Page 143 of Bearing His Sins

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The banner stretched between two pines at the edge of the yard, hand-painted in three different colors of paint that someone had clearly raided from the barn storage.

WELCOME HOME, LOGAN!

And beneath it, the entire ranch.

Walker stood at the grill with a spatula, gesturing with it while he argued something with Boone, who’d crossed his arms and was clearly losing. Johanna swatted Walker’s shoulder and stole the spatula out of his hand. Hatch laughed and said something that made Boone scowl harder.

Echo tore across the yard at a dead sprint, ears flying, with Goose hot on her heels in pure Golden Retriever delight, and Kavik right in the thick of it, howling the song of his people. Cinder watched the whole production from the shade of the porch, unimpressed. Oliver and Tate chased all three of therunning dogs in shrieking loops, Nessie calling after them to slow down while Jax just watched, grinning, doing absolutely nothing to help. Cowboy had stationed himself near Walker’s boots, too old and too smart to involve himself in any of it.

Anson had Maggie tucked against his side near the picnic table, his big hand splayed across her hip, Bramble the wolfhound standing beside them like a small gray horse. Maggie held up two water bottles, asking somebody something across the yard.

Ghost stood at the edge of it all, arms crossed, watching the chaos with the faintly tolerant expression of a man who would rather be anywhere quieter. Naomi walked over to him and tucked herself under his arm, leaning into his side, saying something low that made the corner of his mouth twitch.

X had cornered Mariah at the picnic table again, leaning in with that slow grin, and Mariah was very deliberately not looking at him while she arranged a platter of buns. The tips of her ears had gone pink.

River came around the side of the house, wiping paint-smeared hands down the front of his shirt, grinning like he’d accomplished something genuinely impressive.

Figured he was responsible for that atrocious banner.

Alice was there, too, watching the chaos with wide eyes, the puppy Jonah had given her two days ago squirming in her arms. Jonah hovered close by, as usual. He’d hardly left her side since he and Evander found her.

Evander.

Greta scanned for him, but wasn’t entirely surprised he wasn’t there. He’d hung around on the outskirts of the ranch for a couple of weeks, but as soon as he’d finished rebuilding his cabin, he’d disappeared back into the wilderness.

She should go check on him soon. He’d hate to know she was worried about him, but she was.

All thoughts of Evander evaporated when King and Atlas spotted the truck.

Atlas bolted off the porch like he’d been launched, and King peeled off from where he’d been standing guard by the grill, lumbering behind the quick Atlas. Both of them hit the side of the truck at the same time, King’s paws scrabbling at Bear’s door, Atlas already up on her hind legs at Greta’s window, tail going like a metronome on overdrive.

“Okay, okay,” Greta laughed, fumbling for the door handle. “Hi.Hi.Yes, I missed you, my brave, brave boy.”

Logan opened his door, and King abandoned Bear entirely the second he saw the boy, bowling into him hard enough that Logan staggered back a step, laughing, and went down to one knee in the grass with both arms around the dog’s neck.

Bear hadn’t moved.

He sat there with both hands still on the wheel, watching his son get tackled by his dog under a crooked banner painted by a man with no artistic ability whatsoever, surrounded by every person who’d ever pulled him out of the dark.

Greta went around the front of the truck and pulled open his door.

“Hey,” she said softly and tipped her head to the banner. “Is that why you were nervous?”

He looked at her for several heartbeats, and the tension leaked out of him. “Yeah. That’s it. Worried it’d scare him into shutting down again.”

She glanced over to where Logan wrestled with their dogs, watched X wade into the fray, help the laughing boy up, then steer him toward the picnic tables. “I don’t think you have to worry about that anymore, Grizzly.”

Bear let out a long breath and climbed down from the truck. She tucked herself against his side, and he put an arm around her shoulders as they walked toward the picnic tables.

Around them, the yard erupted back into motion—someone had brought out water guns.

Tate ran by, squealing, as Oliver chased him with two water guns and a bandolier of water balloons. X grabbed two guns, passed one to Logan, and then the two of them joined the kids and Jax in what was rapidly becoming a full-scale engagement. Mariah watched him go with her arms crossed and her expression carefully neutral, which meant absolutely nothing.

Bear bent down to murmur in her ear, “Your six weeks are almost up, and she’s showing no signs of thaw.”

Oh, how wrong he was.

X crouched low in the grass and let Tate clamber up his back before rising to his full height with Tate’s arms around his neck and a water gun in each hand, already aimed. He let out a chest-deep bellow and unleashed two streams of water that sent Jax and Oliver stumbling back, laughing and soaked, while Tate shrieked in triumph from his perch.