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you ever think about the intricacies of smoke & stack's dynamic and go fucking crazy?
their abusive father zeroing in on stack as the outlet for his beatings, smoke killing their daddy, half way done burying him by the time stack came to - smoke being the BIG BROTHER from the start, keeping stack safe - stack becoming who he is - bit reckless, full of charisma and whimsy because of smoke, in a way, shielding him from the world ("doesn't know how to watch his own back").
thinking of smoke saying how stack is the best thing about him, how stack talks a big game but how it's smoke who kills the snake, smoke who shoots two men for stealing out of his truck, smoke who pulls a gun on sammie and pearline. does he ever think he got more of their daddy in him than stack? where stack can connect with people in a way smoke can't quite follow. stack laying out clothes for him, doing his hair, rolling his cigarettes- giving smoke back some of what the war took.
but I also can't help but think that there is this slight ....almost paternalistic element at times - the way stack looks around for smoke when he's with mary, worried he'll be caught, worried he'll displease him and yet that thing he says when he's turned "don't let that witch come between us again" - there's no doubt that stack loves annie and is clearly DISTRAUGHT when smoke kills her but ...was there ever resentment? did he ever feel betrayed? was it ever only meant to be the two of them against the world?
"he was the best thing about me" "i ain't doing it without you there ain't no me without you" "sorry for not keeping you safe - you always did" the way stack is just that one person smoke can't kill, the way the only time he wavers in his resolve is when his vampire brother talks with him.
(this is borderline incoherent but I have a lot of thoughts)
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Pairing: Elias 'Stack' Moore x Reader
Summary: You're just Stack's type â feisty, strong willed, and damn pretty. Only thing is.. You won't give Stack the time of day on account of your daddy.
Your upbringing was a lil' different than girls your age. It was 1932 â you were nineteen, having grown up on your daddy's ranch. Instead of white cotton dresses, neatly combed hair, and puppies, you were raised wearing stained skirts, your hair wild and curly, riding horses and rejecting every boy that dared come near you.
Mama died when you were real young â too young to remember her face without staring at a photograph. Daddy did his best, though. He didnât much care for you doing "girlâs work" when there were fence posts to mend and cattle to brand. So he raised you like he wouldâve raised a son: rough around the edges, stubborn as a mule, and twice as fast with a rifle. By thirteen, you were driving the wagon solo into town. By sixteen, you could outshoot most men at the fair. And by nineteen, most folks knew better than to speak to you sideways.
Still, no matter how tough you acted, there was something that always drew in men. It was a competition almost. Any time you walked home from the schoolhouse at age 16, you heard them talkin'. The boys. Betting on who could secure a kiss first, maybe a date.
"First one to kiss the farmerâs daughter gets bragginâ rights for life," one of âem would say, real cocky. Like you were a trophy instead of a person.
But you werenât some daisy to be picked. You were wild thistle â sharp, stubborn, and grown in hard soil.
None of those boys ever made it past your front gate. One tried and ended up limping back home with a busted lip and a bruised ego. After that, they mostly kept their distance. Called you a spitfire. A manâs girl. Trouble wrapped in curls and sunburn.
And maybe they were right.
You didnât care much for dresses, or dancing, or sitting pretty at socials. You cared about the land, about your daddy, about making it through the droughts and the hard winters. You were proud of the calluses on your hands and the dirt under your nails. You knew how to clean a gun, break a horse, and break a manâs nose if need be. You didnât need anyone â and that scared the hell out of every suitor that came sniffinâ.
Until Stack Moore.
He was the opposite of his brother, though they were both law breakers. They'd come back into town like a storm, claiming it back again when they got sick of being men of war or taking over Chicago. They brought money, they brought booze, and they regained the enemies they'd always had before.
Your daddy knew exactly what type the Smokestack twins were. That's why he was so put out the day Stack spoke to you.
It was hotter than hell that afternoon, the kind of heat that made the air shimmer off the dirt road. You were hitchinâ the mule to the wagon outside the general store, sweat rollinâ down your spine, dust clinginâ to your boots. Stack leaned against a post with a matchstick between his teeth, lookinâ like the devil dressed in Sunday black â suspenders off his shoulders, shirt unbuttoned just enough to make your throat go dry.
"Need a hand, sweetheart?" he drawled.
You didnât answer him. Just wiped your brow and kept workinâ, jaw tight, heart louder than it oughta been. You felt his eyes on you like heat from a fire. That was the first time he spoke to you.
