Natalie Brooks left Pine Ridge twelve years ago on Christmas Eve. Left her family's struggling bakery. Left her childhood home. Left everything familiar. Most painfully, she left Andrew Sullivan-her best friend, her first love, the boy who'd kissed her under the mistletoe and asked her to stay. She chose New York instead. Chose culinary school. Chose ambition over love. Chose leaving over staying. And she's regretted it every Christmas since.Now she's back. Her grandmother Rose is sick. The family bakery-Brooks' Holiday Bakery, Pine Ridge's heart for three generations-is failing. Her mother begged her to come home. Just for the holidays. Just to help. Just until they figure things out. Natalie agreed to two weeks. Christmas and New Year's. Then she'd return to her executive pastry chef position in Manhattan. Return to her real life. Return to pretending Pine Ridge doesn't still feel like home.But Pine Ridge hasn't forgotten her. The town remembers the girl who left. Who chose the city over community. Who broke Andrew Sullivan's heart and never looked back. They're polite but distant. Welcoming but wary. Waiting to see if she'll run again. Waiting to see if this time she'll stay.And Andrew-successful contractor, town councilman, still single after all these years-is everywhere. Renovating the bakery. Fixing her grandmother's house. Volunteering at the Christmas festival. Being kind when she expects anger. Being helpful when she deserves coldness. Being everything she remembered and more. Making her question every choice she's made since leaving.Working together is complicated. The attraction never died. The friendship is still there beneath hurt and time. The love-that terrifying, all-consuming love she ran from-is waiting. Patient. Inevitable. Impossible to ignore. Andrew doesn't trust her. Expects her to leave again. Guards his heart carefully. This is just helping. Just community service. Just getting through the holidays. Nothing more.But proximity forces honesty. Late nights at the bakery reveal truths. Her grandmother's illness is worse than anyone admitted. The bakery's finances are catastrophic. Her mother is exhausted. The family is falling apart. And Natalie realizes she's been running from responsibility. From commitment. From the truth that success in New York means nothing if you have no one to share it with.Andrew is falling for her again. Knows it's dangerous. Knows she'll leave. Knows his heart can't survive another breaking. But he can't help it. She's still her. Still the girl he loved. Still the woman he wants. Still home in human form. The question is whether she'll realize it before it's too late. Before New York calls. Before fear wins again.Natalie has to choose. The executive position waiting in Manhattan. Or saving the family bakery. The penthouse apartment. Or her grandmother's farmhouse. The prestigious career she built. Or the community that raised her. The life she thought she wanted. Or the love she never stopped wanting. Success. Or home.