Surrendering to My Mountain Man Valentine (Date Night In The Mountains #3)
Chapter 1
CHAPTER ONE
NADIA
The frozen highways of British Columbia are not where I expected to spend the week before Valentine's Day, but here I am, white knuckling the steering wheel of my rental SUV while my sister's voice chirps through the Bluetooth like she hasn't just ruined my entire month.
"Nadia, are you even listening to me?"
I am absolutely not listening to her. I'm too busy trying not to die on this winding mountain road while mentally calculating how much of my emergency fund I just blew on last minute flights and this overpriced rental.
"I'm listening, Yasmine." I ease off the gas as another curve appears through the snow flurries. "You said the wedding is Saturday. Valentine's Day. In a town called Crimson Hollow that apparently doesn't believe in proper highway maintenance."
"The roads are fine. You're being dramatic."
Easy for her to say. She's been holed up in this mountain paradise for three months planning her dream wedding while I've been grinding seventy hour weeks at a Chicago marketing firm that just laid off half my department. Including me. Three days ago.
Which Yasmine doesn't know about yet.
"The point is," she continues, her voice taking on that particular tone that means she's about to ask for something unreasonable, "everyone is bringing someone. Mom's bringing Gerald. Dad's bringing his girlfriend. Even Aunt Patricia has a date, and she's been single since 1987."
"Good for Aunt Patricia."
"Nadia."
I sigh, navigating around a patch of ice that appears out of nowhere. The GPS claims I'm forty minutes from Crimson Hollow, but I'm pretty sure this thing was calibrated by someone who's never driven in actual winter conditions.
"What do you want me to say, Yas? I don't have a boyfriend. I've been too busy working to date anyone seriously in the past year." Too busy working at a job that no longer exists, but whatever. "I'll be fine sitting at the singles table with the other lonely hearts."
"There is no singles table. That's the problem." Yasmine's voice pitches higher. "I specifically designed the seating chart so everyone would be paired up. It's a Valentine's wedding, Nadia. The whole theme is love and partnership and you showing up alone throws off my entire aesthetic."
Of course it does. Because my baby sister has always been the one with the vision boards and the perfectly curated Instagram and the fiancé who looks like he stepped out of a cologne advertisement.
Meanwhile, I'm the older sister who was supposed to have her life together by thirty two but instead just got escorted out of her office building with a cardboard box and a pamphlet about filing for unemployment.
"I'm sorry my relationship status is inconvenient for your aesthetic."
"Don't be like that." She huffs. "I'm just saying, if you happened to meet someone between now and Saturday, that would be ideal. Or if you wanted to bring a friend. Or hire someone. I don't care. I just need you to have a plus one."
"Hire someone?" I laugh, but it comes out bitter. "Right. Because that's a totally normal thing to do."
"People do it all the time. There are apps for it."
"I'm not downloading a rent a date app, Yasmine."
"Fine. Then figure something else out. I have to go, the florist is calling. Love you, see you tomorrow."
She hangs up before I can respond, which is classic Yasmine. My phone immediately buzzes with a text.
Yasmine
Also Mom is asking questions about your job. Says they’re on the news about downsizing. I assured her you're just taking some time off. So, you're welcome.
I groan and toss my phone into the cupholder. Of course Mom is asking questions. And of course Yasmine covered for me without even knowing the full story, because that's what we do in the Smith family. We protect each other's images even when everything is falling apart underneath.
The snow picks up as I climb higher into the mountains, and I force myself to focus on the road instead of spiraling about my currently disastrous life.
Unemployed. Single. About to spend the most romantic holiday of the year watching my perfect sister marry her perfect man while my mother side eyes me about my biological clock and my father pretends we're still close even though I've barely spoken to him since he left.
Happy Valentine's Day to me.
The sign for Crimson Hollow appears through the snow like a hallucination. Welcome to Crimson Hollow, Population 2,500, Where Love Finds a Way.
"How ominous," I mutter, slowing as the highway narrows into what I assume passes for a main street in a town this size.
It's actually kind of charming, if you're into the whole quaint mountain village thing.
Brick storefronts with hand painted signs.
Strings of lights that probably look magical at night.
A coffee shop called Bean & Bloom that has a line out the door despite the weather.
