The Cabin Lie That Saved Her Life Became Caleb’s Darkest Secret-QuynhTranJP

The blizzard did not sound like weather that night.

It sounded like an animal at the wall.

Snow screamed through the pines, slammed against the cabin glass, and slid through every crack between the logs as if the mountain itself had decided I did not belong there.

Image

When I opened my eyes, I did not know where my body ended and the cold began.

My lips felt split.

My fingers would not close.

The room swam in dull firelight, all rough pine, smoke, and blue dawn, and I realized I was not alone.

A stranger held me from behind.

His chest was hard against my back.

His arm lay across my ribs like a bar across a door.

For one terrible second, I thought the men hunting me had already won.

I tried to jerk away.

The arm tightened, not cruelly, but firmly enough to stop me.

“Easy,” he said. “You were dying.”

His beard brushed my temple.

His hand covered both of mine beneath the blanket, and his skin was the only warmth I could feel.

“Let me go,” I tried to say.

It came out as breath.

“You can hate me after sunrise,” he said.

That was the first thing Caleb ever gave me.

Not comfort.

Not promises.

A bargain with morning.

My name was Josephine Cartwright, and until that winter I had believed a good name could protect a person.

My father had believed it too.

Read More