At first, I thought it was a prank. Probably Roy again, leaving some half-baked joke about me being the “Barbie Ranch Queen.” But the handwriting stopped me cold — clean, steady, and familiar in a way that made my stomach twist.
It was my ex-husband’s.
I hadn’t seen or heard from him in years. Not since he drove away with half our savings and a head full of excuses. I stood there in the cold, dust swirling around my boots, reading that one line over and over again.
You don’t have to prove it anymore.
For a second, all those years came rushing back — the nights I spent fixing tractors by flashlight, the winters I went without heat so I could afford vet bills, the times I stood in court fighting for the land my family built. Every insult, every smirk, every man who called me “sweetheart” instead of “boss.”
I’d spent so long fighting to prove I could do it alone that I forgot I already had.
As I looked around the ranch — my ranch — I saw what I’d built with my own two hands. The fence lines that stood straight because I dug the posts myself. The herd grazing calmly under the evening sun. The windmill creaking like it was proud of me.
So, I burned the note. Watched the paper curl and vanish in the same fire pit I use to keep coyotes away at night.
Then I saddled up, rode out to the ridge, and watched the horizon swallow the sun.
They can call me Barbie if they want.
But out here — in the dirt, the sweat, and the silence — I’m the one who keeps it all running.
And I don’t need anyone’s damn permission to do it.