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Don’t be stubborn. Eat something.

Also Mila’s coming Sunday. Don’t scare her off by acting like a bear in pants.

I close my eyes.

She always does that—says something that makes you laugh and hate her at the same time.

I type back with my thumb.

Me:Stop texting me like you’re the CIA.

Three dots appear immediately.

June:I am the CIA of Timber Creek.

And if you don’t check on her tonight, I will.

My chest tightens.

Because I know she will. June will march up that cabin road in her winter boots with a casserole and a plan.

And Mila—sweet, brave Mila—will probably invite her inside and never realize she’s being recruited into a whole operation.

I stare at my phone for a long moment.

Then I grab my jacket.

Because I tell myself I’m checking on her for safety.

Because the road is slick.

Because she’s alone.

Because it’s my job.

That’s what I tell myself.

It’s a lie.

Bluebird cabin glows like a lantern when I pull into the clearing, my headlights sweeping over Darlene sitting a little crooked in the snow. Smoke curls from the chimney now—so she figured out the fireplace.

Or she set the cabin on fire and the smoke is a warning.

I kill the engine and step out, boots crunching. The cold hits hard, clean.

I knock.

Three taps.

The door opens almost immediately, like she was waiting.

Mila stands there in thick socks and an oversized sweater that looks soft enough to ruin a man’s morals. Her hair is piled on top of her head in a messy bun, little strands escaping around her face.

She’s holding a spoon.

She looks… domestic.

Like she belongs in a cabin.