Lily
There’s nothing quite like the quiet after a snowfall.
Up here, the world feels suspended in time pine trees draped in white, rooftops sugar-dusted, and the slopes stretching out like a canvas waiting for the first brushstroke. The air is so crisp it stings the tip of my nose, and the snow beneath my skis is perfect fluffy but firm. The kind of snow instructors like me dream of.
I carve a slow curve into the hillside, just for the feel of it. My legs know what to do, my body responding like second nature. I’ve skied this mountain since I was old enough to stand, and even now, after years of teaching wobbly tourists and overconfident teenagers, it still feels like home.
Until I hear the yell.
It cuts through the still morning air like a snapped branch. Sharp. Human.
My eyes scan the slope and there he was.
A man in a sleek white jacket and glossy helmet is barreling downhill like an out-of-control shopping cart. Arms flailing. Legs bent in all the wrong ways. He’s not skiing. He’s surviving. Barely.
“Shift your weight!” I yell before I even think about it.
He doesn’t.
He hits a bump and catches a terrifying bit of air. My stomach drops. His left ski lands first, catches on something, and suddenly he’s veering sideways right towards a tree.
Crap.
I launch forward, skiing straight down with reckless speed. Not exactly instructor protocol, but I’m not about to watch this poor guy turn into pine bark.
By the time I reach him, he’s face-first in a snowbank, limbs sprawled in what looks like a very undignified snow angel. His skis are still attached, but barely. His goggles are crooked, helmet tilted like it’s trying to escape.
“You alive?” I ask, dropping to a knee beside him.
He groans and pushes himself up slowly. “I think I broke my dignity.”
I let out a breathy laugh. “Happens to the best of us.”
He looks up at me then, and I’m not prepared for how blue his eyes are. Icy, glacier-blue like something out of a travel magazine. He blinks a few times, dazed, before trying to sit up fully. He winces.
“And possibly a rib.”
“Let’s start with sitting.” I hold out a hand. “Come on.”
He takes it, warm fingers closing around mine, and I help pull him into a more dignified position. Or as dignified as one can be while half-buried in a snowdrift. He’s tall and broad-shouldered under his jacket, dark hair peeking out beneath his helmet and annoyingly still handsome even after wiping out.
“I should’ve stayed on the bunny hill.” he mutters.
“Let me guess...first time?”
“Was it that obvious?”
I raise an eyebrow. “You have the gear of someone who knows what they’re doing and the form of someone who absolutely doesn’t.”
He sighs, brushing snow from his sleeves. “I watched four YouTube videos.”
“Ah. The Holy Grail of ski training.”
He grins a little sheepish and my chest does a strange fluttery thing.
“I’ll look up How Not to Die While Skiing next time.” he says.
“You should also add How Not to Get Rescued by the Local Instructor Who Was Just Trying to Enjoy Her Morning.”
He blinks, then glances at my jacket. “Oh, right. It says ‘Instructor’ right there.”
I smirk. “Busted.”
“Guess I picked the right snowbank, then.”
“You’re lucky” I say, standing. “I happen to specialize in hopeless cases.”
He lets me help him to his feet, his balance still questionable. “In that case, I owe you.”
“No charge for the first rescue.” I tease. “But the next one’s gonna cost you.”
He laughs this soft, genuine sound that makes me want to hear it again.
“I’m Jake” he says.
“Lily” I reply. “And Jake, I’m giving you a free lesson before you injure yourself or someone else.”
“Very reasonable.”
It turns out, Jake is even worse at skiing than I expected but I don’t mind.
We find a quiet beginner slope, and I walk him through the basics: posture, balance, weight shifts, how to fall without dying. He listens with the kind of focus I usually only get from nervous dads on family vacations.
Of course, listening doesn’t mean executing.
On his fifth fall, he groans dramatically. “I swear, these skis are cursed.”
“They’re not cursed. They just don’t like you yet.”
He flops onto his back. “It’s mutual.”
I help him up,again and he stares at the hill like it personally offended him. His face is flushed pink from the cold, his lashes dusted with snow, and there’s something… endearing about how hard he’s trying. Like he wants to get this right, not to impress anyone, but just to prove he can.