And everywhere, everywhere, Valentine's decorations.
Red hearts in windows. Pink banners stretched across the street.
A giant cupid statue in what appears to be the town square, bow drawn and ready to shoot someone in the ass with an arrow of love.
I need a drink.
According to the GPS, the bed and breakfast where the wedding guests are staying is on the other side of town, but I spot a place called The Velvet Antler and decide my blood alcohol level needs adjusting before I face my family.
The parking lot is nearly full, which seems promising. At least the locals have good taste in bars. I find a spot near the back, cut the engine, and take a moment to check my reflection in the rearview mirror.
The sixteen hour travel day shows. My dark skin has that ashy undertone that means I desperately need moisturizer.
My braids, which I got fresh last week in anticipation of being photographed at my sister's wedding, are frizzing at the edges from static.
And my eyes have that slightly manic look of someone who's been running on airport coffee and anxiety for too long.
"You are a successful, accomplished Black woman who is taking a brief professional hiatus," I tell my reflection. "You do not need a man to validate your existence. You are here to support your sister and drink wine and not commit any felonies."
It's a good pep talk. I almost believe it.
The Velvet Antler is warmer than I expected, both in temperature and atmosphere.
Rustic but upscale, with exposed wooden beams and a massive stone fireplace dominating one wall.
The bar is packed with what looks like a mix of locals and visitors, everyone rosy cheeked and laughing like they're in a Hallmark movie about finding love in unexpected places.
I find the one empty stool at the bar and slide onto it, already scanning the drink menu.
Wine. They have a lot of wine. Something about an attached vineyard called Iron Vine Estate.
I'm debating between a pinot noir and just asking for whatever's strongest when a voice to my left cuts through the ambient noise.
"You look like you're about to order something you'll regret."
I turn, ready to deliver the withering glare I've perfected over years of fending off unwanted attention in Chicago bars, but the words die somewhere between my brain and my mouth.
The man taking up the stool next to me is.
.. substantial. There's really no other word for it.
Tall, even sitting down, with shoulders broad enough to block out the fireplace behind him.
Dark hair shot through with silver at the temples.
A jaw that could cut glass. And eyes the color of a winter storm, pale gray and piercing, fixed on me with an intensity that makes my spine straighten involuntarily.
He's older than me. By at least a decade, maybe more. And he's looking at me like I'm a problem he's trying to solve.
"Excuse me?"
"The wine." He nods toward the menu in my hands. "You've been staring at the pinot noir for three minutes, but your shoulders are tense and you checked your phone twice since you sat down. You don't want to sip something. You want to something that burns when you gulp."
I’m annoyed. Who does this mountain man think he is, reading me like I'm some open book he can just flip through at his leisure?
"And I suppose you have a recommendation?"
The corner of his mouth twitches. Not quite a smile, but close. "Depends on what you're running from."
"Who says I'm running from anything?"
He raises an eyebrow, and I hate that it's attractive.
"Chicago plates on the rental in the parking lot.
Louis Vuitton bag that costs more than most people's rent.
And you walked in here like you were bracing for a fight, not looking for a good time.
" He takes a slow sip of what looks like whiskey.
"You're not a tourist. You're here for something specific, and you're dreading it. "
I stare at him for a long moment, trying to decide if I'm impressed or offended.
"That's a lot of assumptions from a stranger."
"I'm not wrong though."
He's not. That's the infuriating part.
"Fine." I set down the menu and turn to face him fully, crossing my arms. "Since you're apparently the bar psychic, what would you recommend for someone who just got laid off from her job, is about to spend Valentine's weekend at her little sister's wedding without a date, and had to listen to her mother's boyfriend describe his prostate surgery for the entire second half of her flight? "
He’s wearing an unreadable expression. Interest, maybe. Or amusement. It's hard to tell with a face that co someone without looking away from me. "Two fingers of the Macallan. Neat. And whatever the lady wants."
An older man with a knowing smile appears behind the bar. Though he doesn’t give me bartender vibes. "And what does the lady want?"
I hold the stranger's gaze. "The same. But make it three fingers."
The man behind the bar, Silas, chuckles and reaches for a bottle on the top shelf. "Coming right up."