The snow begins before Emma notices it.
At first, it’s just another blur outside the bus window—gray sky, indistinct shapes, motion without meaning. But as the bus slows and Pinebrook comes into view, the snowfall thickens, large flakes drifting downward with deliberate slowness, as if the world itself has decided to quiet down.
Emma presses her forehead lightly against the cold glass. Her reflection stares back at her, faint and fragmented. She barely recognizes herself. She looks older than she feels, more tired than she wants to admit. Her phone vibrates in her pocket—messages she doesn’t open, names she doesn’t want to see.
Pinebrook looks unreal. Lights glow softly along the streets, wreaths hang from lampposts, windows shine with warmth. It’s the kind of town people imagine when they say they want to “get away from everything.”
Emma doesn’t feel like she’s getting away. She feels like she’s stepping out of her own life.
When the bus stops, the sound of the doors opening feels final. She steps down into the snow, the cold immediately biting through her gloves. People move with purpose around her—locals greeting each other, laughing quietly, carrying groceries or wrapped gifts.
Someone smiles at her. “Merry Christmas.”
She forces a polite nod.
Her rental is small and bare. The heater rattles. She drops her suitcase by the door and doesn’t unpack. Instead, she opens her laptop, staring at the unfinished document she hasn’t touched in months. The cursor blinks, patient and accusing.
She closes it.
That night, she stands by the window, watching snow gather under a streetlamp. For the first time, she wonders if she’s not just visiting Pinebrook but hiding in it.