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FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE
FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE
Penulis: Trajeh

BLUE EYED KLUTZ

Penulis: Trajeh
last update Terakhir Diperbarui: 2025-08-12 20:38:08

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.

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  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   THE NIGHT RETURNS

    LILY PRESENT The moment the SUV went dark, the world outside blurred into white. Snow. Wind. Silence. Jake cursed under his breath, slamming the ignition again, but the dashboard stayed dead— like the storm had swallowed the engine whole. My heartbeat didn’t pound.It exploded. Because this was that storm. FLASHBACK -12 YEAR OLD LILY “Dad, slow down—please!” My voice had cracked just like the glass did moments later. But before that—before the crunch, the screaming wind, the crack of the tree—there’d been only the storm. A storm that came out of nowhere, swallowing the mountain road until the car floated in a world that wasn’t sky or earth. My mother’s hand had reached back blindly, fingertips brushing my knee. “It’s okay, sweetheart. We’re almost home.” We weren’t.Not even close. The snow was piling fast, slamming against the windshield like fists. Dad leaned forward, squinting, gripping the wheel tighter with every new gust. “Visibility’s dropping. Just hol

  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   THE BEGINNING OF DOWNFALL

    LILY The moment Jake said pack - I moved fast, shoving clothes into a duffel bag, grabbing documents, and small trinkets. When we stepped outside, the wind hitting my face felt sharp . Too familiar. My breath caught. Because the cold hit me exactly like that night. Jake noticed instantly. “Lily,” he said softly. “Talk to me.” But the world had already started tilting. I swallowed hard. “It’s nothing. Just—just the weather.” It was memory. It was a storm I’d spent years pretending I’d forgotten. We made it halfway down the path to the car when the first snowflake touched my cheek. Just one. But my knees almost buckled. Jake stopped walking. “Lily?” I forced a laugh. “It’s fine—really. Let’s just get to the car.” The clouds. They were the exact shade of the sky the night my parents— No. Not here. Not now. Jake reached for my hand, but before he could touch me— crack . A tree branch snapped somewhere in the woods. I jumped violently, my heart slamming into my ribs

  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   THE END OF THE BEGINNING

    LILY The headline hit me before Jake even spoke. I didn’t need to click it. I didn’t need to zoom in. The thumbnail alone made my blood turn cold. " BILLIONAIRE SECRETLY MARRIED — WHO IS THE MYSTERY WOMAN? " Under it, our courthouse photo.The tiny office.The ugly fluorescent lighting.The rings. Our rings. My breath stuttered. The coffee in my hand went cold. My heart thudded so loud it drowned out the soft morning noises of my cottage. Beside me, Jake’s phone buzzed relentlessly. But my voice was the first thing to break the silence. “Jake,” I whispered, staring at the screen. “What… what do we do now?” He didn’t speak at first. His hands were clenched on the table, knuckles white, eyes fixed on the same headline like he could burn it alive. His jaw worked, a muscle flickering. Then he exhaled—slow and dangerous. “We deal with it,” he said. “Together.” But I shook my head. “Together isn’t the issue. It’s the world. They know, Jake. They know everything. Someone

  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   NEVER A DULL MOMENT

    HENRY The notification pinged just as I was halfway through my third espresso — black, bitter, and perfectly matching my mood. Jake. Now, Jake Ryland doesn’t text mid-day unless it’s serious. I opened the message. One photo. No caption. And my entire mouthful of coffee almost went flying. There it was — a photo. Their photo. Jake and Lily, standing in that tiny attorney’s office, the one with flickering fluorescent lights and a potted plant that had clearly died during the last fiscal quarter. The same place I’d stood just forty-eight hours ago, holding Jake’s cufflinks in one hand and pretending not to tear up when Lily said I do . Except this wasn’t one of my pictures. Someone else had taken it. And stamped right across the bottom in white letters were two words that made my stomach drop: TIC TOC. “Oh, fantastic,” I muttered, setting the cup down so hard the desk rattled. “Because what every secret wedding needs is a countdown.” A second later, Jake’s messa

  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   SMALL COTTAGE IN ASPENRIDGE

    LILY I’d never thought he'd ever see this place. Not when we met, not even later when everything between us had tangled beyond repair. My cottage was the one piece of my life that hadn’t been swallowed by Jake Ryland’s world - just the smell of pine, the hum of the woods, and the quiet that came when the world stopped asking me to be anyone but myself. But that night, as we pulled up the gravel drive and the headlights swept over the snow-dusted porch, I saw his reflection in the window, I realized how much I wanted him here. Jake stepped out of the car and looked around slowly, his breath rising in the cold. “This is…” He stopped, exhaling. “It’s you.” I smiled softly. “Translation: it’s tiny and doesn’t have an espresso machine.” “It’s perfect.” The warmth that spread through my chest had no business being that intense. Inside, the cottage glowed golden and small — the fire crackling low, soft light spilling over the worn couch, the mismatched mugs by the sink. Jake wa

  • FALLING FOR MR SNOWFLAKE   WEDDING

    LILY The snow hadn’t stopped falling since dusk. It came down in soft sheets, muting the world into something unreal — like the universe itself was holding its breath. Inside the chalet, the fire glowed low and golden, painting the walls in amber. The scent of cedar and smoke filled the air, and somewhere in the distance, a storm rumbled like it couldn’t quite reach us. Jake was by the window, a glass of whiskey in his hand. He wasn’t watching the storm — he was watching me. “I can’t believe we came back here,” I said quietly, slipping off my shoes and curling up on the couch. “It feels like cheating fate.” He turned, his gaze softening. “Maybe. But if fate wanted to stop me, it should’ve tried harder.” "Corky much?" He walked towards me, like a man who already knew how this would end. When he stopped in front of me, he set his glass down and held out a hand. “Dance with me,” he said simply. “There’s no music.” He smiled faintly. “Then we’ll make our own.” I hesitated only

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