Catherine Blackwell had been alone before, but never in a room this full.
The church hall in Cedar Creek glowed with oil lamps and stove heat, and every long table was crowded with families shaking off the cold, setting down covered dishes, and greeting neighbors as though worry had no right to follow them indoors.
Catherine kept her head lowered and lined the forks beside the plates.

Her hands trembled each time the silver touched wood.
In her skirt pocket, folded small and sharp as a thorn, was the bank notice that had arrived that morning.
Three months behind.
Thirty days to make the payments good.
After that, the Blackwell farm could be taken.
Her father had read the words twice from his chair by the stove, his bad leg stretched in front of him, his face hardening the way men’s faces did when they would rather be angry than frightened.
Her mother had said nothing at all.
Thomas, only fourteen, had gone outside and split kindling until his hands were raw.
Catherine had come to the church supper because staying home would have made the fear louder.
Now the fear sat with her anyway.
Around her, the women talked of pies, quilting, weather, and the cattle outfit that had ridden in from Texas.
The young girls whispered about cowboys as if a trail man were a storybook prize instead of dust, hunger, sore horses, and goodbye.
Catherine did not look up.
She had no room for foolish dreams.
A farm could be lost in thirty days.
A family could be shamed before a town in less time than that.
Her grandfather had built the Blackwell house board by board, hauling timber, setting stone, raising a roof that had sheltered three generations.
Catherine knew the sound of every step in that house.
She knew which floorboard creaked by the kitchen door.
She knew where spring rain came through the barn roof and where the old fence leaned in a hard wind.
It was not much to anyone with money.
To her, it was the map of her life.
A chair scraped somewhere behind her.
Then a shadow fell across the empty place at her table.
“Is this seat taken?”
Catherine lifted her eyes.
The man standing there was a cowboy, no doubt of that.
The trail was written across him in sun-browned skin, tired shoulders, and boots that no brushing could make new again.
But his shirt was clean, his hat was in his hands, and his blue eyes held no swagger.
He looked almost careful.
“No,” Catherine said. “No one’s sitting there.”
The corner of his mouth moved with the beginning of a smile.
“Then save me a place at your table, if you’d be so kind.”
It was a simple request.
Still, it touched some part of her she had kept shut all day.
He did not drop into the chair as if he owned it.
He waited.
Catherine nodded, and only then did he sit.
He told her his name was Flynn Parker.
He had come in with Mr. Moore’s outfit, driving cattle north, and had not sat at a church supper in nearly two years.
“A man gets used to eating off tin by a fire,” he said, looking around the hall. “But he does not forget what a real table feels like.”
Catherine wanted to remain guarded.
She meant to answer politely, let the evening pass, and go home with the same worry she had brought in.
Flynn made that difficult.
He did not fill every silence with his own voice.
He spoke of rivers crossed and nights spent under weather that turned mean without warning, but he did not boast.
When she told him Mrs. Holloway’s apple pie had convinced more than one traveling preacher to linger in Cedar Creek, he laughed so warmly that Catherine found herself smiling before she remembered not to.
He noticed that too, but did not tease her for it.
The meal went on around them.
Children slipped under benches.
Men talked cattle prices.
Women passed bread and coffee.
The stove snapped and smoked in the corner.
Catherine felt, for the first time since morning, as if the notice in her pocket did not own every breath she took.
When the pie came, Flynn looked at her more closely.
“You have been carrying something heavy all night,” he said.
Catherine’s smile faded.
He lowered his voice.
“I do not mean to pry. I only wondered if my trail stories were wearing you out.”
“No,” she said. “It is not you.”
That should have been the end of it.
In a small town, trouble traveled faster than a horse.
People heard one piece and made ten from it.
But Flynn was a stranger, and maybe that was why the truth came easier.
“My father broke his leg last winter,” she said. “Badly. The farm fell behind. The bank sent notice today.”
Flynn’s face changed.
Not with pity, which Catherine would have hated.
With recognition.
“How long?” he asked.
“Thirty days.”
He looked down at his plate.
The pie sat there untouched, its sugared crust catching lamplight.
“A farm is more than land,” he said. “It is a home, and all the years that made it one.”
Catherine stared at him.
Most people offered advice when they heard grief.
Flynn offered understanding.
“My grandfather built that house himself,” she said. “Every board has a story.”
“I believe it.”
Two words, quiet and plain.
They mattered more than they should have.
When supper ended, Flynn asked if he might walk her part of the way home.
Catherine saw two women glance over from the pie table, already measuring the moment for gossip.
She accepted anyway.
Outside, the air was clear and hard.
Stars hung bright over Wyoming Territory, and the road out of town lay pale beneath them.
Flynn walked beside her with enough distance to be proper and enough attention to make her aware of every step.
He told her he had been on cattle drives for five years.
He was saving money, he said, for land of his own.
There was a place in Colorado he had thought about, with water and grazing enough to make a start.
