Sam had gone to work for his father’s residential real estate company a couple years ago with a vision for the future: buy available and struggling Paradise Valley ranches, subdivide them into mini-ranches, and sell these ranchettes to affluent city folks who fantasized about owning a piece of rugged Montana. Melk Realty wasn’t the first to chop up pastures and farms in Paradise Valley, and wouldn’t be the last, but it still rankled old ranching families that some of the best grazing land was going to folks who didn’t care about cattle, horses, or Montana’s history. Dillon had made a point of avoiding the controversy surrounding the development of Paradise Valley. When he left Montana for college, he knew he was pretty much gone for good. He’d come back only to tide things over, but in working the ranch these past three years, he’d developed a bond with the ranch that he hadn’t felt before. Fortunately, Trey was back and committed to Sheenan Ranch, so the family spread was protected.
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