adam_marks2022
Waylan Harlan has spent his whole life on Bullpoint Ranch, the sprawling Tennessee spread that's been in his family for generations. At twenty-eight, the ranch is finally his to lead-but his strict, traditional parents have one non-negotiable condition: settle down with a woman. Specifically, sweet Daisy Mae from the neighboring farm. They believe a gay man can't run Bullpoint, can't earn the respect of the hands, can't carry on the Harlan name the "right" way. Waylan's heart aches for the land he loves, but even more for the truth he's hidden too long.
Then Sawyer Beaumont arrives as the new ranch hand. Blonde-haired, bright-eyed, and built like he was born to work the land, Sawyer is a true Southern gentleman-funny as all get-out, quick with a Bible verse and a joke that leaves everyone grinning. "The Good Book says love covers a multitude of sins... reckon it covers a multitude of bad coffee too?" Every Sunday he dons his pressed suit for church, radiating sunshine even when his controlling stepmother back home is still trying to "pray him straight."
As Waylan and Sawyer work side by side-mending fences, herding cattle, stealing moments by the river-the pull between them grows impossible to ignore. Laughter under wide Tennessee skies, quiet confessions in the hayloft, and the slow burn of two men discovering they were made for each other. But with family ultimatums, small-town whispers, and the weight of tradition bearing down, their happiness hangs by a thread.
In the end, Bullpoint isn't just about land-it's about choosing love over legacy, joy over fear, and building a future where two cowboys can stand tall together. Warm, funny, steamy, and deeply Southern, this is a story of pure, unapologetic happiness that will leave you smiling long after the last page.