Follow
Chapters
Share
When Winter Blooms Novel Cover

When Winter Blooms

Ethan Cole doesn't need saving, he needs distance, rules, a nanny who will care for his daughter, follow his schedule, and stay out of the parts of his life he has closed off since the night he lost his wife. Maya Reyes needs the job. She is not looking for anything else. She is certainly not looking at him. But then there is Lily, four years old, one sock, and absolutely certain that Maya is exactly what this family needs. And children, it turns out, are harder to argue with than laminated rule cards. What begins as professional becomes something neither of them planned for. He carries her to bed when she falls asleep on the floor. She cooks for him when he forgets to eat. He holds her hand in a dark car and releases it like it never happened. She tells him the truths no one else will. And slowly, without either of them saying a word about it, the coldest apartment in Manhattan starts to feel like home. But grief is not a problem that gets solved, and a man who has spent eighteen months building walls does not take them down easily, especially when everything he is starting to feel terrifies him more than losing it all over again. When Winter Blooms is a slow-burn romance about the love that arrives quietly, the kind that shows up in soup heated on a cold night, the kind you almost miss because you were too busy telling yourself it wasn't there.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

I wasn't supposed to fall asleep.

That's the thing, I had a perfectly good bed, a great bed, honestly, the most expensive mattress I'd ever slept on in my life. 

Eleven steps down the hall, I had no reason to be on the living room floor at 11:45 on a Thursday night except that Lily had wanted one more game, and somewhere between building a blanket fort and losing three rounds of Snap to a four-year-old, I had apparently just...  stopped.

I don't even remember it happening. One minute I was shuffling cards. The next I was gone.

I came back slowly.

Not all the way at first, just enough to be aware of warmth, and the faint sound of the city outside the windows, and the fact that I was moving. 

Which was wrong, because I hadn't been moving. I'd been on the floor.

I was not on the floor anymore.

My brain arrived at this information and then just sat with it for a moment, slow and unhelpful, while the rest of me caught up. 

I was being carried, that was the only word for it. One arm under my knees, one behind my back, and I was against someone's chest and we were moving down the hallway and I was wrapped in the particular warmth of another person's body heat and it was..

I opened my eyes.

The hallway ceiling moved above me, slow and steady. 

I turned my head just slightly, and found his jaw about six inches from my face. 

The way it was set, looking straight ahead, like this was completely normal, like he carried people down hallways every day and it required no more thought than making coffee.

I should have said something immediately, I know that. 

Any normal person would have said oh, sorry, I can walk, put me down, something like that. 

Instead I just looked at him. For a moment that was probably too long to be accidental. The angle I was at, I could see the tiredness around his eyes, the slight looseness of him that only came out this late at night when he thought no one was watching. His hair wasn't quite right. His collar was open.

He looked different when he didn't know he was being seen.

I must have moved, or made a sound, or something, because he glanced down.

Our eyes met.

He didn't stop walking.

"I can..." I started.

"Go back to sleep," he said. Low and quiet, like we were in a library. Like this was a reasonable thing to say to someone he was currently carrying down a hallway.

"I'm awake," I said.

"I know."

He kept walking.

I don't know what made me not argue. Maybe I was still half asleep. Maybe I'd simply run out of the kind of sense that would have told me to insist on being put down. 

Either way I didn't say anything else, and he didn't say anything else, and we went the rest of the way down the hall in silence with me in his arms and my heart doing something I was going to have to think very hard about later.

He turned into my room. Crossed to the bed. And then he crouched smoothly, without any apparent difficulty, which was irritating, and set me down on the mattress like I was something that could break. 

He straightened up, Reached across me to pull the blanket from the other side of the bed and laid it over me with a kind of careful efficiency that suggested he was trying very hard to make this feel like it was just logistics.

It did not feel like just logistics.

He stepped back.

I looked up at him from the pillow. He was looking somewhere around the middle distance, not at me, not away, just at the space beside my head, and I could see him deciding something. 

I don't know what, I couldn't read him well enough yet. I'm not sure anyone could.

"The cards are still on the floor," I said. 

Because I had to say something, and that was the thing my brain produced.

"I'll get them."

"You don't have to..."

"Go to sleep, Maya."

