Page 119 of Ride Easy


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She watches me carefully.

“But then I met you.”

My voice roughens. “And suddenly the noise didn’t matter anymore.”

I take her hands. “You drown out the background,” I share. “You make everything quiet in the best way. You make life—and love—easy.”

Her eyes fill immediately.

“I didn’t know easy,” I continue. “Not like this. Not like coming home and knowing where I belong.”

Her bottom lip trembles.

I drop to one knee.

The world narrows to her face. She gasps softly, hands flying to her mouth. “Dixon,” she whispers.

I pull the ring from my pocket, opening the box with fingers that finally stop shaking. “I don’t want the road calling me away anymore,” I tell her. “I want you calling me home.”

Tears spill freely down her cheeks now.

“I love you,” I confess. “Not in the passing way. Not in the heat-of-the-moment way. In the stay-forever way.”

My voice breaks slightly, but I don’t look away.

“Will you marry me?”

There’s a beat.

Two.

Her hands tremble as they drop from her mouth.

“Yes,” she breathes. Then louder, through tears and laughter and pure disbelief—"Yes.”

The word hits me like sunrise. I stand, sliding the ring onto her finger.

It fits.

Of course it fits.

She throws her arms around my neck, and I lift her without thinking, spinning her once like the world finally aligned. “I can’t believe this is real,” she laughs against my shoulder.

“It’s real,” I murmur into her hair.

She pulls back, cupping my face. “This,” she replies, voice soft but sure, “this is what life should be.”

I raise a brow.

“What’s that?”

“An easy ride,” she smiles.

The phrase settles between us like something sacred.

An easy ride.

Not because it’s effortless.