“You would leave the trail?” Catherine asked.
“I would,” he said. “The trail is good when a man has nothing to tie him. It is not a place to grow old.”
She looked at him then.
Most cowboys she had seen wore restlessness like a badge.
Flynn spoke of roots as if he had been hungry for them.
At the fork in the road, he stopped with his hat in his hands again.
The path to the Blackwell farm ran one way.
The path toward the cattle camp ran the other.
“I would like to call on you tomorrow,” he said. “If I may.”
Catherine thought of her father, sore with pain and pride.
She thought of the herd leaving soon.
She thought of a man who had asked for a place at her table as if it were something precious.
“I would like that,” she said.
The next morning smelled of hay, manure, and cold iron.
Catherine was gathering eggs in the barn when she heard hoofbeats.
Flynn rode in on a chestnut gelding, his trail clothes exchanged for a clean shirt and his best denims.
He dismounted with the easy grace of a man who had lived more years in a saddle than out of one.
“Morning,” he called. “I hope I am not too early.”
“We have been up since dawn,” Catherine said, suddenly aware of her work dress, apron, and loose hair.
“Farm hours,” he said, and smiled as if that explained everything.
Then he told her he had grown up on a farm back in Missouri.
He had not mentioned that before.
When she asked why he had left, a shadow crossed his face.
“Lost it during the war,” he said. “My father never came home. My mother could not manage alone.”
Before Catherine could answer, the farmhouse door opened.
James Blackwell came out leaning hard on his cane.
Even injured, he was a broad, powerful-looking man, with dark hair threaded gray and a father’s suspicion sharpened by worry.
“And who might you be?” he called.
Flynn stepped forward.
“Flynn Parker, sir. I am riding with Mr. Moore’s outfit. I met your daughter at the church supper, and I asked permission to call on her today.”
That mattered.
Catherine saw it in the slight easing of her father’s mouth.
James Blackwell shook Flynn’s hand, though he studied him like a man inspecting a fence for rot.
Flynn did not flinch.
Then he looked toward the east field.
The wheat should have been harvested weeks ago.
Everyone knew it.
No one said it unless they meant to wound.
Flynn did not wound.
“I noticed your east field still needs cutting,” he said. “I would be glad to lend a hand while I am in town.”
James raised one brow.
“A cowboy offering to cut wheat?”
“I grew up with a scythe before I ever rode herd,” Flynn said. “I have not forgotten.”
By afternoon, he had proven it.
He worked beside Thomas under a pale sky, swinging the blade with a clean rhythm that came from memory, not show.
Catherine carried water from the pump.
Each time Flynn took the dipper, she noticed the blisters opening on his palms.
He never mentioned them.
Her father watched from a chair on the porch, one hand resting on his cane.
“He knows farming,” James said at last. “Most cowboys would cut it wrong and brag about it.”
“He is different,” Catherine said.
Her father looked at her then.
“Remember, Katie. A herd moves on. Do not set your heart on wandering feet.”
Catherine nodded.
But the warning came too late to be useful.
At supper, Flynn sat at the Blackwell table as if he had found an old habit waiting for him.
He thanked Catherine’s mother for every dish.
He spoke with James about cattle prices and weather.
He showed Thomas a rope trick that had the boy practicing until his mother ordered him to bed.
When Flynn left, Catherine walked him to his horse.
“Thank you,” she said. “For today.”
“I wanted to,” he said. “Your family reminds me of mine before everything changed.”
The words faded, and for a moment the night held them both.
Then he tightened the saddle cinch.
“The herd moves out the day after tomorrow,” he said. “Mr. Moore wants to reach Cheyenne before first snow.”
Catherine felt the little happiness of the day collapse inward.
“I understand.”
Flynn stepped closer.
“Catherine, I know we have only just met. But meeting you has changed the shape of things.”
He kissed her cheek, gentle and warm.
Then he rode into the dark.
The next morning brought an unexpected reprieve.
The cattle drive would be delayed.
Mr. Moore had trouble with the buyer in Cedar Creek and needed more time to settle business.
Flynn came with the sunrise.
Then he came again the next day.
And the day after that.
The Blackwell place began to know the sound of his horse.
He finished the wheat with Thomas.
He patched the barn roof where rain had been sneaking through.
He mended the fence along the far pasture.
He split firewood for Catherine’s mother without being asked.
Each task was plain, practical, and worth more than any speech.
Love, Catherine began to understand, could sound like a hammer on a loose board.
It could look like a man eating last because he had been working too long to wash up first.
It could be blistered hands hidden under the table.
On the third night, Flynn held her hand.
On the fourth, he kissed her properly beneath the moon.
Catherine should have been frightened by how quickly her heart trusted him.
Instead, she felt as though some deep part of her had recognized him before her mind caught up.
“I never expected to find you,” he whispered into her hair.
“I was not looking,” she said.
