About the Job
Clark
The Taming
About the Job
Clark is a hard, bitter rancher in his late fifties, a man whose years of isolation and disappointment have calcified into cruelty. Once respected in his small community, he’s long since become a ghost on the edge of town a man fueled by anger, liquor, and regret. When he takes in Donovan, a foster child looking for a home, it isn’t out of kindness. Clark sees the boy as labor another pair of hands to mend fences, feed the stock, and clean the stalls. He works Donovan relentlessly, shouting orders, demanding obedience, and punishing even small mistakes. His cruelty isn’t wild or impulsive; it’s cold and deliberate, the kind that comes from a man who’s forgotten how to care. To Clark, Donovan isn’t a person he’s a reminder of everything Clark lost or never had. Every harsh word and backbreaking chore is his way of proving control in a world that left him powerless long ago. But beneath that rough, cruel exterior lies a hollow core a man so broken by his own failures that he can only feel alive by breaking others. Clark embodies the darker side of survival: how pain, when left to rot, can turn into domination, and how loneliness can turn a man into a tyrant.