You grunted, finally getting it hitched, before glancing up at Stack with irritated (and curious, though you wouldn't admit it) eyes.
"I got it. Somethin' I can help you with, Stack?" You responded coldly. In a moment, your daddy would be coming out of the store. He wouldn't take kindly to Stack chatting you up.
Stack smirked, slow and easy, like he had all the time in the world and not a care who saw him spending it on you. That matchstick rolled between his teeth as he looked you over, not lewd, not disrespectful â but bold. Real bold.
"Nah, darlinâ. Just figured Iâd say howdy," he said, voice molasses-smooth with that slick edge he and his brother hadnât lost, even after years in the city. "Hard not to, when youâre standinâ there lookinâ like trouble in a skirt."
You narrowed your eyes. "Keep talkinâ like that, and youâll find yourself wearinâ that matchstick in your eye."
He laughed â a warm, low sound that made something flutter deep in your belly, though you kept your scowl firm. He liked that. You could tell. The way his head tilted slightly, his eyes sharpened like he was memorizing the way your mouth twitched when you were pissed.
"I like a woman who bites," he said.
You opened your mouth to fire back, but the screen door of the store slapped shut behind you. Daddy stepped out with his purchase â a sack of flour and a bottle of tonic. His boots hit the porch with that heavy rhythm that always said someone was about to get corrected.
Stackâs smirk didnât fade, but he straightened up. He tipped his hat slow and easy, like he wasnât worried one bit about the man standing between him and a shallow grave.
"Afternoon, Mr. L/N," Stack said, polite as a preacher.
Your daddy didnât respond. Just stared Stack down, eyes like steel under the brim of his weather-beaten hat. You could feel the tension crackling in the air, thick and dangerous.
"You got business here?" your daddy asked, voice flat.
"Just admirinâ the view," Stack replied, not looking away from him â but the weight of his words sat heavy between you and your daddy. Like a line drawn in the dust.
You cleared your throat, loud enough to break the moment. "We done here, Daddy?"
Your father gave Stack one more look â the kind that could kill a lesser man â before nodding to you. "Yeah. Letâs get home. Stormâs cominâ."
You climbed into the wagon without another word, trying not to think about how your skin still tingled from Stackâs gaze. As the mule started off, you glanced back once, just once â and saw him watching you, arms crossed, eyes lit up like heâd just spotted a gold vein in a rock.
It was the first time Stack Moore spoke to you. And the last time you knew peace for a long while.
When you got home, Daddy cleared his throat awkwardly, cleaning his gun in the common room of the house.
"Y/N." He called to you from where you stood in the kitchen.
You paused, hands deep in the dish basin, the soapy water stinging a nick on your finger you hadnât noticed âtil now. His voice was gruff, but there was something under it â something tight. Wary. Protective in that way only a father could be when he knew his daughter had just caught the eye of a wildfire in a manâs body.
"Yes, sir?" you called back, wiping your hands on a dish rag as you stepped through the archway into the common room.
He didnât look up right away. Just kept running the cloth over the barrel of his Winchester with a quiet, deliberate focus. You could tell he was turning something over in his head, chewing on it like a dog with a bone.
"Stack Moore," he finally said, like the name tasted bad. "You stay away from him."
You blinked, caught off guard by the bluntness.
"Didnât plan on inviting him for supper," you muttered, crossing your arms.
Daddy looked up then â sharp and dead serious. "I ainât jokinâ, girl. That boyâs got blood on his hands and more cominâ. His kind donât leave nothinâ but ruin behind."
You didnât say anything. Mostly âcause you werenât sure what you wanted to say. It was the first time a man had looked at you like you were a woman and not just the farmerâs wild daughter in scuffed boots. And maybe that was dangerous. Maybe Daddy was right. But maybe you didnât give a damn.
"I know you think youâre grown,â he went on, his voice softening a bit, âbut thereâs men out there who take one look at a girl like you and see a challenge. Not a future. Stack Mooreâs one of âem."
You swallowed, throat dry. "Iâm not stupid."
"I didnât say you were. I said heâs trouble. And Iâll be damned if I let him put you in harmâs way."
Silence hung between you. Thick as molasses. You could hear the wind picking up outside, dust scratching against the shutters. Storm was cominâ, alright. But it wasnât just in the sky.
You finally nodded. "I hear you."
He held your eyes for a long moment.
