She peered through the snow-spattered windshield at the neon
sign and hoped like hell there was room at the inn. Had Brooke Myers known a
snowstorm of epic proportions was due to hit the area, she would have delayed
her trip to Vermont. Of course, traveling north in December was no doubt
guaranteed to include snow, but not one meteorologist had predicted these
blizzard conditions before she’d left sunny Texas. Her flight into Burlington
had been on schedule, but by the time she’d rented a car, the snow had started
to fall.
By. The. Ton.
She still had another hour’s drive to meet her parents at the
ski lodge. Continuing at this point in the dark and terrible weather, however,
was just asking for trouble. If she could shack up here at… at…
“Deer Creek Inn,” she read after squinting at the sign her
headlights illuminated. She couldn’t see much of the inn through the white
sheet of falling snow, but she’d stay anywhere right now to not have to drive
any longer.
Assuming there was an available room.
“There has to be.” Brooke hit the gas and slid into the first
empty parking space she found. How many people decided to spend the holidays in
the frigid woods of Vermont? Most people were smarter than that. Most people
packed their bags and went to a tropical location in the middle of winter. Most
people she knew anyway.
That was why she was so surprised when her parents announced
a skiing holiday excursion for this Christmas. Normally the Myers family
convened somewhere exotic, somewhere south to celebrate. Brooke’s father would
simply send airline tickets and resort reservations to his four children
scattered about the United States, and it was expected that everyone would show
up at the destination, full of yuletide spirit. Brooke was still searching for
that spirit. Hopefully it’d show up before she had to actually see her parents.
The last time they’d all been together had been at her
sister’s wedding this past summer. Her younger
sister’s wedding, where her family had done their best to hound her about
when she’d be getting married. Brooke
had assured them an engagement was just around the corner because surely her
serious boyfriend of three years was about the pop the question. She’d been
right too.
About the wrong question.
“Can we see other people, Brooke?” he’d asked on her
birthday.
She’d been just about to dive into the huge hunk of chocolate
cake the waiter had brought over to their table at their favorite restaurant.
“What?”
Needless to say she hadn’t been back to that restaurant
since. A shame really. That cake was to die for.
Puffing out a breath now, she zipped up the winter coat she’d
had to buy specifically for this trip. She pulled on a pair of gloves and eyed
the front door of the inn. Why did it have to be so far away? The parking lot
wasn’t plowed and the walkway wasn’t shoveled. With snow falling this fast,
Brooke understood why, but her boots were in the trunk somewhere, buried under
all the junk she’d packed.
I’ll just
have to make a run for it.
She was at least wearing sneakers and if she stayed in the
car any longer, she wouldn’t have to worry about getting a room at the inn
because she’d be frozen to the driver’s seat.
With a quick thought of warm Texas sunshine, Brooke opened
the car door and hopped out of the small rental sedan that had no business
driving down snowy Vermont roads. She pulled the hood of her jacket up and took
off for the front door of the inn. Heavy, wet snow sloshed into her sneakers,
but she kept moving and made it across the parking lot. A laugh bubbled out of
her as she thought about her colleagues back at the Silver Saddle nightclub in
Texas. They were accustomed to seeing her manage and sing at the club she’d
started from scratch herself. If they’d caught even a glimpse of her bundled up
and darting through snow in the dark, desperate for cover, they’d fall over in
hysterics. Wait until she got back home and told them this tale.
Brooke stepped onto what she assumed was the walkway, but it
was hard to tell with all the snow. Everything looked the same bluish white in
the floodlights shining from the inn’s porch roof. She trudged forward, putting
her arm out to shield her face from the wind and snow.
Which was why she didn’t see that she’d veered off the
walkway a bit. Not until she took her next step and her left leg sunk into snow
up to her thigh. The rest of her body got thrown off balance and she fell, face
first, into the bank. She struggled against the snow’s hold on her and
something low in her back wrenched the wrong way.
