Mark filmed me doing a shaky video tour on my phone because professional content was out of budget and he correctly guessed that too much polish would look false anyway. I stood on the porch in a borrowed cardigan because the wind kept cutting through my shirt and talked about my grandmother and mountain silence and family reconnection and the kind of rest that has nothing to do with spas and everything to do with being allowed to exhale.
Halfway through, my voice cracked.
Mark looked at me over the phone and said, “Keep going.”
So I did.
We posted the video on the website and social accounts the next day.
I expected pity clicks.
Instead, bookings trickled in.
A couple from Boulder celebrating thirty years of marriage who wrote in their inquiry that “our children have all grown and scattered and we’d like one weekend where nobody is rushing anywhere.” A family from Colorado Springs planning a memorial gathering for a mother who loved mountains. A group of cousins who had not all been in the same place since before the pandemic. A women’s writing circle wanting a quiet retreat without “forced spiritual programming or scented water.”
Each booking felt like a small vote for the world as Dorothy had understood it.
The first guest review under my name made me sit down at the kitchen table and put a hand over my mouth.
Feels like the home you wish your family had been able to keep for itself.
That one stayed with me for days.
More came.
Not fancy. Better. Real.
Our kids forgot their tablets existed.
I haven’t slept that deeply in a year.
There’s something healing about this place.
Every positive review was a form of armor, but not the hard metallic kind my father wore. This was softer and somehow stronger. Evidence that the lodge could survive not by becoming what he respected, but by remaining itself more deliberately than ever.
Of course he did not stay quiet.
Men like James Anderson rarely do. Silence, to them, feels like surrender.
The first wave was whispers.