"You're better off with that Boone. If you really hafta marry. He's a nice boy and ain't gonna put you out when he has his fill."
Boone was a ranch hand your daddy had hired. He wasn't unattractive, no. He was tall, strong, worked with a smile and never complained. His parents were respectful and they were fans of how your daddy did business. Boone was who you should've been with, if you gave any man a chance.
He'd been pining after you since the two of you were sixteen.
You rolled your eyes, smirking in amusement.
"You like Boone so much, why ain't you marryin' him?"
Daddyâs face went dark, like you'd just knocked over a beehive.
"Iâm your father. I make the calls âround here."
I folded my arms and leaned against the table, matching his glare. "Ainât no law says I gotta marry the man you pick."
He set the gun down with a heavy thud. "It ainât about law, girl. Itâs about keepinâ you safe. Booneâs steady. He donât bring trouble like those Moore boys."
You groaned.
"I ainât sayinâ Iâm takinâ up with Stack. But donât reckon Iâm gonna be Booneâs bride just âcause you want it."
He sighed, rubbing the back of his neck. "Youâre stubborn as a mule, just like your mama."
You knew that was the final word.
But that night, long after the lights were out and the crickets had taken over the silence, you found yourself sittinâ on the edge of your bed, fingers twitchinâ, heart restless. Because even though youâd said you understood, and even though you knew what kind of man Stack Moore wasâŠ
You also knew you werenât the kind of girl who turned her head away from fire.
Your friend Lizzie had to beg you to go out.
"I swear, Y/N, one night wonât kill you," she said, tugging at your arm as you rolled your eyes. "You need to dance. Laugh. Hell, even just drink something that ainât water or dust."
You werenât exactly the type for blues clubs or lipstick-stained whiskey glasses, but Lizzie had that kind of persistence that wore you down like river water over stone. So by the time the sun dipped low and the sky bled pink, you were dressed â not dolled up like the city girls, but enough to turn a few heads in town: a dark skirt that hugged your hips, boots polished cleaner than usual, and your wild curls pinned just enough to look like you tried.
Club Juke was loud, smoky, and packed to the rafters. Lights glowed like sin on velvet, blues players' moaned from the corner stage, and the air buzzed with liquor and secrets. You followed Lizzie in, your fingers hooked into the belt loop of her dress, and tried not to flinch when a man brushed too close or looked too long.
You made it to the bar and ordered something you didnât even hear over the noise â some whiskey drink served in a chipped glass. Lizzie had already pulled a fella onto the dance floor, leaving you with a half-sip of burn down your throat and the sudden awareness that someone was watching you.
You didnât have to look far.
There he was. Stack.
Sitting in a corner booth like he owned the place (because he did), sleeves rolled, collar unbuttoned, smoke from a lit cigar curling around his jaw. His eyes were on you, unmoving. He didnât smile. Didnât wave. Just looked like heâd found exactly what he came here for.
Your pulse jumped. Damn it all.
You turned back to the bar, heart thudding. Maybe if you ignored him, heâd â
A warm voice slid in behind your ear like a sin on Sunday morning.
"Well now," Stack drawled, low and slow, "ainât you a sight. Didnât expect to see you in a place like this."
You didnât turn around. Just took another sip of your drink, ignoring the heat rolling off him in waves.
"Didnât come for you," you said coolly.
He chuckled. "Maybe not. But I figure fate donât give a damn."
He moved beside you, close enough that your elbows brushed. You could smell leather, smoke, and something sharper â danger, maybe. He rested his forearms on the bar and nodded to the bartender.
"Two of whatever sheâs drinkinâ."
You shot him a glare. "Whatâre you doinâ, Stack?"
He looked at you then â really looked â and for a moment, the noise of the club faded under his steady gaze.
"Tryinâ to figure out why a girl raised to fear me keeps lookinâ like sheâs itchinâ to find out what makes me so damn interesting."
You swallowed.
Then, you fixed the usual glare back onto your face.
"Well, what the hell makes me so interesting? Everyone with a dick in this town can't look away."
Stack barked a quiet laugh, low and raspy, like he wasnât expecting you to come back that sharp â but damn if he didnât like it. He leaned in just a hair closer, eyes flicking from your mouth to your eyes and back again, that grin of his growing just a little wider, a little darker.
"What makes you interesting?" he echoed, voice like smoke. "You walk into a room like you own the land under everyoneâs feet. You donât smile unless you mean it, and you donât flinch at a man like me." He tilted his head, still watching you. "That kinda thing makes folks look. Makes âem wonder."
