Lisa Hawthorne cornered me in the feed store parking lot like she had been waiting for the perfect moment to strike.
It was barely nine in the morning, but the Texas sun was already punishing, the kind of heat that soaked through denim and turned gravel into something that shimmered. I had one boot braced against my truck tire, lifting a fifty pound bag of grain into the bed, when a shadow fell across me that did not belong to a cloud.
“Lily,” she said brightly.
Her heels sank into the gravel with each step, narrow designer things never meant for dust or work. She smelled expensive, floral and sharp, and her sunglasses were large enough to hide most of her face. She waved a stack of papers in one manicured hand like a parade flag.
“I just wanted to thank you for the ranch,” she continued, raising her voice slightly. Just enough. “Five dollars was more than generous.”
The words landed, but they did not hit me the way she expected.
She held the papers closer, angling them so I could see the deed transfer. My name was signed at the bottom in a looping scrawl that leaned the wrong way, letters uneven, pressure inconsistent. Anyone who had watched me sign breeding certificates, veterinary authorizations, tax forms, or supply invoices for the past twenty years would have known instantly it was not my handwriting.
Lisa did not care.
Behind her, parked at an angle that blocked two spaces, sat a silver Mercedes. The windows were tinted, but I knew exactly who was inside. Samuel always sat with his hands on the steering wheel when he was nervous. I could picture it without seeing him. He did not get out. He did not look at me.
I hoisted another bag of grain into the truck, muscles tightening, breath controlled.
Lisa kept talking.
“Samuel says you won’t mind clearing out by Monday,” she added casually, gesturing toward me with the papers. “I’m thinking yoga studio where the old stables are. Maybe an event space. People pay ridiculous money for rustic vibes.”
Monday.
Three days.
Three days to leave the land I had built from raw scrub and stubborn belief.
Tom Murphy stepped out of the feed store then, wiping his hands on a rag. He had been there the day I bought my first bag of feed, twenty years earlier, hollow eyed from my father’s funeral and terrified of the land I had just purchased with his life insurance. Everyone had said it was worthless.
Tom had not laughed.
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