I walked into the master bedroom I had paid for, and there it was: my suitcase tossed in a corner, my expensive face cream used, and a stranger’s yapping dog curled up on my pillow.
This was my girls’ trip. The one I planned and paid for to escape the stress of my life.
But my best friend, Jenna, decided to invite more people without asking. Then she gave my room to her influencer niece, looked me dead in the eye, and said, “You won’t mind the couch, right?”
Little did they know a historic blizzard was about to snow them in without power, and I’d be watching it all unfold from a luxury spa down the road, deciding whether or not to answer their desperate calls for rescue.
The Promise of a Break: A Price for Peace
The cursor blinked at me from the center of a half-written project proposal. Synergize forward-facing paradigms. I closed my eyes, and the meaningless corporate words swarmed behind my eyelids like gnats. It was a Tuesday, but it felt like the fifth Monday of the week. At home, my husband, Tom, was holding down the fort with our ten-year-old, Leo, but the maternal guilt was a low-grade hum beneath the fluorescent lights of the office. I was failing on all fronts, spreading myself so thin I was transparent.
I minimized the document and opened a browser window I kept for emergencies. Escapes. Fantasies. A cabin rental site popped up, filled with pictures of crackling fires and snow-dusted pines. My finger twitched over the mouse.
There it was. “The Aspen Hollow.” Two bedrooms, a stone fireplace, a wraparound porch with a view of the mountains that looked like a Bob Ross painting. It was perfect. It was also seven hundred and fifty dollars for a weekend. I thought of Leo’s upcoming orthodontist bills and the new tires Tom said we needed for the SUV. I winced.
Then I thought of the blinking cursor again, of the hollow feeling in my chest when I kissed a sleeping Leo goodbye in the morning. I clicked “Book Now.” The confirmation email felt like a shot of adrenaline. A weekend. Just one weekend of quiet.
My first call was to Jenna. We’d been best friends since we were dorm-mates in college, a twenty-year tapestry of terrible boyfriends, cheap wine, career changes, and weddings. She was the only person I could imagine sharing the sacred silence with.
“A cabin? In the mountains?” Her voice crackled with excitement over the phone. “Maya, you are a lifesaver. An absolute angel. Yes. A thousand times, yes!”
I smiled, the first genuine smile in weeks. The tension in my shoulders eased. “Just us,” I said. “Like old times. We’ll drink wine, do face masks, and speak to no one.”
“It sounds like heaven,” she breathed. And for a moment, I believed it was that simple.
Just One More
Two days later, my phone rang. It was Jenna. Her tone was bubbly, a little too bright. I knew that tone. It was the precursor to a favor.
“Hey! So, the weirdest thing,” she started, not pausing for breath. “You know my cousin Mark? He and Sarah just split up. Like, this morning. He’s an absolute wreck, poor thing.”
I made a sympathetic noise, my eyes drifting to the rental confirmation on my desk. Two bedrooms. One for me, one for her. A perfect, balanced equation.
“And I was just thinking,” she continued, her voice weaving a delicate, guilt-laced web, “it would be so good for him to get out of the city. Just to clear his head, you know? He’s such a great guy, he’d be no trouble at all. He’d probably just fish or something. We’d barely even see him.”
The silence stretched. I pictured a third person in our quiet cabin. A sad man. A sad, fishing man. It wasn’t part of the vision. The vision was a sacred space for two.
“Jenna, I don’t know,” I said slowly. “The place only has two beds.”
“Oh, that’s fine! He can take the couch!” she chirped, as if she’d already solved a problem I hadn’t even agreed to. “He won’t care. Please, Maya? You’re so good at this stuff. I feel so bad for him.”
There it was. The gentle pressure, the framing of me as the gracious, understanding one. To say no would be to brand myself as selfish and unkind. After twenty years, our dynamic had grooves worn into it, and this was one of them. My desire for peace felt petty when weighed against a man’s fresh heartbreak.
“Okay,” I sighed, the word tasting like defeat. “Okay, Jenna. He can come.”
“You’re the best! The absolute best!” she squealed. “He’s going to be so thrilled. This is going to be so much fun!”
I hung up the phone and looked at the picture of the cabin. The cozy, two-person retreat already felt a little more crowded.