You crossed your arms, hip cocked, not letting him get the upper hand. "You mean it makes âem bet. Run their mouths. Act like they got a chance."
Stack shrugged. "Let âem. Boys bet. Men watch. Iâm just here enjoyinâ the view."
You scoffed. "Youâre all the same."
His expression shifted then â just a flicker of something deeper beneath the charm. He leaned in again, but this time his voice dropped lower, real low, just for you.
"No, darlinâ. If I were like them, Iâd already be bragginâ about what I could do to you. Not sittinâ here waitinâ to see what youâll let me do."
That shut you up for a second. Long enough for the air between you to grow thick and heavy.
Before you could fire back, the music kicked into a new number â a slow, sultry blues rhythm that rolled across the club like honey.
Stack held out a hand. "Dance with me."
You looked at his hand like it might bite you.
"I donât dance."
He smirked. "Then just stand close and sway. I promise I bite softer than I look."
You stared at him, heart thudding somewhere stupid.
And then, without knowing why, you placed your hand in his.
His palm was warm. His grip was gentle. And your daddyâs voice was nowhere in your head when Stack pulled you onto the floor like heâd been waitinâ his whole damn life for this.
The floor didnât feel real under your boots.
Stack's hand rested firm against the small of your back, pulling you close â but not too close. Just enough to feel the heat rollin' off him in waves, enough to smell the faint scent of whiskey and smoke on his collar. Your fingers hovered just barely on his shoulder, stiff at first, like you were afraid of giving in.
"Youâre stiff as a fence post," he murmured against your temple, voice rough and warm. "Ainât nobody lookinâ to bite."
"You just told me you were," you shot back, eyes narrowing even as you swayed to the rhythm.
That earned a quiet chuckle from him â one that rumbled in his chest and traveled straight through you.
The music curled around the two of you like a fog, blues guitar crooning through the haze of cigar smoke and perfume. Other dancers swayed nearby, but none quite like you and Stack. You moved like magnets pulling in, fighting it, pulling in again. A war with no guns â just glances, breath, and the occasional accidental brush of leg against leg.
His thumb stroked a small, deliberate circle at the back of your waist. You stiffened â just slightly â and he caught it.
"You alright, spitfire?" he asked, voice a low purr. "Ainât used to men touchinâ you, or just not used to likinâ it?"
You glared up at him, lips parting to throw fire â but the words got stuck somewhere between your pride and the warmth blooming beneath your ribs.
"âŠYou think just âcause you talk smooth, Iâm gonna fall at your feet?" you finally snapped.
Stack leaned in, close enough that his breath kissed the edge of your jaw.
"No," he said. "I think youâll fight me every inch of the way. And I like a fight."
The tension snapped taut between you, so tight it hummed. His hand slid just a breath lower on your back. Your fingers curled tighter into his shirt. You werenât smiling, but you werenât pulling away, either.
"I ainât your conquest," you muttered.
"No," Stack said, eyes locked to yours like a vow. "Youâre the kind of woman a man earns. Or dies tryinâ."
The music slowed to a crawl. The last long note of a saxophone kissed the silence.
Neither of you moved.
You didnât know who leaned in first â but suddenly your face was inches from his. Lips barely apart. Breath tangled.
"Lord.. If you ain't the devil."
His mouth curved just slightly â not a smile, not quite â something darker. Hungrier.
"Then whatâs that make you, sweetheart?" he murmured, breath brushing your lips. "The lamb wanderinâ into the fire⊠or the flame that keeps dragginâ me back to hell?"
You blinked up at him, your heart thudding so loud you swore the whole club could hear it.
Everything inside you screamed to pull away â to do what youâd always done when boys got too close, when their hands wandered and their eyes lingered too long. But Stack wasnât like those boys. He didnât leer. He didnât plead.
He waited.
Like a man sure of the storm and patient enough to let it come to him.
Your voice came low. Dangerous.
"I ainât no lamb. And I sure as hell ainât chasinâ you."
He laughed â a quiet, genuine sound that rolled through his chest.
"No," he said again, like he was committing it to memory. "I'm chasin' you, baby."
Then his hand slid up â not low, not greedy â just firm and reverent, fingers skimming the side of your jaw like he was feeling the edges of something sacred.
