When forty-year-old Alden Mercer opens his front door in Dry Creek, Texas, two uniforms are waiting-and one sentence changes everything: "Intoxicated manslaughter." He knows what the paperwork gets wrong, but in a town that prefers a clean story over a complicated truth, facts don't protect a man the way people assume they do.
What follows is a hard-edged, deeply human novel about what the system takes-and what it leaves behind. Alden is pushed through pleas, gates, and invisible rules that keep moving, then released into a world that demands "accountability" while offering very little mercy. The damage isn't only physical. It's spiritual: shame, exhaustion, and the slow grind of trying to stay alive when the story everyone believes about you is wrong.
But Love Without Rescue isn't a savior fantasy. It's about the kind of love that shows up without demanding you become smaller-friendship that holds, purpose that returns, and a relationship that adds to a life instead of replacing it.