Pregnant And Homeless At A Ranch Gate, She Unfolded His Family's Lie-mdue - Chainityai

Pregnant And Homeless At A Ranch Gate, She Unfolded His Family’s Lie-mdue

The wind came off the Montana mountains like it had been sharpened overnight, dragging dust, pine, and the smell of rain across Ethan Walker’s fence line.

The wooden gate rattled once, then twice, and Ranger lifted his head before Ethan heard the footsteps.

Ethan set the split log down and looked past the pale grass bending in the valley.

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A woman was walking toward his gate with an old brown suitcase in one hand and her other hand pressed over a belly so round it made Ethan’s chest tighten.

She was eight months pregnant, alone, and still walking.

She stopped a few feet from the gate, breathing hard but standing straight, with wet boots and hair loose around a face too tired to be embarrassed.

She asked if he was Ethan Walker.

Ethan said he was, and the woman gave him a name that sounded like it had been carried too far.

Sarah Collins.

She looked down at the suitcase for one second before she lifted her chin again.

“If you let me stay, I can work on your place,” she said, with the careful tone of someone who had rehearsed the words because panic would ruin them.

Ethan’s answer came too fast.

He told her he did not hire strangers, and the old rule sounded colder once it landed between them.

Sarah nodded as if she had expected it, which bothered him more than arguing would have.

She thanked him and turned back toward the empty road.

That was when Ranger stood.

Ethan had seen that dog ignore children, deputies, delivery drivers, church ladies, and one county commissioner who tried to clap him on the head.

Ranger did not go to people.

People earned their way to him, if they were lucky.

But the dog walked straight through the grass, stopped beside Sarah, and pressed his nose into her open hand.

Sarah froze like kindness had become something she did not know how to receive.

Then her fingers moved behind Ranger’s ears, careful and soft, and the dog’s tail wagged once.

Ethan stared at the animal he trusted more than half the town.

Ranger leaned his shoulder against Sarah’s leg and angled his body in front of her belly, not playful, not begging, simply guarding.

Ethan heard himself ask how far she had walked.

She said since yesterday morning.

He looked past her at the road that ran for miles before it found anything warm.

No woman that pregnant had any business being on that road, and no man with a gate had any business pretending not to see her.

Ethan opened it and told her she could stay one night.

Sarah stepped through like she was afraid the offer might vanish if she moved too quickly.

Inside, she tried to set her suitcase by the back door instead of bringing it upstairs, and Ethan noticed the way her hand hovered near it.

He gave her the guest room, a clean towel, and a plate of eggs she barely touched before her body gave up.

She slept almost fourteen hours.

By the time she came down the next morning, Ethan had fixed the loose hinge on the lower cabinet and made coffee strong enough to stand a spoon in.

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