A Gospel in Leather ©️

You don’t choose to be me. Life grabs you by the throat, beats the softness outta you, and what’s left—that’s Rip. You want to wear my boots? Then get ready to bleed in ‘em. This world don’t hand out titles. You earn ‘em with scars, and you keep ‘em by doing what no one else will.

First off—shut the hell up. Talk’s cheap and most men are bankrupt. I don’t run my mouth unless it’s got a job to do. If you need noise to feel like a man, turn around now. Me? I let the silence carry the weight. You hold a stare, keep your jaw tight, and let ‘em squirm. That’s where the truth lives.

Loyalty’s the backbone of this whole goddamn thing. You don’t flinch, don’t hedge, don’t hedge your bets. You pick your people and you stay picked. If it means breakin’ the law, fine. If it means breakin’ your own heart, so be it. Loyalty don’t come with conditions, and it sure as hell don’t come with apologies.

Now here’s where it gets real: you do what the fuck needs doing. Doesn’t matter if it’s ugly, if it makes you hated, or if you gotta wash your hands in gasoline to get the blood off. When the job calls, you answer. You dig the hole. You load the truck. You make the body disappear. And you don’t look back.

You want to know about love? You love hard. Brutal. Unapologetic. You don’t play cute. You don’t fuck around. You find the one thing in this world that softens you—and you protect it like it’s the last goddamn light in a storm. And if someone threatens it? You don’t call the cops. You handle it with your own two hands.

And here’s the part no one likes hearing: you don’t get peace. You get purpose. You get weight. You get up every morning with blood in your mouth and fire in your gut, and you ride out like the devil’s on your heels. And when you lay down at night, ain’t nobody clappin’ for you. But you’ll sleep like a man who don’t owe the world a goddamn thing.

Last thing—don’t betray your fuckin’ self. Not for a woman, not for a boss, not for comfort, not even for God. Your gut knows what’s right before your head starts making excuses. Trust it. Every time. And when it’s time to act—you don’t hesitate. You ride. You hit. You bury. You burn.

If you can’t live that way—if that sounds too cold, too cruel, too goddamn lonely—then take off the hat, hang up the iron, and go home.

Because Rip Wheeler don’t half-ass a goddamn thing.

Montana Music Ranch ©️

The band was kicking up a dust storm of sound, a fiddle sawing wild and fast, the drums punching the beat straight through the floorboards. I caught her eye across the room — blonde hair braided neat, hat tilted just enough to make her look dangerous and sweet all at once. She smiled like she already knew how the night was gonna end.

I didn’t think about it. I just moved, boots thudding heavy on the wood, tipping my hat with a little nod like ma’am, if you’d be so kind. She laughed — soft, musical — and slid her hand into mine like it belonged there.

The first step was always a little awkward, two bodies figuring each other out, but damn if she didn’t catch my rhythm quick. Left, right, quick-quick, slow. Her boots brushing the dust, skirts swaying just enough to hypnotize. I could feel her warmth through my shirt, her fingers curled against mine, steady as the stars outside.

She wasn’t shy. She leaned in close, close enough I caught the faint scent of wildflowers and whiskey. I led, but it wasn’t about control — it was a dance, a pull, a silent way of saying I see you without a single word passing between us. Her laugh bubbled up again when I spun her, boots scraping a circle on the ground, and when she came back to me, we were breathing the same breath.

The song wasn’t long, but time stretched out, lazy and golden, like a summer afternoon that refused to die. I didn’t even know the band had stopped playing ‘til I heard the scattered claps, felt the way she squeezed my hand just once before slipping away into the crowd, leaving nothing but the ghost of a smile and the memory of her fingers tangled with mine.

I just stood there a second, hat low over my eyes, heart knocking a little harder than before.

Hell.

I reckon I was already two-stepping my way straight into trouble.