Morning ca slow.
No one rushed. The celebration had wrung them out in the best way — the particular exhaustion of joy fully felt. Lily lay on the rug by the cold fireplace, Snow the fox on her chest, staring at the ceiling. Leo sat at the window, whale in his lap, watching snow fall. Franz made coffee. Arianne sat at the table with her hands around her mug, the watch on her wrist catching light.
"Can we do birthdays every day?" Lily’s voice floated up from the rug.
"No," Franz said.
"Every week?"
"No."
"Every month?"
Arianne spoke before Franz could. "Once a year makes it special. That’s the point."
Lily considered this. Her face scrunched with the effort of finding a loophole and failing.
"Okay. But next year has to be even better."
Franz looked at Arianne. She looked back at him.
"Deal," he said.
Erik t them at a different trailhead. This one climbed — not steep, but steady, the forest thinning as they gained elevation. The snow was deeper here. Untouched except for animal tracks. Lily insisted on identifying each set: "Hare. Fox. Sothing big — maybe a bear. Do bears live here?"
"They sleep in winter," Erik said.
"So not a bear. A wolf?"
"Maybe. They don’t co close to people."
"Good."
Leo typed: "I WANT TO SEE ONE."
Erik glanced at the tablet. "You like predators."
Leo considered. Typed: "I LIKE THINGS THAT SURVIVE."
Erik nodded. "Then you’ll like wolves."
The trail opened onto a lookout point. The valley fell away beneath them — white and endless, mountains stacked against the sky, the pines dark against the snow. The cabin was invisible from here. The village was a smudge of smoke on the far horizon. Everything else was wilderness.
Lily stopped walking. Her mouth opened.
"This is the top of the world."
Leo typed: "CAN WE STAY HERE FOREVER?"
Franz put his hand on Leo’s shoulder. "We have to go back tomorrow."
Leo typed: "I KNOW. BUT CAN WE CO BACK?"
Arianne answered. "Yes. We’ll co back."
Leo looked at her. Then at Franz. Typed one word: "PROMISE."
Arianne and Franz spoke at the sa ti.
"Promise."
Leo nodded once. The matter was settled.
Erik took the twins to look at tracks along the ridge — a fox, maybe, or a lynx, the prints widely spaced where the animal had broken into a run. Lily narrated theories. Leo listened and pointed. Erik answered every question with the sa serious attention.
Franz and Arianne stayed at the lookout.
The valley spread below them. The wind had died. The snow fell straight down — slow, unhurried, the kind that had no intention of stopping.
"You said you don’t go back calculating," Franz said.
"I don’t."
"Good."
She turned to look at him. "You’re leading sowhere."
"A little." He paused. "We don’t have to figure it all out at once. But — I want you to know. My room. My bed. They’re yours. Whenever you want. For however long you want."
She was quiet.
"What if I’m not ready to give up my room? My space?"
"Then don’t." His voice was steady. "Keep your room. Keep your space. I’m not asking you to dismantle your independence. You need space to think. To breathe. To be alone sotis. I understand that."
Her exhale was slow. asured. Like she’d been holding sothing and just let it go.
"You do?"
"I’ve watched you for years. I know you retreat to process. I know you need a door you can close. I’m not taking that from you."
"But you want to sleep in your room."
He turned to face her fully. The snow caught in his hair, his lashes.
"I want you to want to sleep in my room. When you’re ready. When you want to. Not because you’ve given sothing up, but because you’re choosing sothing else."
She kissed him.
Not soft. Not questioning. Certain. Her hand at his jaw, his sweater rough under her fingers. He kissed her back — steady, present, no demand in it.
She pulled back.
"How do you always know the right thing to say?"
"Years of practice."
She looked at the valley. The snow. The mountains holding their ground.
"I’ll sleep in your room. At ho. Not every night — not yet. But I’ll stop sleeping in mine just because I’m afraid to need yours."
"That’s enough." His voice was low.
They walked back down the trail. Franz behind her, letting her set the pace. The snow had filled their earlier tracks. Everything looked new.
"I could clear half my closet," he said. "If you wanted."
She stopped walking. Turned.
"Half your closet."
"Symbolic."
She laughed.
"Franz. I’m not ready to rge closets. I’m barely ready to admit I love you out loud."
"You just did."
"I know. I’m practicing."
He grinned. "The offer stands. When you’re ready."
"Noted. Declined for now. But noted."
