The Cabin That Was Mine
The Swiss Alps always made me feel like I could finally breathe properly again. After a year working in Tokyo — managing clinical trial logistics across three continents, navigating foreign regulatory frameworks in a language I barely spoke, living on midnight conference calls and whatever passed for sleep in between — I was desperate for the kind of silence only one place in the world could give me. My cabin in the Colorado mountains.
Eight thousand feet of elevation and aspens and nothing pressing on my chest. I had bought it three years earlier with money from my grandmother’s estate. She always told me to invest in something that made my soul happy, not just my bank account.
The small wooden structure sat on two acres outside Aspen, surrounded by trees that turned golden every autumn and stood skeletal and beautiful through winter. It was my sanctuary. The place I returned to when I needed to remember who I was.
The drive from Denver wound four hours through mountain passes still holding patches of snow in late May. I had timed it deliberately — wildflowers beginning to bloom, trails accessible but not yet crowded with summer tourists. My plan was simple.
Two weeks of complete isolation, the stack of novels I had shipped ahead, hiking until my legs burned, and meals eaten while watching the sun paint the peaks orange and pink. As I turned onto the narrow dirt road leading to my property, something felt wrong. The gate was open.
I always kept it locked. I had taken the only key to Tokyo. My heart rate climbed as I drove slowly up the gravel path, scanning the trees.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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