He walked out of the heat with nothing but a duffel bag and a plan.Willa Crane inherited three hundred acres of dying Nebraska farmland and a lifetime of debt—or so she thinks. Alone, overwhelmed, and drowning in work she was never built for, she's one bad week from crawling back to Omaha and admitting her mother was right.Then Judd appears on the county road. No last name. No history. Just a body built for the land and hands that fix everything they touch.He repairs the tractor. Rebuilds the fences. Hauls water when the well dies and holds her steady when the storms hit. He becomes the only thing standing between Willa and total collapse.But Judd didn't come to save the farm. He came to take it.The phone line goes dead. The truck won't start. The neighbors stop coming. One by one, the threads connecting Willa to the outside world are cut—and every severed line leads back to the man sleeping in her bed.By the time she finds the lockbox hidden in his bag, the truth is already buried too deep to pull free. He didn't rescue her. He made sure no one else could.Now Willa has to decide: run from the man who built her cage, or stay with the only person who ever taught her how to survive inside it.