"And Iâm tellinâ you now," he added, voice dropping like molasses in your ear. "You keep lookinâ at me like that⊠I will find out what you taste like when you stop pretending you hate me."
Before you could bite back, before you could even think, the club doors burst open again â
And Booneâs voice came, loud and panicked:
"Y/N! What the hell are you doinâ?!"
The spell shattered.
You jerked back like burned, your spine stiffening, eyes snapping toward the entrance.
Booneâs chest heaved, face red and soaked in sweat. Eyes darted from you to Stack, and the rage built fast â like a match tossed in dry brush.
Stack turned lazily toward him, jaw twitching. The charming smirk faded into something else. Something sharp.
"You know," he said, stepping just slightly in front of you, âif he was any kinda gentleman, he wouldn't swear at a lady."
Boone didnât flinch. Just pointed a finger, shaking with fury.
"Your daddyâs gonna hear âbout this. And when he does, heâll bury that bastard himself."
Your breath caught.
"Boone, it'sâ"
"Oh hell no. This ends now."
You stiffened, pulling away from Stack slightly. A glare rose to your face.
"You think you control anything I do? You're daddy's ranch hand, you ain't his informant, and you definitely ain't my husband, so I don't reckon you should be telling me what ends now."
Boone's jaw dropped.
"You know this is against his damn wishes. He wants you with me, not with Stack Moore."
Stack smiled, his gold grill glinting in the light of the juke.
"She don't want you, Boone Jones. Hell," he snorted, stepping forward. "She don't even really want me. I suggest you get to movin' before my brother and I toss you out this juke."
Booneâs eyes flashed, muscles tightening like coiled steel.
"You got a real mouth on you, Stack. But donât think for a second Iâm scared of you or your brother."
He stepped forward, the heat between them crackling like a storm about to break.
You swallowed hard, heart pounding. The tension was thick enough to slice through, and neither man was backing down.
Stackâs grin twisted, teeth flashing like daggers.
"Well then, looks like we got ourselves a showdown. You ready to back that up, Boone?"
Boone faltered for a moment. He spotted the gun on Stack's hip, glinting under his jacket. He was torn. But eventually, he turned away from the two of you.
"Get home, Y/N. I'm warnin' you. Your daddy'll be out lookin' for you soon as I tell him this shit."
With that, Boone spat on the floor and walked out.
The jukebox sputtered a slow country tune as Booneâs heavy footsteps faded into the night. Stack turned to you, smirking like heâd just won a war without firing a shot.
"Well, looks like the ranch hand knows when to fold âem."
You stood frozen, the weight of Booneâs warning settling deep in your chest.
Stackâs voice softened, almost mockingly gentle. "Now, tell me⊠whatâre you gonna do with all this heat youâre sittinâ on?"
Your eyes burned with quiet defiance, but inside, a storm was brewing â one that wouldnât be settled so easily.
Without another word, the defiance and want burning in your chest boiled over. You pulled Elias Moore into a crushing kiss, ruffling his suit jacket.
Stackâs smirk faltered for just a heartbeat, a flicker of surprise flashing behind his gold teeth. His hand lifted slowly, fingers brushing the side of your jaw with a teasing, deliberate lightness that sent a shiver down your spine. His voice dropped, low and dangerous, like a velvet promise edged with steel.
"Careful, baby. Youâre playinâ with fire."
But you didnât pull away. Instead, your breath hitched, and your heartbeat thundered in your ears like a wild stallion breaking free. The air between you thickened, charged with a heat that wasnât just from the summer night or the sticky tension in the jukeboxâs flickering neon glow. It was raw, electric, and impossible to ignore.
Your fingers curled into the lapel of his jacket, tugging him closer, hungry for the heat that radiated off his body. The scent of leather, musk, and something uniquely Stack invaded your senses. Your lips pressed harder against his, demanding more, needing more. His hands found your waist, strong and possessive, pulling you flush against him until there was no space left â only the desperate dance of two bodies claiming their own wild territory.
His mouth moved over yours with fierce intention, teasing and tasting, trailing a path of fire down your neck. You arched against him, breath mingling, every nerve alight. The weight of Booneâs warning dissolved somewhere in the back of your mind, drowned out by the thunderous storm between you and Stack.
Stackâs voice, rough and low, was a whisper against your skin.
"You gonna be my woman. One way or another."