“So what’s your verdict?” he asks. “Am I your worst student ever?”
“Not even close.” I say. “There was this guy last winter who tried to ski in cowboy boots.”
His eyebrows lift. “And here I thought I was special.”
“Oh, you’re special. But in a ‘needs a helmet indoors’ kind of way.”
He laughs again, and it’s honest and loud and lovely.
By the time he manages a full run without falling, I throw my hands in the air like he just won a gold medal.
“Victory!” I shout.
Jake beams. “Are we sure it wasn’t just luck?”
“Doesn’t matter. We take our wins where we can.”
He lifts his arm for a high five, but I move too fast and somehow end up hugging him instead. Just for a second.
His arms wrap around me automatically, firm and warm, and the contact makes my breath hitch. He smells like snow and cedarwood and something faintly expensive.
We both freeze, then step back quickly.
“Reflex” he says, his voice awkwardly casual. “Sorry.”
“Skiing does weird things to people” I mumble.
“It’s the altitude” he says. “Definitely not your smile.”
I blink. My heart stumbles.
'' What? ''
We take one lift ride together before I have to head back for my next lesson. He’s quiet on the way up, staring out over the valley like he’s never seen anything like it before. Maybe he hasn’t.
“I’m gonna try this one alone.” he says at the top.
“You sure?”
“I’ve got this.” he declares, then adds, “Probably.”
I smirk. “Remember what I taught you.”
He nods, pushes off slowly, and makes his way down. His form is messy, but controlled. Not terrible. Until the very end, when he gets cocky and falls flat on his back.
Back at the lodge, we warm up near the fire. Jake shakes snow from his hair and flashes me a lopsided grin.
“I think I’m made entirely of bruises.”
“You’re not alone.”
He hesitates at the door, stuffing his gloves into his coat pocket. “Thanks, Lily. Seriously. You saved me.”
“I do what I can for the tragically uncoordinated.”
He looks like he wants to say something else, but I beat him to it.
“If you’re sticking around, I could give you a real lesson. Scheduled. More professional. Less falling.”
His face lights up like I just handed him hot cocoa and a winning lottery ticket. “I’d like that.”
I grab a napkin from the counter and scribble my number. “Text me. We’ll set something up.”
He tucks the napkin into his pocket with exaggerated care. “I’ll keep it safe. Like a treasure map.”
And then, with a final smile that sends butterflies into full-blown flight, he disappears into the softly falling snow.
That night, curled on my couch under a blanket with my favorite cocoa mug in hand, I keep thinking about him.
Jake.
There was something different about him. Not just the cute clumsiness or the way he made me laugh but something beneath the surface. Like he wasn’t just here for the slopes, like he was escaping something or maybe searching.
And then, just as I’m about to head to bed, my phone buzzes.
Are emergency cocoa lessons included in your ski package? Asking for a friend with sore legs and a bruised ego.
I grin.
Only if the friend promises not to ski into the hot cocoa stand.
I laugh into my blanket and sip my cocoa, heart warm despite the winter chill.
Maybe this season isn’t going to be so cold after all.
