“It is,” he agrees. “Most days. Others it’s a riot of noise and one catastrophe followed by another.”
“Yeah, but you love it,” I say, and note the glitter in his eyes.
He doesn’t answer, but that’s okay.
There’s this lull. But it isn’t awkward.
Just quiet. Comfortable.
I glance over again, watching the way he rides.
Confident, easy, like he was born to straddle a saddle.
He belongs here.
In this world. In this moment.
“What made you want to do this kind of thing?” I ask. “Ranch life, I mean.”
He thinks about it for a beat, his gaze fixed on the horizon.
“Like my space,” he says at last. “Like working with the animals. They don’t talk much. Don’t lie. It’s a good fit for me.”
His words are simple, but they hit somewhere deep.
“And you?” he asks, flicking those steel-blue eyes to mine. “Always wanted to be a school nurse?”
I laugh, but it’s hollow. “Oh. Um, not—not really,” I say, the truth clawing at the back of my throat.
I don’t offer more.
And Zeke—intuitive, impossibly sexy, alarmingly perceptive Zeke—doesn’t push.
He just nods like he gets it.
Like he understands what it’s like to live with a truth you’re not ready to speak aloud.
For the first time in what feels like years, I don’t feel like I’m scrambling to prove myself. I don’t feel like I have to fight to be heard or twist myself into a more palatable version of me.
I feel wanted.
Safe.
Seen.
And as the wind brushes my skin and the sun warms my back, I realize something that makes my throat go tight.
Falling for this cowboy?
It’s not a question.
It’s not a risk.
It’s already done.
And I am so screwed.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN-ZEKE