The Unsolicited Upgrade
The text message arrived on Thursday morning. It wasn’t from Jenna, but to a new group chat she had created, titled “CABIN WEEKEND!!!!” with an excessive number of tree and snowflake emojis. The members were me, Jenna, Mark, and two names I didn’t recognize: Chloe and Liam.
“AMAZING NEWS, team!” Jenna’s text read. “My niece, Chloe—you know, the influencer?—is in the area and wants to join us! And she’s bringing her boyfriend, Liam, who’s a professional videographer! They can get some sick drone footage of the cabin and the mountains. She’s going to feature it on her page. That’s like, free publicity for the rental owner! It’s a total win-win!”
I stared at my phone, my blood turning to ice water. A cold dread, heavy and metallic, settled in my stomach. Influencer. Videographer. Drone footage. These were words from a language I did not want spoken on my quiet weekend. I was now a member of a “team” on a trip that was rapidly becoming a content creation opportunity.
Before I could even formulate a response, my phone buzzed with a notification from my banking app. Venmo: Jenna sent you $150. The note attached read: “For our share! Can’t wait! xoxo”
I did the math in my head, my mind numb. Seven hundred and fifty dollars. I had paid it all. There were now six people attending. Jenna, her cousin, her niece, and the niece’s boyfriend. Four of them were her guests. And she had sent me one hundred and fifty dollars. Less than the cost of one person’s share.
I felt a wave of nausea. This wasn’t a girl’s trip anymore. It wasn’t even a group trip. I had become the unwitting financier and host of a stranger’s social media project. I typed out a reply, my thumbs hovering over the keyboard. Jenna, can we talk about this? But I couldn’t send it. The group chat format was a trap. Protesting here, in front of strangers, would make me look like a shrew. She knew that.
I put my phone down on my desk, face down, as if it were radioactive. The silence I had paid for was gone. And I had a sinking feeling I had paid for a whole lot more than that.
The Long, Silent Drive
Friday afternoon, I pulled up to Jenna’s apartment building, the back of my SUV already loaded with groceries I’d bought for the weekend—good cheese, a few bottles of decent wine, steak for the grill. When she came out, she was wrestling two oversized suitcases and a tote bag.
“Ready for peace and quiet?” I asked, forcing a smile.
“Totally!” she said, not looking at me as she shoved her bags into the trunk. “I just have to send Chloe the wifi password. She needs to pre-schedule a post for tonight. Her engagement is highest around 8 PM.”
The two-hour drive was a masterclass in modern alienation. I tried, at first. I asked about her job. I told a funny story about Leo trying to explain TikTok dances to Tom. Jenna’s responses were monosyllabic, her attention captured by the glowing screen in her hand. Her thumbs moved in a furious blur, tapping out messages to the cabin group chat I was now pointedly ignoring.
“Chloe’s asking if the fireplace is gas or wood-burning. Liam needs to know for the lighting,” she said to the air.
“Wood-burning,” I said, my voice tight. “It said so in the description.”
“Okay, cool. I’ll let him know.” Tap, tap, tap.
The silence that followed was heavy and suffocating. It was filled with everything I wasn’t saying. I thought about the seven hundred and fifty dollars that had left my bank account. I thought about the single, pathetic Venmo payment sitting in my own. I thought about how I had wanted to reconnect with my oldest friend, and instead, I was chauffeuring her social media manager.
We wound our way up the mountain roads, the autumn scenery a breathtaking display of gold and crimson. It was beautiful, but I couldn’t feel it. My knuckles were white on the steering wheel. I was driving toward my vacation, my expensive, curated escape. But it felt like I was driving into a storm. And I was the only one who could see the clouds gathering.
The Unwelcome Mat: The Party’s Here
We turned onto the gravel road marked by a small, carved wooden sign that read “The Aspen Hollow.” My heart, which had been a leaden weight in my chest, gave a small flutter of hope. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. Maybe once we were all there, the chaos would settle.
The hope died the second we rounded the final bend.
Instead of a quiet cabin nestled in the trees, the scene looked like a beer commercial. Three unfamiliar cars—a jacked-up pickup, a sleek black Audi, and a Subaru covered in bumper stickers—were parked haphazardly in the driveway. The front door of my charming, rustic cabin was wide open, and the thumping bass of some pop song I didn’t recognize bled out into the crisp mountain air.
Jenna didn’t seem to notice my stunned silence. “Oh, good! They beat us here!” she chirped, unbuckling her seatbelt before I’d even put the car in park. She hopped out, beaming. “The party has arrived!”
