The epilogue brings the story home without pretending the road became easy. Dane receives the buckle from his ride on Rankest Thing Alive by mail, an ordinary delivery that feels too small for what it cost him. The buckle carries the score, but not the truth behind it: the pain, the hangup, Zipper's protection, Raina waiting at the proper line, and Dane learning to stay down instead of proving himself foolish. Six months into marriage, Dane and Raina are still working people. He rides again, but not every time pride wants him to. She keeps running Sunday Smoke with the same horse-first discipline. Money still goes into columns. Diesel, feed, entries, vet bills, farrier costs, miles keep charging them. Brody fades into consequence, not glory, because paperwork and witness finally made him ordinary. When Dane opens the buckle, Raina reminds him the metal does not show what it took; the honest part is knowing the difference. Dane places it on the barn shelf among the real evidence of their life: worn gloves, tack, old straps, hoof tools, and Sunday Smoke's history. The buckle becomes proof, not a trophy. The final beat is quiet and practical: Dane writes the feed chart, Raina adds that the buckle arrived and the man survived his feelings, and Sunday Smoke reminds them who remains central. The road is still waiting. Dane is not fully ready. Raina knows that is the right answer. They leave together, scarred, married, working, and still choosing to come home with something left.