

You’re entitled to substantial inheritance.

Ruby took the envelope with trembling hands.

Inside was a legal document that looked official, complete with stamps and signatures.

But something felt wrong.

My mother’s will was destroyed, she said slowly.

My stepfather burned it.

He tried to, but your mother was clever.

She filed a copy with the court before she died, just in case.

Fletcher’s smile widened.

You’re a wealthy woman, Miss Dawson.

$5,000.

Your mother made sure you’d be taken care of.

$5,000.

more money than Ruby had ever imagined.

Enough to start over anywhere.

Enough to be truly free.

There’s just one problem, Fletcher continued.

The money is held in a Boston bank.

You’ll need to return to Massachusetts to claim it.

I have tickets for the morning stage.

And there it was, the trap baited with everything she’d ever wanted.

freedom, independence, her mother’s love reaching across death to protect her.

“No,” Ruby said quietly.

Fletcher’s expression flickered.

“I’m sorry.

” I said, “No, I’m not going to Boston.

” Ruby handed the envelope back.

If the money’s real, it can wait.

If it’s not, you can tell my stepfather that I’m not that easy to fool.

Fletcher’s friendly demeanor vanished.

You’re making a mistake, girl.

Your man is locked up for murder.

Your ranch is burned.

You’ve got nothing here but enemies and ashes.

He stepped closer.

Come with me now and I’ll make sure you’re protected.

Stay here and you’ll end up dead or worse.

She said, “No.

” Marcus moved between them, his hand on his gun.

“Time for you to leave.

” Fletcher’s eyes went cold.

Edmund Dawson is offering you one last chance to come home peacefully.

Turn it down and he’ll stop being polite about it.

Tell Edmund Dawson that his stepdaughter is done running and if he wants me, he’ll have to come get me himself.

Ruby’s voice was steel.

Now get off this property before I shoot you for trespassing.

Fletcher backed toward his horse, his face twisted with anger.

You’ll regret this, all of you.

After he rode away, Marcus turned to Ruby.

That was either very brave or very stupid.

Someone recently told me they’re usually the same thing.

Ruby’s hands shook, but she forced them steady.

We need to get Clayton out of jail now before my stepfather makes his next move.

The marshall won’t release him without evidence.

Then we’ll find evidence, Ruby thought hard.

Jake was shot in the back on the road between ranches.

Someone had to see something, hear something.

The Morrison ranch hands might know, but they’re not going to talk to us.

Ruby smiled grimly.

No, but they might talk to Evelyn Morrison, and she owes me a conversation.

An hour later, Ruby rode toward the Morrison ranch with Marcus and one deputy as escort.

Every instinct screamed that this was dangerous, that she was walking into enemy territory.

But Clayton was sitting in a cell for a crime he didn’t commit, and she’d be damned if she let him stay there.

The Morrison ranch was chaos.

Half the house was still charred from the fire, and people moved through the yard with the frantic energy of crisis.

Ruby found Evelyn Morrison sitting on the porch, her expensive dress covered in soot, her face haggarded.

“You’ve got nerve coming here,” Evelyn said flatly.

“Your son is dead.

My fiance is in jail for it.

” But we both know Clayton didn’t pull that trigger.

Ruby sat down uninvited.

So, either we can keep playing games while the real killer walks free, or we can work together and find out what actually happened.

Evelyn’s eyes were red from crying.

Why should I believe you? Because Jake was terrible to me, but he was still your son, and you deserve to know who really killed him.

Ruby paused.

I think someone is using both our families, turning us against each other while they destroy everything we’ve built.

Who? My stepfather, Edmund Dawson.

He’s been trying to get me back to Boston since I left.

When legal methods failed, he started using other tactics.

Ruby leaned forward.

Did Jake say anything strange before he died? Mention meeting someone, taking money from a stranger? Evelyn’s expression shifted.

He came home three days ago with $100.

Said a businessman from back east hired him to deliver a message to someone at Blackwood Ranch.

Wouldn’t say what the message was.

Ruby’s blood ran cold.

What did this businessman look like? I never saw him, but Jake described him.

Middle-aged, gray hair, expensive clothes, spoke with a Boston accent.

Evelyn’s voice cracked.

Jake thought it was easy money, a simple errand.

He didn’t know.

He didn’t know he was being used.

Ruby finished.

Your son was killed because he became a liability because whoever hired him wanted him dead so Clayton would take the blame.

Evelyn stood abruptly.

I need to speak to the marshall.

Jake’s death.

It wasn’t about your feud with Clayton.

It was about this Boston man wanting you isolated.

Will you tell Garrett what you just told me? Yes.

Evelyn’s jaw tightened.

My son was many things, but he didn’t deserve to die for someone else’s schemes.

If this Edmund Dawson killed him, I’ll see him hang.

They rode to town together, an unlikely alliance forged from grief and fury.

Marshall Garrett listened to Evelyn’s testimony with growing alarm, then turned to Ruby.

Do you know where your stepfather is staying? Fletcher mentioned morning stage tickets, which means he’s probably at the boarding house.

Ruby’s hands clenched.

He’s waiting for me to break to come to him.