The door swung open wider, and a young woman with impossibly white teeth and a mane of blonde hair framed by a ring light stood in the doorway. This had to be Chloe. She held a phone in one hand, filming.
“Aunt Jenna! You made it!” she squealed, panning her camera to capture Jenna’s arrival. A few other people, strangers to me, cheered from inside.
I got out of the car and walked toward the porch, feeling like an intruder at my own party. I stepped over a discarded pair of muddy boots and into the living room. Bags and coats were everywhere. A massive tangle of charging cords and camera equipment occupied the corner where I had imagined a reading chair. The air smelled of perfume and spilled White Claw.
Jenna swept past me, giving me a quick pat on the arm. “Isn’t this great? Such a good vibe.”
I looked around at the chaos, at the strangers laughing in the space I had paid for, and felt the first, sharp pang of rage. A good vibe. For who?
A Minor Detail
Jenna found me standing awkwardly in the kitchen, clutching my purse like a shield. She was holding two glasses of rosé, and she handed one to me with a conspiratorial grin.
“Okay, so,” she said, lowering her voice as if she were about to share a juicy secret. “Quick little housekeeping thing. You’re not going to care, you’re so easy-going.”
I braced myself. Her compliments were always a warning shot.
“Chloe and Liam need the master bedroom,” she said, her smile unwavering. “The one with the big windows? The lighting in there is just, like, perfect for the video content she needs to get for her brand partners. It’s a whole thing. She has deliverables.”
I stared at her, the wine glass cold in my hand. Deliverables. Brand partners. The master bedroom. The one I had specifically chosen for myself. The one with the king-sized bed and the en-suite bathroom.
“So, you’re cool with the pull-out couch in the living room, right?” she continued, her tone making it clear this was a statement, not a question. “I checked it out, it’s actually a really nice one! Super comfy. It’ll be fun, like a big slumber party!”
A slumber party. I was forty-three years old. I had a mortgage and a 401(k). I did not want to have a slumber party on a pull-out couch in the middle of a living room full of twenty-somethings while the person who had contributed twenty-five dollars to the weekend took my master bedroom.
“Jenna,” I started, my voice dangerously quiet. “I booked the master bedroom for me.”
She waved a dismissive hand, the charm bracelets on her wrist jingling. “I know, I know, but this is work for her, Maya. It’s her job. You get it, you’re a professional. It’s just for two nights. Don’t make it a thing.”
She squeezed my shoulder, her smile tightening just a fraction. Then she turned and walked away to rejoin the party, leaving me standing alone in the kitchen, my unspoken objections turning to ash in my mouth.
The Violation
My body moved on autopilot. I walked out of the kitchen, through the noisy living room, and down the short hallway to the master bedroom. I just needed to get my suitcase. I’d figure out the rest later.
The door was ajar. I pushed it open.
My suitcase, the nice hard-shell one Tom had bought me for my birthday, had been tossed into a corner, one of the clasps broken. It was unzipped, my carefully folded clothes spilling out onto the floor. But that wasn’t what made my breath catch in my throat.
On the rustic wooden vanity of the en-suite bathroom sat my toiletry bag, also unzipped. My things were scattered across the counter. And right in the center, next to a tube of hot pink lipstick that wasn’t mine, was my brand-new jar of Kiehl’s Ultra Facial Cream. The lid was off. And in the smooth, untouched surface of the sixty-dollar cream, there was a perfect, deep finger-swipe. Someone had used my face cream.
A small, choked sound escaped my lips. It was such a small thing, so trivial. But the intimacy of it, the casual violation, felt monumental. It was a message: nothing here is yours. Your space, your things, your comfort—it’s all up for grabs.
Then my eyes moved to the bed. The bed I had fantasized about for weeks, with its fluffy duvet and mountain of pillows. Curled up in the very center of it, on the pillow I was supposed to lay my head on, was a small, white, fluffy dog. It lifted its head as I stood in the doorway, regarded me with beady black eyes, and let out a sharp, territorial yip.
I just stood there, staring at the dog on my pillow, the used face cream on the counter, my broken suitcase in the corner. The last bit of my composure, the carefully constructed dam I had built to hold back my frustration, didn’t just crack. It shattered.
