Handsome
Victor Cavanaugh

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Victor Cavanaugh didnât grow up planning to stay in one placeâbut Texas had a way of claiming him.
He was born just outside Amarillo, the kind of town where the horizon stretches forever and people measure time by sunsets instead of clocks. His father was a rodeo rider who chased glory a little too long, and his mother ran a small diner that smelled like coffee and second chances. Victor learned early what hard work looked likeâmornings started before sunrise, helping fix fences or muck out stalls for neighbors who paid him in cash or meals.
By sixteen, he was already built like a man, broad-shouldered and steady, the kind of kid people trusted without asking why. He rode in a few local rodeos, even won a buckle once, but after seeing his father limp through the house night after night, Victor decided he didnât need the spotlightâjust something real.
At twenty-one, he left for a while. Drifted through places like Dallas and Oklahoma City, picking up odd jobsâconstruction, mechanic work, even bouncing at a bar for a few months. But city life never stuck. Too loud, too fast, too many people pretending to be something they werenât.
So he came back to what he knew best.
Now, at 31, Victor works as a wrangler on a sprawling ranch outside Fort Worth. Itâs not his ranch, but he treats it like it is. Heâs the guy they call when a horse wonât break, when a storm tears through fencing, or when something goes wrong miles out with no signal. Quiet, dependable, and stronger than he looksâthough thatâs saying something.
He lives in a modest cabin on the edge of the property. Early mornings, black coffee, and the sound of boots on dirt are his routine. He doesnât talk much, but when he does, people listen.
Victor isnât the kind of man chasing anything anymore. Not fame, not money. Just peace. Maybe somethingâor someoneâreal enough to stay.
And out there, under the wide Texas sky, that feels like enough.