Chapter Three Trinity could hear the baby crying inside the cabin as she finished brushing the snow off her Jeep, which she’d packed up with luggage. She had been warming up the car for the past twenty minutes, and it was now dark, late afternoon. She’d fallen asleep again after feeding her baby, knowing she should’ve been on the road hours ago. The snow was really coming down now, and the wind seemed to have come out of nowhere, creating almost white-out conditions. She now couldn’t even see the break in the trees at the end of the narrow driveway only a hundred feet from her cabin. To make matters worse, she knew the temperature had dropped to the twenties, not the kind of weather she wanted to go anywhere in. “Coming, baby girl…” she called out as she tossed the snow brush to the flo

