“I need to make love… Stay still or it will hurt more. I’ll be quick,” the man gasped, his voice low as he pinned her down. “Don’t resist. You’ll only make it worse,” he whispered again, pressing her against the rough wooden floor of the barn. The bride had fled. Her white dress, once impeccable, was now in tatters, stained with dirt, sweat, and despair. Under the relentless desert sun, she ran with the urgency of someone escaping death itself. She thought she had found refuge in an abandoned barn, a place to hide from the cruelty of the man she had married. But fate had other plans. The owner of the barn, a man hardened by solitude and a wild life, found her burning with fever, trembling between consciousness and collapse. Fear locked her muscles the instant she saw him. However, it wasn’t his appearance that sealed her fate. It was the raspy whisper he uttered moments before dragging a kitchen knife across her skin that changed her life forever. She was already running. The scorching heat of the American Southwest burned her throat with every gasping breath. The air itself felt like flames invading her lungs, competing with the panic exploding inside her chest. Just hours before, the wedding dress symbolized hope and a new beginning. Now, it had become a trap. The lace and silk snagged on every thorn and cactus. In a frantic desperation, she had torn the hem, freeing her legs at the cost of elegance. The fabric, once a brilliant white, was now dyed with desert dust, sweat, and faint traces of her own blood. The veil was long gone, ripped away by a sharp branch like a surrender she refused to accept. Each stumbling step kicked up clouds of red dust that swirled upward and clung to her damp skin. Dirt streaked her face, her cheeks flushed with exhaustion and terror. Above her, the sun burned without pity—a relentless force in a cloudless, merciless sky. No shade. No relief. Only endless rocky terrain stretching to the horizon. Boone’s face haunted her thoughts. Boone Kincaid. The husband she had gained at dawn, the man she was fleeing before dusk. His hard jaw, his warmthless eyes, the possessive intensity he showed at the altar. Every memory pushed her forward. She had trusted his charming promises; she had believed in the life of stability and protection he described. Her family, drowning in debt, had welcomed him as their salvation. But when the ceremony ended and the doors closed behind them, everything changed. There was no affection. There was no kindness. Only a frozen declaration: —“You are my wife now. That means your body, your time, your mind… everything belongs to me. Disobedience is not an option.” The crushing grip of his hand on her arm had left bruises that now throbbed beneath the torn fabric. That moment had been the final warning. To be continued in the comments

“I need to make love… Stay still or it will hurt m…

“I need to make love… Stay still or it will hurt more. I’ll be quick,” the man gasped, his voice low as he pinned her down. “Don’t resist. You’ll only make it worse,” he whispered again, pressing her against the rough wooden floor of the barn.

Where the desert sun scorched the earth with merciless intensity, a lone rider advanced with a steady stride through an endless sea of ​​dust and silence, his presence blending into the harsh landscape like another wandering shadow shaped by violence and regret. His name was Wade Sullivan, a gunslinger whose weathered face bore scars etched by bullets, betrayals, and choices that could never be undone, while his dark eyes reflected the weight of memories that haunted him more faithfully than any companion.

A worn revolver rested at his hip, its metal dulled by years of relentless survival, and an unspoken purpose propelled him forward through the hostile frontiers of the American Southwest. The hot wind tugged relentlessly at his coat as his weary Mustang, a stubborn gray beast named Ghost, pressed on toward a forgotten settlement known as Dustfall, a town whispered about in saloons and feared by those who understood what desperation often builds in places abandoned by law and mercy.

Wade sought refuge, but refuge was never the true reason guiding his journey through the scorched wasteland. He sought someone whose presence haunted him long after absence should have severed all attachment. Her name was June Callahan, daughter of a once-powerful landowner whose violent death had become legend, though Wade suspected the truth behind that story was far darker and more complex.

As the sunset slowly bled over the horizon, the desert stillness shattered with the crack of a distant gunshot, forcing Ghost to rear up in surprise as Wade’s instincts ignited with instant precision. From the swirling dust emerged a lone outlaw, his face hidden behind a faded cloth, a Winchester rifle pointed with reckless certainty.

“Give me your money, stranger,” shouted the bandit, his voice sharpened more by arrogance than by caution.

