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The road to High Meadow Mine is about three miles as the crow flies and about forty harrowing, white-knuckled minutes in the truck. There’s one point where I’m absolutely positive I’m about to fall ass over teakettle down an embankment, but somehow at the last second I remain on solid ground. Thank fuck for four-wheel drive, I guess.

The sky’s a deep purple when I finally make the last turn from a dirt road to a gravel road—yes, there’s a difference, there’s amajordifference—and see about ten signs that read “NO TRESPASSING, PRIVATE PROPERTY, BEAUMONT MINERALS LAND, STAY OUT.” They glow as I drive past them, practically holding my breath and leaning forward over the steering wheel like a ninety-year-old with glaucoma. A little further and there are the hulking yellow machines, oddly pretty when they’re doused in snow like this, lined up along the side of the road.

I can’t say I disagree with this woman for not wanting Beaumont Minerals to mine here. Even though it’s about half a mile outside the national forest, it’s still pristine and pretty, practically untouched. I just wish she hadn’t chained herself to a tree with a snowstorm coming, which might be the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard in my life.

The gravel road ends abruptly: a few orange-and-white sawhorses across the road, and that’s it. Just trees. I stop the truck and look around, because it sure seems like no one’s here. If someone were, they’d have stood and waved or gotten my attention somehow, right?

Unless they were dead. Or incapacitated.

“Fuck,” I whisper to myself, pull my hat down, and get out of the truck but leave the lights on. The wind in the trees is the only sound for miles, even my footsteps dampened by the snow. If there were someone else here, they’d be making noise, but there’s nothing as I take a step past the barricade, almost into the trees.

God, this isn’t the wrong entrance, is it? I thought there was only the one, and I’m at the coordinates Dale gave me but I know technology is fallible sometimes. Everyone’s heard stories about a hiker in need of rescue whose GPS showed them on a ridge but they were actually ten feet to the right and fifty below in a ravine, waiting for help that wasn’t coming because—

There’s a soft rustle and I nearly jump out of my skin.

“Hello?” I shout, which I should have done several minutes ago, probably. It doesn’t always occur to me to talk.

“Uh, hi?” says a woman’s voice.

I turn so fast I nearly lose my footing and walk toward the voice, my shadow cutting dark, diffuse shapes across the trees when I walk in front of the headlights.

“I’m from the Forest Service,” I say, shielding my eyes against the falling snow as I scan the trees for her, still walking. “There’s a blizzard out here—” no shit, Gideon, “—and I need to get you to safety.”

The rustling gets more spirited, but she doesn’t answer. Finally, I see something bright blue between two trees, out on the fading edge of the headlights, and I step into the shadows.

A pod person straight out of a science fiction double feature stares back.

There’s a second where I honest-to-God believe it’s some sort of cryptid—this is deep woods, there are tales, this is how half of them begin—but then my eyes adjust and I realize it’s a woman in a sleeping bag, standing against a tree, a chain around her middle.

Then my eyes adjustmore, and I look at her face, which is the only part of her I can see, and I blink some snow out of my eyes, and I lookagain,and—

“Andi?”

The sleeping-bag-pod-person pauses for a moment, squirms a little, clears her throat, and says, “Gideon?”

CHAPTERTWO

ANDI

The momentI hear Gideon’s voice, I start hoping it’s not him. It’s pretty easy to mistake a voice, right? Especially if you’ve seen someone once in the past twenty years, and the two of you exchanged a maximum of fifty words?

But it is. The man standing in front of me is definitely Gideon Bell, someone I would recognize across a crowded bar after three beers, or two cars over and one behind at a stoplight, or in the dark during a snowstorm wearing a large winter coat zipped up to his chin and a knit hat. He stares at me like I’m some sort of backwoods monster who’s about to pounce on him and eat his eyeballs if he doesn’t eliminate me first. For a moment, I think he might try, and that makes me panic, so I do the same thing I always do when confronted with an awkward situation like this.

“Hey!” I say, giving him my sunniest and most disarming smile. “Fancy seeing you here.”

I didn’t think it was possible for him to stare harder, but he does.

“Andi,” he says again.

“Hi.”

“Why thefuckare you chained to a tree in the middle of a snowstorm?”

“It’s a long story,” I say, as breezily as I can manage while fully inside a sleeping bag, chained to a tree, in a snowstorm. “How have you been? I ran into your sister Hannah the other day and she said you have a new nephew? Congrats!”

Gideon stares, his frown deepening, and I get a little more nervous. I’m now sweating inside my sleeping bag, which is a very not-ideal situation because the moment the adrenaline of this encounter fades away, it’ll make me colder and I really don’t need to be colder right now.

For the record, I’m ninety-five percent sure Gideon is going to rescue me, not head back to his nice warm truck so he can pretend this never happened. There’s being a self-righteous dick, which he was, and then there’s leaving a helpless damsel to the elements, which I’m pretty sure he won’t.