Page 22 of Falling Just Right


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My eyebrows shot up. “Oh no.”

“Oh yes.”

“Did they try to take selfies with the elk?”

“Yes.”

“Unbelievable,” I muttered. “People are unhinged.”

He nodded. “One of them also packed three scented candles in her pack because she thought it would attract mountain energy.”

I snorted coffee up my nose. “Oh my God.”

“She lit one. A pine-scented one. While standing next to actual pine trees.”

I wheezed into my sleeve. “This is why we can’t have nice things.”

“It is a miracle they survived,” he agreed.

“No, seriously,” I said, wiping my nose, “I once guided a guy who brought twenty-two protein bars and nothing else. Not even water. But he had flavors. A selection. Like he was curating snacks for the apocalypse.”

Carson smiled again. An honest, unexpected one that made my insides flutter like they were auditioning for a dance competition.

“And yet you survived them all,” he said.

“I’m a wilderness professional.”

“That is debatable.”

He laughed softly, and something warm twisted beneath my ribs.

Too warm.

Too friendly.

Too easy.

This was the problem. Carson and I should have been awkward and distant and entirely incompatible conversationally. Instead, we were talking like we had been swapping stories for years.

And I hated how good that felt.

Because good was dangerous. Good chipped at my walls. Good made me think about things I did not allow myself to think about.

Romance.

Wanting.

Being seen.

No. Absolutely not. Denied. Rejected. Return to sender.

I gulped my coffee to drown the thought, but nearly choked when I saw Abby leaning over the counter, watching us with binocular-grade intensity.

She mouthed, “Millie?”

I mouthed back, “No.”

She gave me an angelic smile and made the universal phone call gesture.