My Father Sent Me Away as Punishment… But the Farmer Changed My Life Forever

The first time I saw Noah Bennett, he was standing ankle-deep in mud, covered in grease, holding a wrench in one hand and a broken irrigation pipe in the other.
He looked absolutely nothing like the men my father wanted me to marry.
And at that moment, I hated him.
Or at least I wanted to.
Because if Noah Bennett existed, it meant my father had won.
At least, that’s what I thought.
Three months earlier, my life had looked perfect from the outside.
I was Avery Whitmore.
Daughter of Richard Whitmore.
Heiress to one of Seattle’s oldest investment families.
The woman everyone expected to marry Grant Caldwell—the polished, wealthy businessman my father had chosen for me years ago.
People envied me.
They saw designer dresses.
Luxury vacations.
Penthouse apartments.
Private schools.
Charity galas.
What they didn’t see was that every part of my future had already been planned.
Every dinner.
Every business meeting.
Every smile.
Every relationship.
Even my marriage.
Especially my marriage.
My father called it responsibility.
I called it a prison with gold-plated walls.
The breaking point came during a family dinner.
The dining room looked like something from a magazine.
Crystal glasses.
Imported wine.
A table longer than most apartments.
My father sat at the head as if he were a king reviewing his kingdom.
Grant sat across from me.
Smiling.
Waiting.
My father raised his glass.
“To Avery and Grant.”
The room applauded.
My stomach twisted.
I set down my fork.
“I’m not marrying him.”
Silence.
The kind of silence that feels dangerous.
Grant’s smile vanished.
My father lowered his glass.
“What did you say?”
I met his eyes.
For the first time in my life, I didn’t look away.
“I’m not marrying Grant.”
The expression on his face changed instantly.
Not disappointment.
Not sadness.
Anger.
Cold, controlled anger.
The kind that had ruled my entire life.
“You don’t understand what’s at stake.”
“No,” I replied quietly.
“You don’t understand what’s at stake.”
My voice shook.
But I continued anyway.
“You’re asking me to spend the rest of my life with a man I don’t love.”
Grant shifted uncomfortably.
My father didn’t.
“Avery,” he said calmly.
“This isn’t about love.”
That was the moment something inside me finally snapped.
Because he was right.
To him, it was never about love.
It was about contracts.
Business.
Influence.
Debt.
Power.
I pushed back my chair.
“I’m not doing it.”
My father’s eyes hardened.
“Then perhaps it’s time you learn what life is actually like.”
I should have known then.
I should have understood exactly what he meant.
But I didn’t.
Not until twenty-four hours later.
Not until the black SUV turned onto a gravel road outside Portland.
Not until I saw endless rows of greenhouses stretching beneath a gray Oregon sky.
Not until the driver opened my door and pointed toward a man working beside an old wooden shed.
A man covered in dirt.
A man whose boots looked older than some of my designer handbags.
A man who glanced up exactly once before returning to work.
That man was Noah Bennett.
And neither of us knew it yet.
But the next three months were about to destroy everything we thought we knew about ourselves.
Including the walls we had spent our entire lives building.