“Neither was I.”
That made it worse and better at once.
On the sixth day, Mr. Moore rode out to the Blackwell farm.
He was a stout man with a thick mustache and eyes that seemed to count everything they saw.
Flynn was stacking the last of the wheat when Moore called his name.
“Parker, I was wondering where you disappeared to. Boys said you had found a pretty reason to neglect your post.”
Flynn straightened.
“No neglect, sir. Only helping during our delay.”
Introductions were made.
Mr. Moore tipped his hat to Catherine and her parents, then delivered the words Catherine had been dreading.
“We move at first light. Deal is done. I need the herd to Cheyenne before the weather turns.”
The yard seemed to go still.
Flynn’s face did not change much, but Catherine saw his jaw tighten.
Mr. Moore turned his horse, then paused.
“One more thing,” he said. “That business we discussed in Texas. Come see me tonight if you are still interested. I may have a proposition.”
After he rode away, Catherine asked what he meant.
Flynn looked toward the road.
“Just business.”
It was the first answer he had given her that felt like a door closing.
That evening, he did not stay for supper.
He said he had to speak with Mr. Moore before the outfit left.
Catherine tried to be brave.
She had known from the beginning that cowboys moved on.
Knowing did not make it hurt less.
Flynn took her face in his hands, his palms rough against her skin.
“Catherine Blackwell,” he said, “meeting you has changed everything for me. Whatever happens, know that.”
Then he rode away in the dusk.
Catherine did not sleep.
She lay awake listening to the house settle, to her father’s cane tap once in the next room, to the faint wind moving over the fields.
By dawn, she could not stay in bed and wait for goodbye to come find her.
She dressed quickly, slipped outside, and borrowed her father’s horse.
Cedar Creek was already awake when she reached town.
Cowboys moved along the street with bedrolls and saddlebags.
Horses stamped near the hitching rails.
Wagons creaked.
Cattle bawled beyond the far end of town, raising dust into the morning light.
Catherine saw Flynn near the general store.
He stood with Mr. Moore in a serious conversation, both men facing the street as if the whole future were being weighed between them.
She held back.
It did not feel like a moment to interrupt.
At last, the two men shook hands.
Mr. Moore clapped Flynn on the shoulder and walked away.
Flynn remained still.
In his hand was a folded paper.
He stared at it for so long that Catherine’s chest tightened.
Then he tucked it carefully into his shirt pocket.
She rode forward.
“Flynn.”
He turned, and relief broke across his face before worry followed it.
“Catherine. I was coming to find you.”
She dismounted and tied the horse to the rail.
“I could not wait here wondering.”
He took both her hands.
His were cold despite the morning sun.
“There is something I need to tell you,” he said.
Behind him, the cattle drive was preparing to leave.
Behind her, the town had begun to watch.
“What is it?” she asked.
Flynn reached slowly into his pocket and drew out the folded paper.
“Mr. Moore has offered me a position,” he said. “Not on the trail. At his ranch here in Wyoming.”
Catherine barely breathed.
He continued before hope could rise too fast.
“It comes with a foreman’s cabin and steady pay. Fifty miles from Cedar Creek.”
“You are not leaving?”
“I have not signed yet.”
The words confused her.
He had the thing he had said he wanted: work, pay, a roof, a way to put down roots.
“Why not?” she whispered.
Flynn looked down at the contract.
“Because if I stay, I need to know whether I am staying for more than a job.”
The general store door opened then.
The storekeeper stepped out, pretending to sweep the boardwalk while listening with both ears.
Two cowboys slowed beside the hitching post.
Catherine felt heat rise in her face, but Flynn did not seem to care who heard.
“I know it is sudden,” he said. “We have known each other only a week. But that week has felt more like home than five years of riding.”
He swallowed.
“I am asking whether, with time and your father’s permission, you might consider a future with me.”
Catherine’s eyes filled.
Before she could answer, hoofbeats pounded from the direction of the livery.
Thomas came running into the street, breathless, his hat gone, his face white.
In his hand was a paper.
Not Flynn’s contract.
Another paper.
The bank notice.
“Catherine!” Thomas shouted.
Every head turned.
He stumbled into her arms, shaking so badly she had to grip his shoulders.
“Pa sent me. The banker came early. He says the thirty days will not matter if we cannot show the first payment by noon.”
The street went silent.
Dust moved around their boots.
Flynn looked from the contract in his hand to the notice clenched in Thomas’s fist.
Catherine saw the choice strike him.
His old dream.
His new future.
Her family’s home.
The herd called from the edge of town, restless and ready to move.
Mr. Moore stood beside his horse, watching.
Flynn unfolded the contract.
Then he turned toward Catherine, and the look in his eyes made the whole street hold its breath.
“I need to ask you one thing before I put my name to this,” he said.
Catherine could not tell whether the paper in his hand had just become a promise or a goodbye.