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.

None of this was your fault.

You hear me? None of it.

But if I hadn’t come here, if you hadn’t come here, I’d still be half alive, going through the motions, building a ranch with no one to share it with.

His hands cuped her face.

You brought me back to life, Ruby.

Whatever trouble came with you was worth it.

He’s going to prison, my stepfather, for murder and everything else.

Ruby’s voice broke.

It’s really over.

Yeah.

Clayton pressed his forehead to hers.

It really is.

They stood like that for a long moment, and Ruby felt the last of her fear dissolve.

She was safe.

Clayton was free.

Her stepfather would never hurt her again.

Everything that had seemed impossible a week ago was suddenly, miraculously real.

“Marry me,” Clayton said suddenly.

Ruby pulled back to look at him.

What? Marry me today, right now? His eyes were intense.

I know we plan to wait to take our time, but I almost lost you.

Almost lost everything, and I don’t want to waste another day pretending we’re not already committed to this to each other.

Clayton, you don’t have to.

I want to.

He took her hands.

I want to stand in front of God and everyone in this town and promise you forever.

I want to make you my wife legally, officially, permanently.

I want you to know that no matter what comes, no matter who tries to tear us apart, we’re in this together.

Ruby’s eyes filled with tears.

Yes.

Yes.

Yes.

I’ll marry you today, right now, however you want.

She laughed through her tears because you’re right.

We’ve been building toward this since the moment you saw my bruised face and promised they’d be the last.

And I’m ready.

I’m ready to stop being afraid and start being yours.

They found a preacher within the hour.

Catherine Wells and Marcus stood as witnesses along with half the town who’d heard about the dramatic capture and wanted to see the end of the story.

Ruby wore her best dress, still simple, still worn.

But Clayton looked at her like she was wearing diamonds.

The ceremony was short, the vows simple.

But when Clayton slid a ring onto her finger, a plain gold band he’d bought from the general store minutes before, Ruby felt something click into place.

This was right.

This was real.

This was the beginning she’d been fighting for.

“You may kiss your bride,” the preacher said.

Clayton pulled Ruby close and kissed her like she was precious, like she was everything, like she was the answer to every question he’d ever asked.

And Ruby kissed him back with equal fervor, equal hope, equal promise.

When they finally pulled apart, the crowd erupted in cheers.

Evelyn Morrison stepped forward, surprising everyone by offering a handshake.

“I misjudged you,” she said quietly.

both of you.

I’m sorry for that and I’m sorry for my son’s actions.

He paid for his choices, but that doesn’t excuse what he did to you.

Thank you, Ruby said.

I’m sorry for your loss.

No matter what else, losing a child is the worst pain there is.

Evelyn’s eyes were wet.

But knowing the truth helps.

knowing he didn’t die because of some stupid feud.

That helps.

After the ceremony, Clayton drove Ruby back to Blackwood Ranch in the wagon.

The burned barn stood as a reminder of everything they’d survived.

But Marcus and the hands had already started clearing the debris, planning the rebuild.

“We’ll make it bigger this time,” Clayton said, following her gaze.

better, strong enough to withstand anything.

Like us, Ruby said softly.

Like us.

That night, they stood together on the porch, watching the sun set over the valley.

Ruby leaned against Clayton’s chest, his arms wrapped around her, and felt peace settle into her bones.

“I used to think safety was impossible,” she said.

that it was just something people pretended existed to make themselves feel better about a dangerous world.

And now now I think safety isn’t about the absence of danger.

It’s about having someone who will face the danger with you, who will fight for you, who will choose you every single day, no matter what comes.

She turned to face him.

You gave me that, Clayton.

You gave me safety by giving me partnership.

You gave me the same thing.

Clayton’s thumb brushed across her cheek.

You gave me a reason to be brave again, to build again, to believe that second chances are real.

They kissed as the stars began to emerge, and Ruby thought about everything that had led her here.

The abuse, the fear, the desperate flight across a continent, the terror of trusting a stranger, the slow building of hope, the fight for freedom, the choice to love despite the risk.

All of it had been necessary.

All of it had been worth it because it had brought her here to this man, to this life, to this moment where she finally understood what it meant to be whole.

No more bruises, Clayton whispered against her lips.

No more bruises, Ruby agreed.

Just building, just partnership, just us.

And standing there in the Arizona darkness, wrapped in her husband’s arms, Ruby Dawson Keller finally stopped running and started living, proving once and for all the damaged things can heal, broken hearts can mend, and love built on truth and respect can overcome any darkness the past might throw against it.

 

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