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Millionaire Cowboy Finds a Frozen Nurse Alone—Their Journey Sparks a Historic Love Story

Part II: The Ghost in the Scrubs

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The next morning broke with that eerie, blinding silence that only follows a historic blizzard. The sun hit the snowfields, creating a glare so intense it could burn your retinas if you looked too long.

Inside the ranch house, the kitchen smelled of black coffee, sizzling bacon, and cast-iron skillet biscuits. Cole liked the ritual of cooking. It grounded him. It was a far cry from his old life in San Francisco, where breakfast was a green juice consumed while reading stock tickers on a screen.

He heard soft, hesitant footsteps on the hardwood floor behind him.

He turned around. Elena was standing at the edge of the kitchen, wearing a pair of his old grey sweatpants—swallowing her small frame entirely—and a thick flannel shirt with the sleeves rolled up four times. She looked fragile, but her skin had returned to a healthy, olive-toned cream color, and her dark hair was brushed back in a neat ponytail.

“You shouldn’t be walking yet,” Cole said, pouring a mug of coffee and sliding it across the heavy oak island. “Your blood pressure is probably still tanked.”

She caught the mug, holding it with both hands as if it were a lifeline. She took a slow sip, closing her eyes as the heat hit her system. “I’m a nurse, Mr…?”

“Cole. Just Cole.”

“I’m a nurse, Cole. I know my body. My blood pressure is actually fine. My pride, on the other hand, is completely destroyed.” She gave a weak, self-deprecating laugh that ended in a small cough. “I got stuck on a seasonal road, didn’t I?”

“The old logging pass,” Cole said, leaning against the counter and crossing his arms. “Local authorities close that gate in November. Someone left it unlocked, or you ignored the sign.”

Elena looked down at her coffee, a flush of embarrassment coloring her cheeks. “The GPS said it was a shortcut to Laramie. I was trying to beat the storm. I just finished a forty-eight-hour double shift at the county hospital down south, and I… I wasn’t thinking straight. I just wanted to get home.”

Cole watched her. He didn’t scold her. There was no point. Out here, nature did the punishing; survival was the lesson. “You’re lucky you didn’t sleep through it. If you’d fallen asleep before your engine died, you wouldn’t have woken up.”

“I know,” she said quietly. She looked up, her hazel eyes locking onto his with an intensity that made him sit up a little straighter. “I looked at my car window this morning from your porch. You broke the back glass to get to me. You carried me. You… you saved my life, Cole. Truly.”

“Anyone would have done it,” he said, shifting uncomfortably. He wasn’t good with gratitude. It felt too intimate, too binding.

“No, they wouldn’t,” she countered, her voice firming up with that natural authority nurses have. “Most people would have stayed inside their warm trucks and called a sheriff’s department that wouldn’t have arrived until three days later. You didn’t. Don’t minimize it.”

Cole shrugged, turning back to the stove to flip the bacon. “Eat something. Then we can figure out what to do with you. The roads are going to be closed for at least four days. The county plow broke a differential three miles down the valley, and the state route is completely blocked by a jackknifed semi. You’re stuck here.”

Elena walked over to the island and sat down on one of the heavy iron stools. “Stuck here? With a millionaire cowboy who lives in a house that looks like an architectural digest ad for the rugged elite?”

Cole paused, a slight smirk playing on his lips. “You notice a lot for someone who was a popsicle six hours ago.”

“I notice quality,” she said, looking around the expansive room—the vaulted cedar ceilings, the custom ironwork, the professional-grade kitchen. “And I know what a tech-exit ranch looks like. You didn’t grow up pulling calves in the mud, Cole. The hands are too smooth under those calluses, and the art on the wall isn’t from a local feed store.”

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