Page 34 of My Cowboy Neighbor


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"I'm still scared."

"Me too. But I think scared is okay, as long as we're together."

She kissed him then, and he tasted possibility and promise and everything he'd ever wanted without knowing he was looking for it.

They still had details to figure out. Still had challenges ahead. But they had each other, and right now, that felt like enough.

That felt like everything.

Epilogue

Vanessa

One Year Later

Vanessa stood at the kitchen window of the farmhouse, watching Dustin work a young mare in the arena. The horse was skittish, fresh off the track and uncertain about her new life, but Dustin moved with the kind of patience that still amazed her after a year of watching him build this place from the ground up.

Fleming Training Facility. The sign at the end of the long driveway still made her smile every time she saw it.

Her phone buzzed with a work email. The consulting firm wanted her input on a new client proposal, something that could wait until Monday when she drove back to the office. She'd gotten good at the balance over the past year, spending three days a week in the city and four days here. Her boss had been skeptical at first about the arrangement, but her results had won him over. Turned out she did her best strategic thinking from the farmhouse office Dustin had helped her set up in the spare bedroom.

The one that overlooked the pastures where Thunder grazed with three other horses they'd acquired over the past six months.

"Coffee's getting cold," she called out the open window.

Dustin looked up and grinned, that same boyish smile that had scrambled her brain the first day they'd met. He said something to the teenage girl working with him, one of the five students currently enrolled in his training program, and headed toward the house.

She met him at the back door with his mug, and he kissed her before taking it, tasting like morning air and the peppermint gum he chewed when he was working.

"How's Rosie doing?" she asked.

"Getting there. Hannah's got good instincts with her." He leaned against the counter, watching her move around the kitchen. "You heading out soon?"

"In about an hour. I need to prep for the Monday meeting." She refilled her own mug. "You still good to come to the office thing Thursday?"

"Wouldn't miss it." He'd been surprisingly good about her work events, showing up in jeans and boots to functions full of suits and managing to charm every single one of her colleagues. Her boss's wife had declared him "refreshingly authentic" after the last dinner party, which had made Dustin laugh for a solid five minutes.

"It's just drinks, but Richard wants you to meet his husband. Apparently, they're thinking about buying a horse for their daughter."

"Always happy to talk horses." He set down his mug and pulled her close. "You okay? You seem distracted."

She was. Had been for the past week, ever since she'd taken the pregnancy test. Three of them, actually, because she hadn't believed the first two.

They hadn't been trying. After a year of living between two places, of building careers and learning how to fight fair and figuring out what forever looked like day by day, a baby hadn't been part of the immediate plan.

But apparently the universe had other ideas.

"I'm fine," she said. More than fine. "Just thinking about the Richmond project. The client's being difficult."

It wasn't a lie, exactly. She was thinking about the project. She was just thinking about a lot of other things too.

She'd tell him tonight. When she got back from the city and had time to process it herself and figure out how to say the words.

I'm pregnant. We're having a baby. Our lives are about to change in ways we can't even imagine.

"You'll figure it out," he said, kissing her forehead. "You always do."

That faith he had in her. It still caught her off guard sometimes, the way he believed in her abilities without question. The way he'd rearranged his entire life to build something permanent with her, and never once made her feel like she owed him anything for it.