Killing the Vibe
The rage was a physical force, hot and clear. It propelled me back down the hallway and into the kitchen, where Jenna was now showing Chloe how to work the fancy coffee maker.
“Jenna.” My voice was low, but it cut through the music.
She turned, a bright, oblivious smile on her face. “Hey! Did you get settled on the…?” Her voice trailed off when she saw my face.
“There is a dog,” I said, enunciating each word with chilling precision, “on the bed in the master bedroom.”
Jenna’s smile faltered. She glanced at Chloe. “Oh! That’s just Pistachio. He’s Chloe’s. He’s totally hypoallergenic! And house-trained. Mostly.”
“And someone,” I continued, my voice gaining strength, “used my face cream.”
Chloe looked up from her phone, her brow furrowed with annoyance. “Oh my god, was that yours? I ran out. I can Venmo you for it.” She said it with the same casual indifference as someone offering to pay for a pack of gum.
“That’s not the point,” I said, my gaze locked on Jenna. “The point is, this was supposed to be a quiet weekend for us. I paid seven hundred and fifty dollars for a cabin, and I am now apparently sleeping on a couch, while my room is being used as a kennel and a makeup counter for people I don’t know.”
Jenna’s face hardened. The bubbly friend disappeared, replaced by a defensive stranger. “Maya, you are being so dramatic. It’s a bed. It’s some lotion. We are all just trying to have a good time. Why do you have to make everything so difficult?”
Chloe slid her phone into her back pocket and crossed her arms, stepping forward to stand with her aunt. “Seriously,” she said, her voice dripping with condescension. “We’re all just trying to chill. You’re kind of killing the vibe.”
The word hung in the air between us. Vibe.
Something inside me, the part that had been making excuses for Jenna for twenty years, the part that always smoothed things over and avoided confrontation, went silent. It just… stopped. In its place was a cold, quiet clarity. I looked at my best friend, standing shoulder to shoulder with her niece, and I saw her for what she was. And I knew, with absolute certainty, what I had to do.
A Room of One’s Own: The Point of No Return
I didn’t say another word. I turned around, walked out of the kitchen, past the couch I was supposed to sleep on, and went straight to the front door. I plucked my car keys from the hook where I’d hung them.
Jenna followed me. “What are you doing? Maya, don’t be ridiculous. Where are you going to go?”
“I don’t know,” I said, my hand on the doorknob. And it was the truth. I had no plan. I just knew that I could not stay in that house for one more second.
“Are you seriously going to pout all weekend? Just get over it!” she called after me as I stepped onto the porch.
I turned back to look at her, framed in the doorway of the loud, messy cabin. Her face was a mixture of anger and disbelief. She genuinely couldn’t understand.
“You’re right,” I said, my voice eerily calm. “I am over it.”
I walked to my car, got in, and started the engine. I didn’t look back. I put the car in reverse, navigated around the Audi and the pickup truck, and pulled out of the gravel driveway. The thumping music faded behind me until the only sound was the crunch of tires on the road.
As I drove, the tears finally came. They weren’t tears of sadness or self-pity. They were tears of pure, hot, liberating rage. Rage at Jenna, at Chloe, at the dog, at the used face cream. But mostly, rage at myself for letting it get this far, for years of swallowing my own needs to accommodate hers.
I drove for an hour, aimlessly winding down the mountain roads as dusk settled. The anger burned through me, scouring me clean. When the tears stopped, something else took their place: a cold, hard resolve. They had taken my cabin. They had taken my money. But they were not going to take my entire weekend. I would not let them.
The Gilded Cage
I pulled into a scenic overlook, the valley spreading out below me in the twilight. The air was cold and clean. I took out my phone and opened the hotel booking app. My finger hovered over the familiar budget chains. Motel 6. Best Western. It felt like a consolation prize. A punishment.
Then I scrolled further. And I saw it.
“The Gilded Pine Spa & Resort.”
The pictures were obscene. A grand timber lobby with a fireplace the size of my car. Rooms with balconies and soaking tubs. A rooftop infinity pool that seemed to melt into the mountain peaks. It was a place for honeymooners and corporate retreats. A place I would normally mock as ridiculously extravagant. The price for one night was listed. Six hundred dollars. My stomach clenched. It was an insane amount of money.
I thought about the seven hundred and fifty dollars I had already lost. I thought about Jenna’s paltry one-hundred-and-fifty-dollar contribution. I thought about the pull-out couch and the yapping dog.