The blizzard wind swallowed her holler. Brooke tried to break
free, but the pain in her back radiated throughout her body each time she moved
her limbs. She had to get up though. Had to get out of the freezing snow and
into that inn. Had to have someone massage the throbbing ache in her back, in
her head, in her…
Brooke’s heart beat wildly as she snapped awake. Crap. She’d passed out from the
pain and from imagining all the ways she could die if she didn’t get free. How
long had she been out here? Long enough that her strength was at zero and parts
of her body had gone numb. She got her hand into her jacket pocket only to
remember she’d left her cell phone in the car because she’d been using it to
listen to an audio book on the drive.
This would
only happen to me. All her family members were probably nestled by
a roaring fire at the ski lodge by now. Too bad her family would have to
remember this Christmas as The One When Brooke Froze to Death.
A low howl sounded from the dark woods bordering the inn. It
sounded like something… big. Brooke pulled the sides of her hood tighter around
her face as a second howl echoed the first.
Great.
Not only did she have to worry about freezing to death, she also had to try not
to look like prey.
More howls erupted from the white-washed shadows,
sounding more and more like an entire pack of… dogs? They had to be some mighty
huge dogs to let loose howls like these. Did Vermont have wolves? Were they
active in the winter?
Did they eat nightclub owners from Texas?
When the next howl vibrated from the trees, the front
door of the inn opened, spilling golden light onto the porch. A silhouette
filled the doorway and Brooke called out, “Help!” Her voice cut in and out
though, and the silhouette disappeared as the door closed. Brooke’s shoulders
sagged and fresh pain zinged down her spine.
A moment later the door opened again and the
silhouette came onto the porch. It was slightly larger and Brooke realized the
person had donned a jacket.
“Hello?” a deep male voice called above the wind. “Is
someone out there?”
“Yes!” Brooke’s voice was barely a rasp. She’d already
been outside in the cold too long. She couldn’t yell any louder.
The silhouette came down the front steps but was
looking toward the other side of the walkway. She had to do something to get
noticed or this would definitely be her last Christmas.
Using what little strength she had left, she grabbed
two glovefuls of snow—though her back protested at the movement—and packed them
together into a tight ball. She took aim and sailed that snowball right into
the silhouette’s back where it exploded.
The silhouette flinched and turned around, his gaze
connecting with hers. “Oh my God!”
Brooke fell forward just as the silhouette reached
her. Strong arms caught her before she hit the snow. A second later, a warm
jacket was wrapped around her shoulders and she was lifted out of the bank
completely.
A wail of pain escaped her throat as she was jostled.
“You’re going to be okay, lass,” a soothing male voice
with just a touch of an Irish accent said. “Let’s get you inside.”
No
sweeter words had ever hit Brooke’s ears.
Come back tomorrow for the second part of Melt My Heart!
Want more of the Warrior Wolves Series? Check it out HERE!
Toodles,
Chris
www.christinedepetrillo.weebly.com
9 comments:
Nice start there, Chris. I will be back tomorrow. Count on it.
Great way to start my day. I will be sure to tune in tomorrow. Same Bat time. Same Bat channel.
Yay! What a terrific start. I can picture her stuck. I've gone down in some deep snow. It isn't easy to get out!
Oh, nice start. I'm looking forward to tomorrow.
Love the beginning of The Roses of Prose FREE holiday reads tradition. Great job, Chris. Can't wait to read more.
Perfect set-up, Chris. Once I got stuck in the mud like this...I could not get out on my own! The Irish accent and the deep voice? Yay!
Wowza, what an opening!
Charming start to this story and to our annual holiday stories. Since it is tomorrow, I'm scrolling up to read Part 2.
Oh wow....I forgot these stories were starting and just remembered this morning. EXCELLENT start. I'm definitely hooked. Love your description and how you gave us a sprinkle of her life and situation without going into boring detail. Off to read part 2!
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