My name, not Miss Reyes. He'd been calling me Miss Reyes since I got here,  formal, deliberate, the right amount of distance. 

And now at 11:50 on a Thursday night in my dark room with him standing at the foot of my bed, it was just Maya. Quiet and matter-of-fact, like it had always been that.

I didn't say anything.

He left. I heard him in the living room, the soft sound of cards being gathered, the rustle of the blanket fort Lily and I had constructed being gently dismantled. He wasn't loud about it. 

He moved through the space like he was trying not to disturb anything.

I lay in the dark and stared at the ceiling and pressed one hand flat against my sternum like that was going to do anything useful.

It didn't.

Here is the thing nobody tells you about living in someone else's space, you learn them whether you mean to or not. 

You learn the sounds of their morning, You learn how they take their coffee and what time they usually give up on sleep and which lights they leave on when they're working late. You learn them in all the small ways that add up to something bigger before you've noticed it's happening.

I've been here for two weeks.

Two weeks, and I already knew that he woke up at 5:43 almost every morning. Not by an alarm, just him, like his body had decided sleep was something that happened to other people. 

I knew he stood at the kitchen window for a few minutes before he did anything else, looking at the city. 

I knew he kept the volume on his phone lower than anyone I'd ever met, like he didn't want to disturb something. 

I knew he always checked on Lily before he left for work, even when he was running late, I'd heard his footsteps stop outside her door, pause, and then move on.

Every single morning.

I knew all of that. And he didn't know I knew, because we were both very careful about pretending we weren't paying attention to each other.

That's the thing I lay there thinking about at midnight with the blanket he'd pulled over me still warm from his hands.

We were both paying attention.

The question I wasn't ready to answer was what exactly we thought we were going to do about it.

He was already at the counter when I came out in the morning, Coffee on, Jacket on. Phone in hand.

I went to the cabinet, the correct one, I knew where it was now, and got a mug. 

Neither of us said anything. 

The coffee machine finished and I poured and we stood on opposite ends of the kitchen island and I could feel him not looking at me the same way I was not looking at him, which is to say: with a great deal of effort.

"The fort's been put away," he said finally.

"I saw, Thank you."

"The cards are on the counter."

I looked, They were neatly stacked. 

"Thank you," I said again.

Silence.

"You shouldn't sleep on the floor," he said, looking into his phone.

"I didn't mean to."

"I know." A pause. 

"There's a pullout in the second guest room if Lily wants late nights. It's more comfortable."

"Okay." I looked at my coffee. 

"I'll remember that."

He picked up his travel mug. Straightened his jacket. And then he walked to the elevator and I watched him from the corner of my eye and he did not look at me once, and I did not look at him once, and the elevator doors closed and he was gone.

I stood in the kitchen for a moment.

Then I put both hands around my mug and looked at the sunflower magnet and the laminated rules card pinned beneath it and thought: Maya. You are in so much trouble.

I took a long sip of coffee.

I went to wake up Lily.

I did not think about the way my name had sounded in his voice in the dark.

I thought about it the entire day.

You may also like

After His Fiancée Tried to Drown Me Novel Cover
9.7
The cream-colored envelope arrived on a Tuesday morning, slipped under my apartment door like a small, elegant thief. I picked it up from the floor, my fingers brushing against the heavy paper stock, and immediately recognized the Hunt family's embossed crest in the corner. My heart did that familiar, painful skip it always did when anything connected to Maddox crossed my path. I sat at my kitchen counter, coffee cooling beside me, turning the envelope over in my hands. The formal invitation inside was written in calligraphy I didn't need to read to understand. Maddox Hunt's engagement party. Aboard his family's yacht in the Hamptons. This weekend. I pressed my fingertips together, a habit I'd developed as a child when trying to hold myself together. Eight years of loving him in silence, of being his closest friend but never quite his love, had led to this moment.
Breaking Free from His Grip Novel Cover
9.5
The set of matching coffee mugs felt warm in my hands as I climbed the steps to Marcus's penthouse. I'd spent weeks crafting them in my small pottery studio, carefully glazing them in our favorite shades of blue and gold. They weren't just mugs—they were symbols of our future together, of the mornings we'd share over coffee after we were married. One month. Just one more month until I would become Mrs. Vasquez. I slipped my key into the lock, a smile playing on my lips. Marcus wasn't expecting me today. He'd mentioned a late meeting, but I couldn't wait to see his reaction to my surprise. "He'll love them," I whispered to myself, stepping into the marble foyer.
Broken Bonds: The Rise of the White Wolf Novel Cover
8.8
As the pack's Omega cleaner, I was invisible. I spent my days scrubbing floors, clutching a cheap moonstone in my pocket—the only proof that Marcus Thorne, the billionaire Alpha, had once touched me. I was his fated Mate. I thought he just needed time to realize it. But the night of the Alpha Ball wasn't a fairy tale; it was an execution. Isabelle, his scheming assistant, dropped classified documents at my feet and screamed "Traitor!" I waited for Marcus to sense our bond. I waited for him to save me. Instead, his eyes turned cold as ice. He didn't just believe her; he destroyed me. He threw me into a dungeon coated in burning silver. He watched as I was fed Wolfsbane. And then, in front of the entire pack, he delivered the final blow. "I, Marcus Thorne, reject you, Olivia Hayes." The bond snapped. My soul shattered. He chose a viper over his true mate and ordered me dumped at the border to die like a rogue. But he made a fatal mistake. The rejection didn't kill me. It woke something ancient inside me. I wasn't a weak Omega. I was the White Wolf. Five years later, I returned to New York. Not as the girl he threw away, but as the powerful Luna of the Crescent Moon Pack, with a new, stronger Mate by my side. When Marcus saw me, the color drained from his face. He fell to his knees in the dirt, holding out that old, dull moonstone, weeping. "Liv, please. I remember now. Take it back." I looked down at the man who had broken me and whispered the truth that would haunt him forever. "I don't want it, Marcus. That stone belongs to a girl who died in your dungeon."
Cheated With Four Girls Novel Cover
7.9
I thought I was the only one Kade wanted—until I caught him in a VIP lounge, grinning as four different girls stripped for his approval. My confidence shattered. I felt utterly worthless, convinced I’d never measure up to those perfect bodies. I wanted to run, to erase my memory forever. But I didn't run into the street. I crashed straight into the solid, imposing chest of Ryker Vance. Kade’s estranged, ruthlessly powerful older brother. Ryker doesn’t want four girls. He only wants one. And he is willing to destroy his own brother to prove that the body I hate is the only one he worships.
HE’S MINE TO CLAIM: STRANDED WITH MY BESTFRIEND’S UNCLE Novel Cover
9.7
“Really, one other will join us?” I got excited and curious which relative it would be. Cheryl, my best friend, had just invited me to her family home with only her parents for the Christmas holiday. “Yes, my uncle.” Cheryl replied. “Wowww!” “Wishing you don't fall for him when he arrives, he's arriving today.” I didn't take it seriously because that would never happen, I assured myself. But when Cheryl opened the door and her uncle walked in, my heart instantly froze as I looked up to see a tall, muscular, slim young man with short spiky hair. His face turned and the first person his eyes landed up turned out to be me. My fork fell off as my eyes came in contact with his sea-blue eyes. I jerked back, pulling in a deep breath. I caught Cheryl grinning from behind him. I told you! She seemed to say from her look. My eyes kept on following this gorgeous man who looked like the prince charming from my favorite Japanese Anime series. Beauty was an understatement for him. When I gave him greenlight to be my mate, he refused saying I should treat him as my big bro. But one day, he walked into my room with an unusual request, a secret that shook my heart and wolf all together. To escort him to the hotel where his wife was found cheating with another man, as revenge. Will this be the start of my dream relationship with him or his indirect way to stop me from dreaming further?
Mafia's Forbidden Touch Novel Cover
8.7
Synopsis: She thought she could forget him by morning. She was wrong. Catherine Moretti wanted to escape her past. As the daughter of a powerful mafia boss, her life was full of danger, lies, and control. So she ran, hoping to start over, far from the world she was born into. But one reckless night turned her life upside down, just to find out later she's pregnant with the hot Italian stranger's baby, the one she spent the night with! Now, she's pulled back into the mafia world, only this time, into Nico's. She ran from one mafia king... and ended up in the arms of his enemy However, Nico isn't the kind of man you walk away from. And in his world, one night can turn into forever.