The Outlaw's Daughter
  • Reads 1,437
  • Votes 46
  • Parts 13
  • Time 2h 26m
  • Reads 1,437
  • Votes 46
  • Parts 13
  • Time 2h 26m
Ongoing, First published Apr 15, 2015
The Wild West is a dangerous place. Outlaws, Gangs, anduntamed land. It's not the ideal place to raise a family, but it's the perfect place to earn a living as a rancher. At least until you run off and become the law's most wanted.

 Cassidy Williams, a spunky, sassy, and independent 17 year old girl (also on the top of the law's WANTED list, has known nothing except guns and violence her entire life. What else would she know as a gang leader's daughter? Her mother and brother died when she was eleven. Her father took her away from their home to live on the run. To live in a gang. Everything is okay for them. Stealing what they need is all they know. All she knows. 

Then Cassidy is kidnapped by the enemy gang, and she is suddenly torn between her childhood friend, and the enemy. Her father's and her best friend's lives are all depending on her actions. But how can she protect both at the same time? Who will she betray? What choices will impact her future?

Find out in The Outlaw's Daughter.
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Yeah I was in Juvie. Get over it. by moonlightariaturner
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Carmen is screwed up. She's been in and out of juvie all her life and seriously there's no place she'd rather be. Until she gets released from juvie unexpectedly, given a probation officer, and forced to live with a normal family and go to a normal school. Carmen doesn't even know the definition of normal. Much less family, or school. Separated from the only system she's known and has stayed constant all her life, she finds it hard to adjust to the world outside the concrete building. The structure and rules aren't the same. In juvie, rules were like opinions, people ignored them. But in the real world, supposedly it wasn't socially acceptable to steal cash, or graffiti the front of the school building. Enter the Harrisons, the family who's taking care of her. The matriarch of the family hates her criminal record. Sammy, the seven-year-old, is too clingy, too innocent, and too naive to understand anything. Then there's Jay, the guy she's forced to share a room with. A self-righteous son of a bitch, Jay doesn't understand Carmen and doesn't understand her self destructive way of thinking. Though he's not bothered by her, he's fascinated with her. The family represents the structure and rules that Carmen doesn't, nor wants to, understand. But as Carmin starts to push back at the structure and rules suddenly rushed into her life, it starts to change. Her whole way of living is thrown off balance, what she deems normal isn't. And through a series of events, she starts to spiral out of control, and she doesn't know if someone can pull her up from that. Carmen was given a second chance, but is it a good chance, or is it just another recipe for getting thrown right back to square one, like she always is? Because second chances don't usually get handed out. And she's about to learn what it means to get a second chance. ____
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After being caught, tried and arrested for a crime she didn't do; Lexi Hunter has a choice. It's either Juvie or spend the summer on her dad's ranch working off her probation. Should be an easy pick, right? Only problem is, she hasn't seen or spoken to her dad in ten years. The last time she saw him was through a car window as her mom drove them and all their possessions away to go live a normal, busy, eccentric lifestyle in New York. So basically, being back at a place she used to call home with a man she can't muster the respect for to actually call 'dad', is a prison sentence in itself. Lexi is determined to hate and ridicule everything about her situation. Wanting nothing more than to get the summer over with so she can go back to real life. That all changes when she meets Dawson Priest; the ranch hand who she is forced to work side by side with. His optimistic, simple, almost eloquent outlook on life, the world, and the small town ranch life in general sparks her to see things from his perspective and may even challenge her enough to mend the strained relationship with her dad. This is a story of self discovery, personal growth, a steamy cowboy fling, and learning the importance of forgiveness. This simple, small town life may not seem as much of a jail sentence by the end of the summer. Who knows, maybe Lexi turns out to be a country girl at heart after all.