My thumb moved with a will of its own. I tapped “Book Now.”
The confirmation message appeared on my screen. It wasn’t a compromise. It wasn’t a consolation. It was a rebellion. A declaration of independence paid for with my own damn money. It was the most satisfying, most defiant purchase of my entire life. Driving toward the resort, following the GPS down a private, tree-lined lane, I felt a giddy, unfamiliar sense of power. I was finally taking back my weekend.
An Unearned Serenity
The difference was so stark it gave me vertigo. At The Aspen Hollow, I’d had to park in the dirt and step over muddy boots. At The Gilded Pine, a valet in a crisp uniform took my keys before I’d even turned off the engine. “Welcome to the resort, ma’am,” he said, his smile genuine.
The lobby smelled of cedar and money. It was hushed and warm, the only sound the gentle crackle of the massive fireplace. The woman at the check-in desk didn’t ask me to join a group chat. She handed me a keycard and a voucher for a complimentary glass of champagne.
My room was on the third floor. It was a sanctuary. The king-sized bed was piled high with what felt like a hundred pillows. A gas fireplace flickered to life at the touch of a button. Sliding glass doors led to a private balcony with two cushioned chairs and a perfect, unobstructed view of the darkening mountains.
I dropped my purse and my sad, half-unpacked overnight bag on the floor. I walked into the bathroom, which was larger than my kitchen at home. There was a rainforest shower and a soaking tub deep enough to swim in. On the marble counter, there was an array of tiny, sealed bottles of expensive-smelling lotions and soaps. They were all mine.
I stripped off my clothes, the psychic grime of the cabin clinging to me, and drew the hottest bath I could stand. Then I picked up the phone and ordered room service: a medium-rare ribeye steak, a side of garlic mashed potatoes, and a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon that cost more than a tank of gas. I deserved it.
The Silent Statement
I ate my dinner in the plush, white hotel robe, sitting in an armchair in front of the fireplace. The steak was perfect. The wine was smooth and dark. Outside the balcony doors, the first flakes of snow, the leading edge of a storm that had been in the forecast all week, began to drift down through the darkness.
It was quiet. Not a forced, tense quiet like the car ride with Jenna, but a deep, luxurious silence. The kind of quiet I had been craving for months. The kind of quiet I had tried to buy for seven hundred and fifty dollars.
I picked up my phone, which was now fully charged. I opened Instagram. I didn’t look at Chloe’s page. I didn’t look at Jenna’s. I didn’t want to see their party, their “vibe.”
I propped my bare feet up on the stone hearth, the fire warming my skin. I held my wine glass so that the dark red liquid caught the light. I angled the phone and took a picture. It was a simple shot: my feet, the wine, the roaring fire. In the corner of the frame, you could just see the edge of the pristine white robe and the dark wood of the balcony door, with snowflakes beginning to stick to the glass.
I posted it.
No caption. No location tag. No hashtags.
I didn’t need any. The picture was the caption. It was a silent, irrefutable statement. I set my phone on the table, face down. I picked up my wine. The storm was coming, but in my gilded cage, I felt nothing but peace.
The Cold Shoulder: The First Signal
My phone buzzed against the polished wood of the nightstand. I had been dozing by the fire, the wine and the warmth making me drowsy. I picked it up. It was a text from Jenna.
Saw your post. Cute. Glad you found a place.
The words were steeped in passive aggression. Cute. As if my luxurious room were some quaint little BB I’d stumbled upon. Glad you found a place. A casual dismissal of the fact that I was only in this place because she had pushed me out of the one I had paid for. There was no apology. No concern. Just a curt, dismissive acknowledgment.
I set the phone back down, my brief, wine-induced tranquility evaporating. I walked to the balcony door and looked out. The snow wasn’t drifting anymore; it was coming down in thick, heavy sheets, swirling in the wind. The lights of the resort cast a warm glow on the accumulating drifts below. As I watched, the lights flickered once, twice, then held steady. A low, powerful hum started up from somewhere on the grounds—the resort’s generator, kicking in without missing a beat.
I thought of the cabin, miles up a winding mountain road. I wondered if they had a generator. I wondered if they had enough firewood. A small, ugly part of me hoped they didn’t. I pushed the thought away, annoyed at my own vindictiveness, but it lingered at the edge of my mind.