LILYI left his office feeling like I’d walked out of a storm and into glass — the air bright and painfully clear, and every shard reflecting a piece of what I’d just done.My legs felt weak and steady at the same time. I hadn’t planned to say yes. I’d gone in determined to protect him, to protect myself. I’d wanted to be the sensible one. Instead I’d let him hold me hard enough for the world to feel smaller for a moment. I’d let him ask. I’d said yes. The word still hummed in my ears like a secret I wasn’t sure I deserved.The hallway felt narrow and absurdly loud. People pretended not to notice, pretending I was just another assistant carrying a stack of reports. I wanted to tell them. I wanted to shout it down the hall — that I’d just promised to be with him, that I’d walked out of his office and belonged to someone who would fight for me. But I didn’t. We’d agreed on careful.One step at a time.Henry was waiting by the elevators, leaning against the marble with his usual lazy grin
JAKEI stepped closer until the space between us was nothing but heat. Her breath hitched; I could hear it, feel it, like a flame inches from a dry leaf.“Enough,” I said again, softer this time but with the same steel beneath it. My hands came up—one on either side of her head on the desk—so she couldn’t move away even if she wanted to. The room tightened around us; the world outside the glass was irrelevant. There was only her, the sharp intake of her breath, the quick flutter of her pulse under my thumb.“You don’t get to walk,” I told her. “Not like this. Not when I’ve already picked a fight with the world for you.”Her eyes darted to mine, wide and wet. “Jake”“I’m serious.” My voice dropped, rough and close enough that she could hear the rasp of it. “If I told you I’d fight the board, fight the press, burn whatever needed burning—if I told you I’d give up everything rather than watch you erased—would you—” I hesitated, because the words themselves felt enormous, “—would you marr
LILYThe office had never felt so quiet. Not in the good way, not the productive hum of keyboards and phones ringing.Because everyone could feel it. The air between me and Jake Ryland. I avoided his gaze like it might burn me. Slipped out of meetings the second they ended. Timed my coffee breaks when I knew he’d be locked in calls. If I had to pass documents to his desk, I did it quickly, my voice clipped, my eyes fixed on the folder, never on him. And he noticed.Every time I dared a glance, he was watching me. Not openly, not enough for others to point it out, but I felt it. His eyes lingering too long when I typed, the pause before he spoke to me in front of the team, the way his jaw tightened when I kept my answers short.It wasn’t just me, either. The others picked up on it. Whispers spread like static. Did something happen? Why is she so distant? Why does he look ready to bite someone’s head off every time she walks past?I buried myself in work, desperate for the numbers and re
LILYThe afternoon sun slanted through the blinds, striping the walls of my apartment in pale gold. I should have been marking ski class schedules, updating invoices, anything productive—but instead, I sat curled on the couch with my phone in my hand, staring at the screen like it might bite. We’d spoken almost every night since the board meeting. Quiet conversations, sometimes only a few words, but enough to make the distance feel less sharp. He always promised the same thing—that he wasn’t bending, that he wouldn’t cave to their pressure. That one step at a time, we’d maneuver this together.I wanted to believe him.I did believe him.Until Henry called.“Don’t panic,” he said, which of course made my stomach twist instantly. “But your boy had an unexpected visitor today. Guess who?”My heart stopped. “What do you mean, visitor?”“Oh, you know,” Henry said breezily, like he was narrating a sitcom. “Tall, sharp, terrifying heels. Rich enough to buy a small island. Name starts with a C,
JAKE It had been days since the board ambushed me with their ridiculous ultimatum, but the irritation still lingered.The silence of my office did little to soothe it. The skyline glittered outside my floor-to-ceiling windows, the city restless and alive, but all I saw was the reflection of their smug faces around that damned table. Marriage. I hadn’t built Ryland Global with a ring on my finger. I’d built it with sleepless nights, ruthless decisions, and a spine strong enough to take every hit and keep moving. And now they wanted me shackled because investors needed a bedtime story to sleep through their anxieties. I leaned back in my chair, loosening my tie with one hand, the other drumming against the mahogany desk.My phone buzzed once. Lily’s name lit up the screen, but it wasn’t a call—just a text: One step at a time, remember?My chest tightened, the sharp edges inside me softening. One step at a time. With her, that had meaning. With her, the chaos made sense. I was just about
JAKE “Mr. Ryland,” one of them began, his voice slick with false courtesy. “The company cannot afford any more instability. Investors are jittery. The press is circling. And you—” he gestured at me, “are front-page news for all the wrong reasons.”I leaned back in my chair. “I wasn’t aware that skiing in Aspenridge was a crime now.”Nervous chuckles flickered around the table, but no one really laughed.“This isn’t about Aspenridge,” another cut in. “This is about image. You’ve been unattached for years, Jake. That was fine when the company was thriving without distractions. But now? With rumors flying about staff entanglements? We need stability. We need commitment. We need—”“A spouse,” the chairman said flatly. '' A marriage would anchor your image. Silence the speculation. Show that you’re not chasing after… fleeting distractions.” His eyes lingered just long enough to make the meaning clear.For a moment, the room was silent except for the ticking of the clock. Then I laughed. “S