LOGINLily
I always loved the quiet just before the afternoon lessons. The air crisp and clean, kids tumbling around on their tiny skis and the hum of the lift in the background like a lullaby of winter. The snow today was soft and powdery.
I was sipping the last of my peppermint tea from a dented thermos when I saw him.
Jake.
Punctual this time, which was a small miracle in itself. He looked well, better geared, for starters. His jacket was sleek black, fitted, and clearly new. Not in a flashy way, but in the “I-don’t-shop-sales-rack” kind of way. His boots actually matched and his helmet didn’t look like it had survived three wars.
Still, he carried himself like a man preparing to face his doom.
“Hey, disaster” I called out with a grin, sliding my goggles up.
He gave me a sheepish smile as he trudged over, skis balanced awkwardly on his shoulder. “I’ll have you know I’m now a seasoned skier. I watched three YouTube videos last night.”
“Did they cover falling with flair? Because that’s your specialty.”
“Oh, absolutely. I’m practically an Olympic-level tumbler.”
He was joking, relaxed. His shoulders less tense than they were last time. Something about it made me feel lighter too.
We clicked into our skis and shuffled toward the bunny slope. The late-day sun cast long shadows across the snow, turning everything soft and golden. A few locals waved at me as we passed. One of the kids I taught on weekends shouted “Hi Miss Lily!” from the lift.
Jake glanced sideways at me. “Celebrity status, huh?”
I shrugged. “Small town. People wave.”
“I think someone just handed you a muffin from their pocket.”
“That happens more than you’d think.”
He laughed and it caught me off guard. There was something magnetic about Jake’s laugh, like it came from deep inside him and didn’t get out very often.
“All right” I said, stopping near the top of the bunny hill. “Let’s see what those YouTube videos taught you.”
Jake inhaled like he was about to jump out of a plane. “If I break anything, you’re driving me to the hospital.”
“I’ll sled you down personally” I promised.
He pushed off cautiously and to my surprise, he didn’t immediately fall.
Sure, his arms flailed a little, and his knees wobbled like spaghetti, but he managed to make it about twenty feet without eating snow. I let out a celebratory cheer.
Jake reached the bottom, slightly out of breath but grinning like a kid who’d just pulled off a magic trick. “Did you see that?”
“I’m not sure whether to clap or call the Guinness World Records” I teased, skiing up beside him. “That was actually decent.”
He raised his hands in victory. “Decent! You hear that, Aspenridge? Your girl just called me decent!”
A few people turned at the noise, and I blushed, laughing as I shoved his arm gently. “Come on, hotshot. Let’s go again.”
We spent the next hour running drills slow descents, pizza stops, the occasional dramatic fall. He got better. Smoother. And even when he messed up, he didn’t get frustrated the way most beginners did. He laughed at himself, shook it off, tried again.
And I couldn’t help but notice how he listened to my instructions. Took them to heart. Looked at me when I spoke like my words mattered.
Most tourists treated the bunny hill like a temporary annoyance on their way to bigger slopes. Jake treated it like a destination.
After our fifth run, I called for a break. We unclipped from our skis and collapsed onto the wooden bench near the edge of the slope, under a pair of pine trees dusted in white. He was flushed, sweaty, and panting.
“You’re not bad” I said, tossing him a half-squished granola bar from my pocket.
He looked at it like it was a precious artifact. “This is gourmet compared to my last protein bar. That one exploded.”
“I don’t want to know.”
He peeled it open, took a bite, and groaned. “Oh my god. Actual food. You’re an angel.”
I leaned back on the bench, letting the cold wood press through my jacket, and watched the slope for a moment. The sun was dipping lower now, painting the sky in soft pastels. There was something peaceful about it all. Just us, and the snow, and the world quietly spinning on.
Then, without planning it, I asked, “So… what brought you here?”
Jake froze mid-bite.
“To Aspenridge, I mean,” I clarified, trying to keep my voice light. “We don’t exactly get a ton of guys like you.”
He smiled, but it didn’t reach his eyes. “Guys like me?”
“You know. Mysterious loners with nice gear and zero skiing ability.”
He chuckled softly, brushing a crumb off his gloves. “Fair enough.”
I waited, not pushing, just sipping the silence.
Finally, he said “I guess I needed to… disappear for a while.”
I tilted my head, curious.
“Not in a dramatic way” he added quickly. “Just… my life got loud. Complicated. I needed somewhere quiet. Somewhere I could breathe and not be expected to perform.”
“Perform?”
He shrugged, eyes on the slope now. “Be who people think I am.”
I studied him, the set of his jaw, the way his fingers fiddled with his gloves like he was keeping something in. A secret. A wound. Maybe both.
“Well” I said gently, “you picked a good town for disappearing. We don’t ask a lot of questions here.”
Jake looked at me and something passed between us,quiet and fragile.
“What about you?” he asked. “Why stay?”
That question. People always asked it like it was strange, like staying meant something was missing. But I smiled.
“Because I like it here” I said simply. “I like the way the snow smells in the morning. The way people leave casseroles on your porch when you’re sick. I like teaching kids how to ski and falling asleep knowing I did something real that day.”
He watched me like I was saying something he hadn’t heard before.
“That sounds… nice” he murmured.
“It is.”
We sat like that for a moment, wrapped in the kind of quiet that didn’t need to be filled. The slope buzzed with laughter and shouts and skis carving turns in the snow. But here, under the pine trees, it felt like our own little bubble.
Eventually, I stood, brushing the snow off my pants. “Lesson’s not over, mystery man.”
Jake groaned theatrically but stood too. “Do I at least get a sticker or something?”
I grinned. “If you don’t fall on this next run, I’ll buy you a hot chocolate.”
“High stakes.”
We clipped into our skis again and slid toward the slope, side by side. His elbow bumped mine, and he didn’t move away. I didn’t either.
As he started down the hill, a little wobbly but determined, I let myself watch him and realized I liked teaching him. Not just because he listened, or because he was funny and weird and surprisingly unpretentious, but because something about him made me feel seen.
Jake wasn’t like the tourists who came and went with their designer jackets and ego bruises. He was different.
And that made me nervous.
Because people like him? They didn’t usually stay.
But for now, I followed him down the slope, laughing when he stumbled, cheering when he stayed upright.
For now, I let myself just enjoy it.
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
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
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
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
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
LILY The plane hummed softly, a low, steady sound that filled the silence between us. Jake was seated beside me, his jacket off, shirt sleeves rolled up, one hand loosely clasping mine over the armrest. We hadn’t said much since takeoff. Outside the window, the world stretched in shades of blue and white — clouds rolling like waves, the faint outline of mountains glinting in the distance. Aspenridge. The place where it all began. “I didn’t think we’d come back here,” I said quietly, watching the horizon. Jake’s thumb brushed my knuckles. “You didn’t think I’d let our story end where it started, did you?” A soft laugh escaped me. “You mean in a snowstorm, with me half-frozen and you pretending not to be a billionaire?” He smiled at that. “I wasn’t pretending. I was hiding.” “Same thing,” I said, but gently. “Maybe,” he said, his voice lower now, “but I’m not hiding anymore.” Something in my chest fluttered painfully. I turned back to the window before he could read t