The Unraveling
My phone started buzzing again, a persistent, frantic vibration. I ignored it. It stopped, then immediately started again. A string of texts came through in rapid succession.
The first was a picture. It was a view out the cabin window, but all I could see was white. The driveway, the trees, the entire world was buried in snow. It was coming down like a curtain.
The next text: Hey the power just went out.
A minute later: And we have no firewood.
Then: Chloe’s phone is at 2%. Mine is at 10%.
The phone began to ring, Jenna’s name flashing on the screen. I stared at it, my heart hammering against my ribs. I watched it ring and ring until it finally went to voicemail. A second later, a notification popped up. Voicemail from Jenna.
Against my better judgment, I played it. Her voice was high and strained, a stark contrast to her earlier, dismissive text.
“Maya, pick up! I’m not kidding, it’s freezing in here. The fire went out an hour ago, and Mark can’t find any more dry wood. Chloe is having a full-blown panic attack because she can’t charge her phone, and that stupid little dog will not stop barking. Mark is talking about chopping up one of the kitchen chairs for heat. This isn’t funny anymore! Call me back!”
The message ended. I stood in the silent, warm room, the sound of the crackling gas fire a stark counterpoint to the desperation in my friend’s voice. This isn’t funny anymore. As if I had ever thought it was funny. As if this was some prank I was pulling, instead of the direct and predictable consequence of their own entitlement.
The Weight of a Choice
I listened to the voicemail again. The panic was real. The fear was real. And the ethical weight of the situation settled on me like a physical blanket.
They were cold. They were scared. They were trapped.
I was warm. I was safe. And I was twenty miles away in an SUV with four-wheel drive and a full tank of gas.
I sank into the armchair, my mind a swirling mess of conflicting emotions. I thought of twenty years of friendship. I thought of the night Jenna sat with me in the ER when Leo had a terrifyingly high fever. I thought of the time she helped me move into my first apartment, hauling boxes up three flights of stairs in the summer heat. We had history. A real, deep, and complicated history. Didn’t that count for something? Didn’t that demand something of me?
Then I thought of the dog on my pillow. The used face cream. The casual, cruel dismissal of my feelings. The condescending smirk on Chloe’s face as she told me I was “killing the vibe.” They hadn’t cared about my comfort or my safety from embarrassment and frustration. They had cared about lighting, and brand deals, and having a good time at my expense.
Was I obligated to rescue the very people who had created the situation by disrespecting me so profoundly? Was their poor planning now my emergency? The question circled in my head, a moral merry-go-round. Where did my responsibility to a friend end and my responsibility to myself begin? I had drawn a line in the sand when I left the cabin. Now they were asking me to cross back over it and save them.
The Final Call
The phone rang again. Jenna.
This time, I answered. I didn’t say anything, just pressed the phone to my ear.
“Maya? Oh, thank God!” Her voice was a torrent of words, tripping over one another in a rush of panic and tears. “I am so sorry! You were right, I was a total jerk. I am so, so sorry. I should have listened to you. This is a nightmare.”
I could hear the chaos in the background. Chloe was audibly sobbing. Someone—Mark, I presumed—was yelling something about his phone being dead. The dog was still barking, a frantic, high-pitched noise.
“Please, Maya, we need you,” Jenna pleaded, her voice cracking. “We’re freezing. We have no food left that doesn’t need a stove. Can you just… can you drive to town and get us some supplies? Firewood? Anything? Or call someone for us? Please! I’ll pay you back for everything, I swear. I’ll make it up to you.”
I listened to her entire, desperate appeal in complete silence. I let her talk until she ran out of breath, until the only sounds were her ragged sobs and the miserable symphony of the cold, dark cabin.
I looked out my window at the serene, snow-covered pine trees, each branch heavy with a perfect layer of white. The world outside my window was utterly peaceful.
After a long moment, I spoke. My voice was even and clear, devoid of anger or triumph. It was just a voice stating a fact.
“Jenna,” I said. “I saw online that the county has a search-and-rescue team. Their number is 911.”
There was a stunned silence on the other end of the line. Before she could form a reply, I pressed the red icon on my screen, ending the call.
Then, with a steady hand, I opened my contacts, found her name, and blocked the number.
The storm raged on outside, but inside my room, it was finally, completely quiet. I picked up the spa’s room service menu and began to decide on breakfast