His hands slid lower, fingers digging into the curve of your hips, grounding you even as your pulse raced with reckless abandon. You tugged at the buttons of his shirt, exposing the warm skin beneath, your nails grazing, marking. Every touch was a challenge, every breath a promise.
Your lips parted in a silent plea, and Stack answered, his tongue tracing the line of your jaw, down to the swell of your collarbone. The heat in your chest ignited into a blaze, scorching and sweet. It wasnât just passion â it was war, desire, defiance, and something dangerously close to surrender.
The air thickened, charged and heavy with all the words neither of you dared say. His fingers tightened on your hips, pulling you impossibly closer, as if he wanted to press you into him and make sure you couldnât slip away. Your hands trembled slightly, caught between the urge to push him away and the desperate craving to keep this fire alive.
Stackâs breath hitched as his mouth dipped lower, kissing the hollow at your throat, leaving a trail of heat that seared through your skin. Your fingers tangled in the coarse fabric of his shirt, dragging it open just enough to feel the steady thump of his heart beneath your touch. Every beat was a promise, wild and relentless.
That night, you thought you'd be in wicked trouble with your daddy.
You got home and he was sitting in his chair, rifle by his side. There was no glare. No anger. No fight. Just disappointment.
His eyes met yours â quiet, heavy, like the weight of every unspoken word between you.
"Boone stopped by. Said you was almost kissin' Stack in the back of his juke joint. That the truth?"
You froze in the doorway, the screen creaking shut behind you. Your boots felt heavy against the floorboards.
"Is that the truth? I won't ask again." he asked again, voice like gravel and smoke, worn down from years of silence that meant more than shouting ever could.
You swallowed, but your throat was dry.
"Yes, sir."
Your daddy looked away then, toward the window. The moonlight spilled across the hardwood like spilled milk, cold and pale. He didnât raise his voice. He didnât even shift in his chair.
âDidnât raise you to chase heat just âcause it burns bright.â
You stepped further inside, your heart thudding in your chest.
âIt ainât just heat.â
He turned back to you, slow and steady, the way storms roll in without hurry.
"That boyâs trouble, Y/N. His people bring it like flies bring rot. You think Stack Moore gives a damn about you come winter? When the crops are dry and the nights are long?"
âI ainât askinâ for your blessing,â you said, quietly. âBut I ainât askinâ for forgiveness, either.â
His jaw worked, clenched and tight. The rifle stayed at his side, but his hands curled on the armrests like he was gripping the weight of every fear a father could carry.
"You know Iâd ride to hell for you, girl."
"I know."
A beat. A breath. The porch creaked under the weight of the wind.
"Then donât make me bury you for someone who wouldnât ride back. If you think Stack Moore is worth it, I can't stop ya," he asserted wisely. "But he better be. Because if a single tear drops to this floor and he's responsible for it, I'm buryin' him. And his brother."
Your breath hitched, but you didnât let it show.
He wasnât threatening. He was promising.
That old chair creaked as he leaned forward, forearms braced on his knees, eyes pinning you like a hawk pins its prey.
"You understand me, girl?"
His voice was low, but there was thunder in it â a quiet kind of rage built on love and fear and the kind of heartbreak only a father can carry.
You nodded, chin up even though your chest was tight.
"I understand."
He let out a long breath through his nose, like heâd been holding it for years.
"Then go on to bed. And think real hard âbout the kind of man youâre givinâ your name to. 'Cause once you do⊠you don't get to take it back."
You stood there for a moment longer â the screen door groaning open behind you again, the wind pushing against your back like even the night was trying to warn you.
But you didnât look back.
The next day, Stack stopped by the ranch, as if he was askin' for a gun to go off towards his head. You were out back, tending to the horses, brushing your favorite tenderly.
The horse, Annie was her name, blew air out of her nose, as if she knew trouble was approaching. You cooed at her.
"Settle down, pretty girl. Ain't nothin' comin' to get you."
But even as you said it, your eyes flicked toward the dust trail creeping down the long dirt drive â slow and deliberate. A dark car. Stackâs.
Annie shifted under your hand, hooves stamping once against the earth. You didnât blame her. You felt the same tight pull in your chest. That mix of anger and ache, nerves and want, all tangled together like barbed wire.
Stack stepped out like he owned the goddamn world. Boots still dirty from whatever hellhole he'd walked through last, and that cocky tilt to his mouth like he'd slept just fine while the storm he stirred brewed all night long.
He spotted you in the paddock, and his smirk deepened like heâd expected a bullet and got a welcome mat instead.