Wade’s hand moved faster than any hesitation. The revolver was drawn from its holster with fluid inevitability. A single shot echoed across the empty plain, and the attacker fell to the sand, his ambition ending as abruptly as his threat.

“I’m not carrying anything worth stealing,” Wade muttered, and spurred Ghost on again.

Dustfall appeared beneath the rising moon, its crooked buildings sinking into decay and a silent menace hanging heavy over the deserted streets, an unnatural silence descending. Wade dismounted slowly, tied Ghost to a splintered post, and kept every sense alert to the invisible tension woven into the stillness.

Inside the saloon, the stale whiskey and musty smoke clung to the air like ghosts that refused to leave. Behind the bar stood a burly bartender whose wary gaze fixed on Wade with obvious suspicion.

“What brings you here, traveler?” he asked cautiously.

“A drink and some information,” Wade replied calmly.

From a dimly lit corner came the melancholic melody of a voice both familiar and eerily distant. June Callahan stood beneath a flickering lamp, radiating confidence and danger in equal measure, and recognition leapt between them instantly.

“Wade Sullivan,” she said softly, approaching with measured grace. “I thought you were gone forever.”

“Perhaps vanished,” Wade replied calmly. “But never forgotten.”

Her smile held a subtle tension.

—Did you come back seeking comfort… or something much more complicated? —he asked carefully.

“I came back looking for the truth,” Wade replied in a murmur.

Outside, under the cold glare of the moon, their conversation lost all pretense.

“Your father’s death was never what the people believed,” Wade said firmly, with a certainty devoid of accusation.

June’s expression hardened.

“You talk about dangerous things without proof,” he warned.

—I found the abandoned mine— Wade continued—. And the tomb hidden under stone.

The silence between them felt heavy.

Before they could continue, a sudden burst of gunfire ripped through the night. From the shadows emerged Boone Kincaid, leader of the ruthless Dustfall outlaws, his presence commanding fear with effortless authority.

“You should have stayed far away, Sullivan,” Boone growled coldly.

Wade reacted without hesitation. Bullets ignited chaos in the empty street. Two men fell quickly beneath Wade’s deadly accuracy, but Boone moved with predatory cunning, twisting through the darkness until the icy steel rested against Wade’s neck.

“Your story ends here,” Boone whispered harshly.

A gunshot split the air.

Boone staggered backward, pain twisting his face, while June held a smoking gun, her expression unreadable but resolute.

“This ends tonight,” he said quietly.

Boone let out a bitter laugh despite the wound.

“Do you think loyalty ever protected anyone?” he spat. “Your sister trusted me once.”

June’s hand trembled.

“You ruined his life,” Boone added cruelly.

The last shot silenced him forever.

At dawn, Wade and June rode toward the abandoned mine, their hearts heavy with the tension of unresolved betrayal and a fragile alliance. Inside the crumbling tunnels, Wade found a hidden chest where gold coins glittered like promises capable of corrupting even the strongest convictions.

“We could leave it all behind,” Wade murmured thoughtfully.

June’s eyes darkened as she pulled out a hidden leaf.

“No,” he said slowly. “I don’t leave anything unfinished.”

“You killed your father,” Wade said calmly.

“He destroyed my childhood,” June replied, frozen. “And your sister found out everything.”

Rage erupted in Wade’s chest.

The fight erupted fiercely, dust and gold flying amidst fury and despair. When exhaustion finally subdued the violence, Wade immobilized June with trembling determination.

“You will face justice,” he declared.

An explosion shook the earth.

The Kincaid gang descended upon the ruins like vultures drawn by the distant echo of gunfire. Trapped beneath falling stones, Wade and June clawed their way to survival, their fragile cooperation forged not by forgiveness, but by necessity.

As they emerged into the blinding light of day, bullets once again ruled the cruel bargain of fate. Wade fought with relentless precision, while June seized a fallen rifle, her determination as fierce as her defiance.

When silence returned to the field, victory offered neither peace nor certainty.

“The gold is gone,” Wade said quietly.

—And illusions too—June replied thoughtfully.

They rode towards the burning horizon, their alliance forged between violence, betrayal, and something neither dared to name at all.

Years later, whispers spoke of two horsemen who faced cruelty wherever it thrived, their legend growing under desert skies where truth and myth forever intertwine.