Before the Frost Takes the Meadow

Before the frost takes the meadow, two people learn that love cannot be built like a wall.

Gideon Cross is a man who trusts stone more than speech. As an architectural preservationist, he spends his life rescuing forgotten places from collapse, restoring old structures with patience, precision, and a belief that careful work can hold back ruin. Maeve Linwood makes the opposite argument with every living thing she touches. A botanical artist with a gift for wild, temporary beauty, she creates vast installations of moss, timber, vines, and bloom that are meant to change, fade, and die on schedule. When they meet inside a neglected glass conservatory on a historic New England estate, each sees in the other a flaw too large to ignore—and a challenge neither can quite resist.

What begins as a clash over rot and structure becomes something fiercer: a summer of black coffee, late nights under cracked glass, and a romance built in the narrow space between control and surrender. Gideon, who has made permanence into a creed, begins to see that openness is not weakness. Maeve, who has spent years fleeing anything that feels like a cage, begins to understand that roots are not the same as captivity. But the very instincts that draw them together also pull them apart. He tries to make life orderly enough to survive. She feels the old panic rise whenever devotion starts to resemble enclosure. When love turns into pressure, they separate rather than break one another completely.

As autumn deepens, the conservatory becomes the site of both their most beautiful creation and their hardest lessons. They return to it changed, older in the ways that matter, carrying the quiet knowledge that some relationships are not meant to be preserved exactly as they were found. They are meant to be rebuilt with more room, more honesty, and more grace.

A moving story of work, longing, and second chances, this is a novel about what endures after the bloom falls away.

And when spring returns, they will discover what still lives beneath the frost.

Coming 2027-2028