You didnât wave. Didnât call out.
Just kept brushing Annieâs side like you werenât burning from the inside out.
Stack leaned on the fence, one arm slung over the top rail, eyes fixed on you like you were the only thing that ever moved slow in his world.
"You didnât call," he said, voice low and teasing. "Thought maybe Boone talked you outta me."
You looked up then, slow and measured.
"No one talks me outta anything, Stack. Least of all a man who runs when daddyâs rifleâs on the porch."
That knocked the smirk clean off his face for a second. Then he chuckled â slow, deep.
"Figured Iâd come back âround today. Let your old man know I ainât runninâ. Iâm standinâ."
You shook your head, a bitter little smile tugging at your lips.
"He already knows. Question is⊠do you?"
Stackâs jaw twitched. His eyes dropped to your hands on the horse â the way they moved, firm but gentle. Like you could break things and fix them all the same.
He straightened off the fence.
"I ainât scared of your daddy," he said. "And I ain't here for a quick trip to the sheets. You're the typa woman worth marryin'."
You froze.
Annie huffed beside you, but you barely heard her over the rush of blood in your ears. Stackâs words hit you like a hammer to the ribs â not because you didnât believe him, but because deep down⊠maybe you did.
Still, you kept your hands busy, brushing through Annieâs mane like she was the only thing keeping you grounded.
"You donât even know what marryinâ me means, Stack Moore," you said quietly. "It ainât just Sunday dresses and kissinâ under porch lights. Itâs long winters and hard land and family that donât forget where you came from."
He stepped into the paddock without asking, boots crunching over the straw and dirt. That alone told you something â Stack had never waited for an invitation in his life.
"I know it wonât be easy," he said, stopping just a few feet from you. "I know your daddy donât think Iâm good enough. Hell, maybe I ainât. But I know this â Iâd rather fight every damn day for your heart than spend a single one without it."
Your hand paused on Annieâs shoulder. For the first time, you looked at him â really looked.
There was no grin now. No sharp teeth. Just a man, standing there with his scars and swagger stripped down to something real.
"Youâre serious," you said, more to yourself than him.
"Iâve been in fights I ainât walked away from. Iâve stared down the barrel more times than I can count. But you?" He stepped closer, voice low and steady. "Youâre the first thing thatâs ever made me scared to lose."
Your chest tightened.
Goddamn him.
Because you wanted to believe it. Wanted to throw your arms around him, take him in the barn, and kiss the past right off his mouth. But youâd learned too young that want didnât make a man stay. Promises were easy when the sun was out â it was the nights that told the truth.
So you swallowed hard and said the only thing you could.
"Then donât say you want me, Stack. Show me."
His eyes flickered, something fierce and warm lighting in them.
"I intend to, darlinâ," he said. "Every damn day. Starting now."
And when he reached for your hand, you let him take it. Just for a moment.
Just long enough to remember how it felt.
He raised it to his mouth. Kissed it gently, if Stack Moore was even capable of being gentle.
"Now.. Take me inside to see your daddy. I'm sure we can find somethin' to agree on. Gotta get along before I ask for the blessin'."
You snorted, tying Annie up and kicking his boot with your own.
"It ain't that easy. You've got to court me before you marry me, and even then, you gotta impress daddy."
Stack chuckled low in his chest, the sound rich like molasses and twice as thick with trouble.
"Darlinâ, I didnât think anything about you would be easy," he said, falling in step beside you as you started toward the house. "Hell, if you were, I wouldnât be out here riskinâ a shotgun sermon and a boot up my ass."
You cut him a sideways glance, amused despite yourself. "Youâll get more than a boot if you donât stop runninâ that mouth."
He grinned, flashing that infamous gold tooth like a warning sign. "That mouthâs gonna be the reason you marry me, just you wait."
You stopped at the bottom of the steps, boots crunching in the dirt. Stack did too, waiting for your lead. Waiting, you realized, for your say-so â and that was rare.
"You serious about this?" you asked, voice lower now. No teasing. No fire. Just the honest question of a woman who knew how easily hearts cracked under pressure.
He nodded once. No swagger this time. Just steel and heat.
"I want a wife. I want babies. I wanna hang my guns up until I need 'em. And I want you. So, little lady, let's go."
You held in a tear, the only tear that had ever developed in your cold e/c eyes since mama died. Then, you willingly threaded your fingers into Stack's and tugged him towards the house.