BECCA
Margie’s place smelled like cinnamon and strong coffee, but that was about the only festive thing about it.
No tree. No garland. Not even one of those fake pine-scented candles. Just a plain wreath on the front door, and I’m pretty sure she only hung it because the HOA made her.
I did even bother to pretend I didn’t miss him. Him, being Bear. Big, grumpy, broad-shouldered Bear who’d made me feel safer in two nights than Huntley did in two years. He also mad me feel sexy… I craved it the skin to skin the deep tongue kisses… I never really felt that way before.
Margie stirred something in a chipped blue mug and shot me a look over the rim.
“So. He didn’t come in with you?”
“Nope.” I curled up on her old corduroy couch. “I think goodbyes are hard for him. Maybe.”
Margie raised an eyebrow. “What happened up on that mountain?”
I grinned. “It was so much fun being snowed in. Honestly, if someone told me the men up here were so...everything,I would’ve visited way sooner.”
Margie laughed — one of those deep, chesty laughs that made her nose wrinkle. “Honey, why do you think I haven’t left in years?”
I laughed too, but it faded fast. Her eyes softened.
“You up for dinner and some shopping?” she asked, casual but kind.
I hesitated. “My car...”
“Oh, hush. My treat. But only if you spillallthe tea.”
Downtown lookedlike someone had thrown a Hallmark movie into a snow globe and shook it real good.
Strings of lights crisscrossed above the main street. Storefronts glowed with wreaths and garland, and a group of carolers in matching scarves were harmonizing near the bakery like they’d been hired straight off a Christmas card.
I stood on the sidewalk with a hot cider in hand, breathing in sugar and pine and wondering if I’d see him again.
“Maybe,” Margie said with a shrug, catching my look. “They come down every now and then. Supplies. Work. Trouble.”
I smiled into my cup. “He seems more like the ‘avoids trouble at all costs’ type.”
“Oh, sweetheart,” she said, “only on the outside.”
Dinner was at a tiny place called Juniper Table — exposed brick, rosemary bread, candlelight flickering in mason jars. I hadn’t had a meal that nice since Huntley dragged me to a fusion restaurant that served scallops in spoons and charged triple digits for the privilege.
I sipped my wine and finally let the silence stretch.
“I’m going to redo my resume,” I said. “Actually sit down and take it seriously. Start applying for new jobs.”
Margie tilted her head. “Marketing again?”
“Maybe. Or something different. I don’t know.” I shrugged. “I’ve got a few headhunters sending me links. Might set up a couple video calls tomorrow, during the day.”
“You thinking of moving?” she asked.
I looked around — the soft light, the wreath in the window, the snow drifting outside. My brain saidno,but something deeper whisperedmaybe.
“I’m thinking I need a reset,” I said. “A real one.”
She nodded, didn’t push. Just offered me the last bite of her dessert and said, “Well, if it’s a reset you want… these mountains aren’t a bad place to start and my guest room is rent free.”
I smiled, forked up the last bite of apple crumble, and tried not to think about Bear’s flannel still in my duffel.