Resort Owner Tried To Hide My Ranch, Then The Guests Saw The Drive-Ginny

Logan Pierce slapped the letter down before the sun cleared the ridge.

It landed on the dusty hood of my pickup with a flat little crack, the kind of sound paper should not make unless the person holding it wants a fight.

Two of his campers stood behind him in wool socks and spotless jackets, both holding coffee, both pretending they were not listening.

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My foreman Randy had one hand on a saddle strap and the other on the trailer gate, and he went so still I could hear the cattle shifting behind us.

Logan had dressed for the confrontation like it was a business lunch, pressed jeans, quilted vest, clean boots that had never lost an argument with mud.

I had manure on my cuff and fence wire scratches across my knuckles.

That difference seemed to please him.

He tapped the first page with one finger and told me his attorney had reviewed the matter.

The matter was my annual cattle drive.

According to the cease-and-desist letter, the drive was an avoidable disturbance that threatened the guest experience at Golden Prairie Escape.

According to the same letter, I was expected to reroute 600 head away from his eastern fence or reimburse him for canceled bookings, refunded stays, and reputational harm.

I read that phrase twice because it took real nerve to build tents beside a working ranch and then bill the ranch for working.

Logan watched my face the way a man watches a gate he expects to swing open.

“Your cows are scenery, Wade, not a business,” he said.

One of the campers looked down into her coffee.

The younger man beside her stopped recording, or at least lowered his phone.

Randy’s jaw shifted, and I knew he was one breath away from saying something that would make the morning less efficient.

I folded the letter once and tucked it beneath the windshield wiper.

“Drive starts Saturday,” I said.

Logan blinked like I had missed the important part.

He told me there were premium reservations that weekend.

I told him there were cattle that needed moving before weather changed.

He said guests had paid for peace.

I said livestock had paid in advance by being livestock.

The woman behind him made a sound that might have been a laugh if she had not swallowed it so fast.

Logan’s smile tightened.

He asked if I could postpone one week.

That was when I understood he still thought this place was a stage and I was one of the men he could ask to move a prop.

My family had worked that stretch outside Dry Creek for longer than any of us had been good at keeping records.

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