Then let’s not keep him waiting.

Garrett stood, checking his gun.

But we do this my way.

legal by the book.

They found Edmund Dawson exactly where Ruby expected, sitting in Mrs.

Patterson’s parlor, drinking tea like a gentleman tourist.

He looked up when they entered, and his smile was everything Ruby remembered.

Charming, cold, calculated.

Ruby, darling, I was hoping you’d come to your senses.

He set down his cup.

I’ve been so worried about you.

Save it.

Ruby’s voice was flat.

The marshall knows everything.

The forged warrant, the hired men, Jake Morrison’s murder.

Edmund’s expression didn’t change.

I’m afraid you’re confused, dear.

I came to Arizona out of concern for your welfare.

If someone’s been causing trouble, I assure you it wasn’t me.

Evelyn Morrison identified you as the man who hired her son.

Garrett stepped forward.

And we found the kerosene can used to burn the Keller barn.

It has your fingerprints on it.

That was a lie.

They hadn’t checked for fingerprints.

But Edmund didn’t know that.

His smile faltered slightly.

Circumstantial.

You have no proof.

I have Jake Morrison’s body with a bullet in his back that matches your pistol.

Another lie.

But Garrett delivered it with confidence.

And I have testimony from Thomas Fletcher, who’s currently in my custody and very interested in avoiding a murder charge.

He’s told us everything about your plan to isolate Ruby and force her back to Boston.

Edmund’s mask finally cracked.

Fury flashed in his eyes as he looked at Ruby.

You ungrateful little.

After everything I did for you, everything I gave you, you gave me bruises and fear and nightmares.

Ruby stepped closer.

But I’m done being afraid of you, done letting you control my life.

You came to Arizona thinking you could manipulate me like you always did.

But I’m not that girl anymore.

You’re nothing without me.

Edmund lunged toward her, but Garrett was faster, pinning him against the wall.

Edmund Dawson, you’re under arrest for murder, arson, conspiracy, and attempted kidnapping.

Garrett pulled out handcuffs.

You have the right to.

Edmund’s fist connected with Garrett’s jaw, and suddenly the room exploded into chaos.

Edmund shoved past the marshall and ran for the door, pulling a pistol from his coat.

Ruby dove for cover as he fired wildly, the bullets splintering the door frame inches from her head.

Marcus returned fire and Edmund staggered but kept moving, disappearing into the street.

Garrett was up in seconds, blood streaming from his split lip.

He’s headed for the livery.

Stop him.

Ruby ran after them, her own pistol in hand.

Edmund was already on a horse, spurring it toward the edge of town.

But Clayton’s ranch hands had heard the shots and they blocked the road with a wagon, forcing Edmund to veer into an alley.

He pulled up hard when he found himself facing Ruby, who stood at the other end with her gun raised steady.

“It’s over,” she said.

“Get down from the horse.

You won’t shoot me.

You’re not strong enough.

” Edmund’s laugh was bitter.

You never were.

That’s why you needed me.

Why? You’ll always need someone to tell you what to do.

You’re wrong.

Ruby’s finger tightened on the trigger.

I was always strong enough.

I just didn’t know it yet.

But I know it now.

Then prove it.

Pull the trigger.

For a moment, Ruby wanted to.

Wanted to end this to make sure he could never hurt her again.

But then she thought about Clayton’s promise about building something that mattered.

about being better than the violence that had shaped her.

No, she lowered the gun slightly.

Because I’m not you.

I don’t solve problems with fists and fear.

I solve them with courage and choice.

And I choose to let the law handle you.

Marshall Garrett appeared behind Edmund, gun drawn.

Final warning.

Get down or I shoot you down.

Edmund’s shoulders slumped in defeat.

He dismounted slowly, hands raised.

As Garrett cuffed him, Edmund looked at Ruby one last time.

You’ll never make it without me.

You’ll fail.

And when you do, don’t come crawling back.

I won’t fail because I have something you never understood.

Ruby met his gaze without flinching.

I have people who believe in me, who see my strength instead of my scars, who build me up instead of tearing me down.

That’s something you’ll never have.

” They led Edmund away, and Ruby felt something release in her chest.

The weight she’d carried for years, the fear, the shame, the constant looking over her shoulder finally lifted.

He was going to prison.

She was free.

Actually, truly free.

But her freedom meant nothing if Clayton was still locked up.

Marshall, she said urgently.

Clayton didn’t kill Jake Morrison.

You know that now.

You have to release him.

Garrett wiped blood from his mouth.

Already planned on it.

Soon as I get your stepfather secured in the cell, Keller walks free.

An hour later, Ruby stood outside the jail as they brought Clayton out.

His face was bruised from a fight with another prisoner.

His clothes were filthy, but his eyes were clear.

The moment he saw her, relief flooded his expression.

“Ruby!” she ran to him, throwing her arms around his neck.

He caught her, lifting her off her feet, holding her so tight she could barely breathe.

And she didn’t care.

She just needed to feel him solid and real and alive.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered.

“I’m so sorry you had to go through this because of me.

” “Stop.

” Clayton pulled back to look at her.

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