Evening ca too fast.
Dinner was simple. Soup. Bread. The twins were subdued — not sad, exactly, but the particular quiet of children who didn’t want sothing to end. Lily pushed her soup around her bowl. Leo kept looking at the window, at the snow, at the mountains they’d leave tomorrow.
"I don’t want to go back." Lily’s voice was small.
Leo typed: " NEITHER."
Franz set down his spoon. "We have to. But we’ll co back. We promised."
Lily looked at Arianne. "I know. I just — I like it here. Everyone’s happy here."
Arianne t her eyes. "We can be happy at ho too."
Lily considered this. "Promise?"
"Yes."
"Okay." She picked up her spoon. "Okay."
The last night ritual.
Hot chocolate on the deck. The sky was clear — no Northern Lights tonight, just stars, sharp and cold and endless. The mountains were black against the darker black. The snow reflected starlight.
Lily wrapped in three blankets again. Leo pressed against Franz’s side. Arianne with her hands around her mug, the watch on her wrist, the star at her throat.
"I’m going to rember this forever," Lily said.
Leo typed: " TOO."
Franz looked at the sky. "So will I."
Arianne said nothing. But her hand found his under the blanket.
They stayed until the cold drove them in. Lily’s teeth were chattering but she was smiling. Leo’s cheeks were red, his eyes bright. Franz carried Leo. Arianne guided Lily.
Tucking in took longer tonight. Lily kept finding reasons to stay awake — one more question, one more adjustnt to Snow the fox, one more thing she’d forgotten to say. Leo lay quietly, whale in his arms, watching them.
Finally, Lily’s eyes stayed closed.
Leo typed one more thing. Held it up so they could both see: "BEST FAMILY EVER."
Franz read it. Arianne read it. They looked at each other.
"Yes," she said. "Best family."
Leo’s eyes closed.
***
The cabin was quiet.
Franz built up the fire. Arianne sat on the couch, feet tucked under her, the watch catching firelight. He sat beside her. Not touching. Present.
"The airport," she said.
He waited.
"When I ca back. You t . You didn’t consult . You acted without ."
"I did."
"I understand why. You were protecting . You saw a threat and you moved."
"I saw them coming for you." His voice was low. "I didn’t think."
"And it created a problem. Not the protection — the exclusion. The board will ask questions. We need a unified answer."
He turned to face her. "What do you want the answer to be?"
"That we made a decision together. That any public statents going forward will be joint. That Rochefort Group does not act unilaterally on matters affecting both of us." Her voice was even. Not accusing. Stating. "I need to know that when sothing threatens us, you’ll tell before you act. Not after."
Franz was quiet. The fire moved in the grate.
"I’ve spent years protecting you from a distance. Watching. Waiting. Not acting because I had no right to act." He looked at his hands. "Having the right — it’s new. I’m still learning where the lines are."
"I know that."
"When I saw what they were doing — the sar campaign, the coordinated attacks — I moved. I didn’t stop to think. I just moved."
"I know."
He t her eyes. "I should have called you."
"That’s what I need. Next ti."
"There won’t be a next ti. Not like that." He paused. "I can’t promise I won’t want to protect you. That’s not sothing I know how to turn off. But I can promise I won’t do it without you again."
Arianne looked at him for a long mont.
"Then we’re aligned."
"The board will accept that? Joint decisions. Unified front."
"They want stability. We give them stability."
"Together."
She leaned into him. His arm ca around her.
Later, in their room.
The snow-glow through the windows. The star pendant on the nightstand beside the whale and the letter. The watch beside it, still ticking.
She ca to him without hesitation. Not discovery — they’d done that. Not reclamation — they’d done that too. This was sothing else. Intention. Promise. Her hands on his skin, his on hers, no walls between them, no calculations, no reserve.
After, she lay against his chest. His hand traced slow circles on her back.
"We’re going ho tomorrow," she said.
"We are."
"It’ll be different there. Harder. The board. The dia. The investigation."
"It will."
She was quiet. Then: "I’m not afraid."
He kissed her hair. "Neither am I."
"Because we’re doing it together."
He didn’t answer with words. Just pulled her closer.
She closed her eyes. His heartbeat was steady under her ear. Outside, snow continued to fall — the last night, the last snow, the last quiet before the world ca back.
She slept. He followed.
In the morning, they would go ho. But tonight, they were here. That was enough.
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