Page 53 of Snowed In With


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I should be ashamed of myself, but I drive the nail a little harder. “But a copperhead or a black bear may get you first.”

Char turns that gloriously beautiful but angry face in my direction and glares before turning her attention back on the road before her. Her stance is a lot more tense and jumpy than it was before my warning.Nice, Dave. Real nice.

“Please,” I plead, softer now. “I promise I won’t bother you. You can take the guest room. I’ll take you to Matt and Ellie’s place first thing in the morning.”

“No. And excuse me if I don’t trust you or your promises,” she sneers. “Seeing how you took it upon yourself to invade my privacy.”

“Okay, I deserve that.” I rush to walk backwards in front of her so I can face her head on. “Butifyou have a key to their house, do you really want to wake them up in the middle of the night?”

Not cool, Dave.Playing on her guilt. You’ve really stooped to an all new low. Not to mention, if she insists on walking, it will take her forever to get a signal, much less reach the main road below. There’snopossibility of her waking those two before morning.

She hesitates, her shoulders slumping as she likely considers her heavily pregnant friend. Then rolls her eyes in defeat, muttering something under her breath before turning to climb into the passenger seat of my truck.

The drive back is silent, except for the rhythmic swish of the wipers against the glass. The flakes of snow falling would’ve been romantic, if I hadn’t ruined any chance with her.

I want to tell her everything. To explain that the papers weren’t what she thinks. I was honestly trying to help. I knew something was wrong and only wanted to understand what she was running from. Yet her walls have obviously snapped back into place.

“I was only worried about you,” I finally say.

“I’ve had enough of wealthy men thinking they can control my life!” she spits.

This statement has my mind reeling. Who is she referring to? And in what way did they try to control her? There’s so much I still don’t know about this enigma of a woman. And whether I crossed a line or not, I simply wanted to make sure she was safe.

“You may not believe me, but I really care about you. I only wanted to help.”

Her gaze stays fixed out the window. “Well, save your hero complex for the job. I don’t need your help.”

That one hits harder than I expect. Like a virtual slap to the face.As much as I want to beg her to give me a chance to explain, I don’t argue. It seems futile right now.

The cab’s too damn quiet. The only sound is the low hum of the heater fighting against the cold and the occasional creak of the truck as we wind back up the mountain road.

Char stares straight ahead, her arms folded tightly over her chest. Her shoulders are trembling. Whether from the cold or from me, I can’t tell. Probably both. I want to pull her into me, keep her safe and warm. Beg her to understand. Yet I keep my hands locked on the wheel. White knuckles. My pulse won’t settle.

The headlights carve tunnels through the dark, catching the ghostly shimmer of frost on the trees. It’s beautiful, but all I can see is her. Finding her shivering as she braved the long road, her face pale. And that look of betrayal etched there, like I’d put a knife in her back.

“I wasn’t…” The words scrape out of my throat. I stop, force myself to breathe, and try again. “I wasn’t trying to hurt you, Char.”

She lets out a cynical laugh under her breath, bitter and broken, shaking her head.

Hell with this. If I’m losing her anyway, I might as well go all in. “I was trying tohelp.” My voice cracks on the word. “You don’t get it. I knew something was off. The way you flinched when Matt touched you. The way you look over your shoulder when you think no one’s watching. I just…” I glance at her long enough to see the rigid set of her jaw. “I wanted to make sure you were safe.”

Her head snaps toward me. “By digging through my life?”

“I didn’t dig,” I say quietly. “I asked someone I trusted to check a few things. Only enough to know if you were in trouble.”

Her silence is worse than her anger. I’d take her yelling, throwing every name in the book at me, over this cold, aching quiet. Out of the corner of my eye, I see her turn toward the window, jaw trembling. She doesn’t speak for a long time. Finally, she says, barely above a whisper, “You don’t know me.”

“I know enough,” I murmur. “Enough to care.”

She exhales sharply, like the air’s been punched from her lungs. “That’s the problem, Dave. Youshouldn’t.”

I want to tell her she’s wrong. That I didn’t want to care. Not about her or any woman. But from the moment I saw her smile at Matt and Ellie’s wedding, I was already gone. But I bite it back. She doesn’t need that kind of confession now. Not when she’s two seconds from bolting again.

The truck hits a patch of gravel, tires crunching. I ease off the gas. The trees thin just enough for the valley lights to flicker below. Her hand twitches against her thigh, like she’s thinking about reaching for the door handle.

“Char,” I say, keeping my voice low. “I don’t know what you’re running from. I don’t need to. But if it’s danger you’re in, you don’t have to handle it alone.”

She doesn’t respond, but her arms loosen a little. The tension in her shoulders eases, just barely. As we crest the last curve, I catch her reflection in the glass. I want to reach over, to tell her that what’s between us isn’t some passing spark, that it’s been a long damn time since I’ve felt this alive. But I don’t. I simply drive. Because if I say the wrong thing now, I may lose her for good.