A Widow Offered Her Finest Stallion, But The Soldier Refused-rosocute

The dust came first.

It rose beyond the gate in a pale brown warning, drifting over the sage and the hard road that cut toward Susan Grayson’s ranch.

By the time Corporal Joel Alden reached the porch, Susan was already there with a rifle across her arm.

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She had been expecting this day.

Every ranch in that stretch of New Mexico Territory had heard the same talk by spring of 1863.

The army needed horses.

Not someday.

Now.

War had a way of making hunger out of everything it touched, and cavalry hunger was measured in hooves, saddles, grain, vouchers, and empty pastures.

Susan had no husband to stand beside her.

Thomas Grayson had been gone four years, taken in a riding accident so sudden that grief had arrived before sense could catch up.

Since then, she had run the ranch with her own hands, old Rogelio’s help, and a stubbornness that had hardened without turning cruel.

She knew every board in the barn.

She knew every weak place in the fence.

She knew every horse by sound before it came into view.

So when Joel Alden rode in wearing army blue, she did not wonder why he had come.

She only wondered how much he intended to take.

He stopped below the steps and removed his hat.

That was the first thing that troubled her expectation.

A man who meant to bully usually kept his hat on.

He was not dressed like a polished officer.

His cavalry coat had weather in the seams, his trousers had dust at the knees, and his hat was a civilian wide-brim that had seen more sun than parade ground.

His horse was in fine condition.

That mattered to Susan.

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