A Rancher Read The Debt Paper And Saw Her Real Worth-rosocute

The Cowboy’s Secret: She’s Worth More Than Gold in the Wild West

“I’m not here to be your wife,” Elena said.

Her voice did not shake, though everything inside her wanted to.

Image

She stood in the center of Caleb Ror’s office with dust on her hem, road grit in the seams of her gloves, and one folded paper burning like a coal in her coat pocket.

“I’m here because the Morrisons paid my father’s debt with my name.”

Caleb did not move.

The office was quiet except for the low creak of timber and the distant stamp of horses in the yard.

An oil lamp sat cold on the desk beside a ledger, a tin cup, and a scatter of papers held down by a brass weight.

The room smelled of leather, pine smoke, and bitter coffee left too long on a stove.

Elena lifted her chin.

“I thought you deserved to know that before you threw me out.”

Still, Caleb Ror said nothing.

He was not the sort of man who wasted movement.

He sat behind the desk with his broad hands resting near the ledger, his dark coat still dusted from the yard, his face cut hard by work and weather.

His eyes stayed on her in a way that made Elena feel neither admired nor dismissed.

Measured, maybe.

Weighed, certainly.

But not like Harold Morrison had weighed her.

Morrison had looked at her and seen payment.

Caleb looked as if he were trying to understand who had dared put a price on her at all.

That difference was small.

It was also the first small mercy she had seen in days.

Elena had not come to Iron Ridge Ranch expecting kindness.

She had come expecting a door closed in her face, a hired man’s laugh, perhaps a horse pointed back toward the road before sunset.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *