Submitted to: Contest #331

The Log Cabin

Written in response to: "Start or end your story with someone watching snow fall."

10 likes 1 comment

Christmas Fiction Romance

Each one is different, they say. Absolutely unique. To do with how the crystals are formed as the water makes its way down, or some such. But all I see is a bleak, featureless whiteness. As if God sought to erase any distinguishing feature from the landscape, blanket it with white, and start all over.

That’s what I’m doing here, barricaded as I am in this snowed-in forest cabin in cold, distant New Hampshire, away from everything I’ve ever loved or understood… Starting all over.

A loud crackle from the fireplace startles me away from the frosted-over window, the heart shape I traced with my finger already losing definition. Which figures.

I throw another log in and collapse on the couch to stare at the fire. At least it’s not white. The nearly empty, lipstick-stained wineglass resting on the coffee table seems to beg for a refill. Better pace myself, the night is young.

What was it that he said? “But you don’t need me, do you? Like you don’t need anyone. Just your laptop, so you can keep churning out those empty, sugary romances of yours. Your pulp. No room for real people in it.”

I could have said so many things, looking at that smirk on his sun-burned face, his hair moving ever so slightly in the breeze. Could have said “of course, I need you.” Could have said “I’m sorry.” So many things.

“The pulp that pays for you, you mean,” is what I settled on. Not a good choice, in retrospect.

And so, alone in snowy New Hampshire. Merry Christmas.

“A separation would do you good,” Joanne says, before screaming, “Put that down!” as the FaceTime display rotates to show her apartment’s ceiling. Her face reclaims it a moment later.

“Sorry, hon, we’re in the phase where we grab anything within reach, and we still haven’t fully childproofed the place.” She beams at me, her full belly a reminder that her chaos is about to double. Joanne is my best friend and lawyer. And agent.

I smile back. “Seems to me you’re a bit late on that one.” But the cheer is not in me. “Separation?”

Her eyebrows are quick to react. “He hasn’t asked for a divorce, hon, has he? Seems a bit quick, it was just a minor spat, wasn’t it? After five years?”

There it is. The dreaded “D” word. She knows, though. Knows that it’s not “just a spat”, as sure as she knows what’s cooking in her belly. What will never cook in mine. She won’t say it, though. Afraid it will rub off.

I sigh. “No, he hasn’t. But I’m not sure there’s much of a point to it.” It hangs at the tip of my tongue. The unsaid.

“Look, hon,” she starts, and for a moment I’m afraid she’ll say something cruel. Like mom’s “why don’t you adopt. Or get a surrogate.” But she doesn’t. “Didn’t you say you want to work on something a little more serious?” she asks. “That big American Novel of yours? What better time than now? It’ll give you time to think.”

I didn’t call. Felt like giving up somehow. Just sent him a text with the Airbnb link. “Going up to New Hampshire for the holidays. Told Mom. Back on January 2nd or 3rd. Then we’ll talk.” Toggled between a white bear and a Coke bottle emoji. Erased it. Message sent.

The flight from Miami International to Boston’s Logan Airport was busier than you might expect in wintertime, but I guess Christmas, that great reshuffler of the American population, was to blame. Everyone had to be somewhere else, some smiling cheerfully, as if they were about to break into a carol, ugly sweater on display, some dreading their upcoming family reunion like the plague.

I sat there, observing quietly, in the aisle seat of the first row, trying to make up their stories as they sailed past me: college kids, moms, dads, children, even the occasional emotional support animal, all doing their best to fill up the cabin of the 737 Max to the brim.

With the cabin door finally closed, we managed to leave the gate on time. and had an uneventful flight, though I had to beg off the offered champagne with a “no thanks, couple of hours drive for me on arrival.” The nuts were heated, though, and only a few daring souls from steerage violated the sanctity of the first-class cabin to use our restroom. It’s the way to travel, and when the captain used his radio-broadcaster quality voice to wish us all Happy Holidays, I gave the flight attendant what I thought was my best genuine smile with a thank you before deplaning.

The Hertz counter was a bit more chaotic; luckily, I already had a reservation and did not need a car seat, unlike the hapless couple ahead of me. The fifty-something, tired-looking attendant did appear to be on the verge of some sort of breakdown, or perhaps it was my insistence on taking the electric car I’d booked, which she patiently attempted to explain would be a bad choice with the oncoming weather.

Finally persuaded, I settled for a GMC Yukon, though I regained a measure of dignity by refusing any form of extra insurance. Climbing into the driver’s seat, which must have been nearly three feet off the ground, I felt like a farmer’s daughter on a tractor. And the visibility!

Chasing away a last pang of “perhaps I should have taken an Uber,” I set the Airbnb’s address into navigation and drove off into the wilderness.

Visions of a moose encounter somewhere on a dark, windy winter country road did not materialize, though the blizzard did make the last hour or so a challenge until I remembered to kill the far-distance beams.

The log cabin was every bit as picturesque as the listing, majestic, snow-covered pines in the background; it could have come off a Norman Rockwell or a Robert Frost creation…

It was great. Two days ago.

Oh, it had everything. Electricity, hot water, ample firewood. A fully stocked fridge and a premium wine rack — all of these should have been enough to compensate for the disconnected experience, which is exactly what I was looking for. Two days ago.

Today, though, I’m staring at an evilly blinking cursor on the top of a blank laptop screen. And the empty wineglass next to it.

My great American novel. Cruel thoughts run through my head. Stillborn.

It is then, when I give up, with a sigh, and get up to pour myself another glass of red, that I see the bright lights flash across the window. The wind is howling outside, but I can hear the hum of a live engine pulling up to the front, and I run to the door.

He is there, of course, looking ridiculous in an oversized heavy leather coat he must have bought for the purpose, a large grocery bag in his gloved hands.

He sets it down with a clink. Bottles. Closes the door behind him and takes off his skier’s hat to let his unruly curls out. Smiles. “Do I look like one of your heroes?” he asks.

There are so many things that I want to say. They churn inside, wanting to pour out of me and hit him over the chest like balled fists. It rises up, this anger, threatening to choke me…

But then I see the small lines around his eyes, see him swallow, nervous, holding his breath, waiting for me to say something. Anything. His shoulders sagging.

And then I say “No. You’re perfect.”

Posted Nov 28, 2025
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10 likes 1 comment

Julie Grenness
21:36 Dec 10, 2025

This story portrays an interesting flow of scenarios, engaging the reader with realistic winter seasonal settings in the environment. The writer admirably leads the reading audience to the feel good conclusion, where inner angst appears to be resolved by this happy ending. Overall, worked well as a response to the prompt.

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