One Bed, No Rules by Jace Wilder - MM Contemporary Romance book cover

One Bed, No Rules

MM Contemporary Romance
by Jace Wilder

One Bed, No Rules by Jace Wilder - MM Contemporary Romance book cover

Pairing: MM
Heat: 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ Inferno
Tropes: One Bed, Forced Proximity, Snowed In, Grumpy/Sunshine, Opposites Attract, Strangers to Lovers, Touch Starved

They were supposed to survive the storm. They weren’t supposed to survive each other.

Caleb Ward came to the mountain to close up the cabin and be alone. He’s a contractor, a loner, and a man who hasn’t let anyone close in two years. The plan was simple: drain the pipes, board the windows, drive home to silence.

Ryan Blake booked the cabin for a week of landscape photography and peace. He’s a traveler, a runner, and a man who’s never put a shirt in anyone’s drawer. The plan was simple: shoot fall foliage, avoid the situationship he ghosted in Brooklyn, leave before anything counts.

Neither expected the other. Neither expected the storm that trapped them both.

One cabin. One bed. No signal. No way out. The rules were simple: stay on your side, keep your hands to yourself, wait it out. They lasted one night.

Now the storm won’t stop, the bed keeps getting smaller, and the only thing more dangerous than the ice outside is what’s building between them. Every night strips another rule. Every morning pretends it didn’t happen. And every time Caleb says “we’re not doing this again,” Ryan makes sure he does.

By the time the roads clear, they’ll have to decide — was it just the situation? Or was it the only real thing either of them has ever had?

You’ll love this book if you enjoy:

✅ One bed + forced proximity with NOWHERE to hide
✅ Grumpy mountain man x sunshine photographer
✅ “Stay on your side” → “Come here” pipeline
✅ Slow burn that DETONATES (🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ — graphic, explicit, emotional)
✅ Touch-starved hero who breaks one rule at a time
✅ A man who runs and a man who makes him want to stay
✅ HEA guaranteed


⚠️ Content Warning: This novel contains explicit sexual content (graphic MM scenes), strong language, and themes of emotional vulnerability and fear of intimacy. Intended for readers 18+.


📖 Read Chapter One Free

Not sure yet? Read the full first chapter right here.


Chapter One: Wrong Place, Right Storm

The cabin was supposed to be empty.

That was the whole point — the quiet, the nothing, the last job of the season before I sealed everything up and drove home to a house just as silent. Greylock was always my favorite close-down. Forty-five minutes up a logging road that turned to gravel after the first mile, no neighbors for three ridges in any direction, and a view of the valley that made you feel like the last person alive. Two days of draining pipes and boarding windows and then I’d be done until April.

I pulled my truck around the last switchback and saw the rental car.

Silver Subaru Outback. Connecticut plates. Parked crooked in the gravel turnout like whoever drove it had never parallel parked against a mountain before. The cabin windows were lit up warm behind the glass, and I could hear music — something with an acoustic guitar and a voice too smooth to be coming from inside those old walls.

I sat in my truck for a full ten seconds, hands on the wheel, jaw tight.

Jim Hadley had called me two weeks ago. Close her up, Cal. Same as last year. I’ll leave the key under the mat. Jim was seventy-three, lived in Burlington, and hadn’t set foot on his own property since his wife died. He rented the place through some app he barely understood, and every October he paid me to come up and put it to bed for winter.

Nobody was supposed to be here.

I grabbed my toolbox from the bed of the truck and walked to the front door. Didn’t knock — it was technically my job site. Pushed the door open and stepped into someone else’s week.

The cabin was a wreck. Not dirty — occupied. A camera bag sat open on the kitchen table, lenses lined up in a row like surgical instruments. A laptop was propped on the arm of the couch, screen glowing with a grid of photographs. Clothes spilled out of a duffel near the bed — the bed that was unmade, sheets pulled back, pillow dented. A Bluetooth speaker on the windowsill pumped out that acoustic nonsense at a volume that suggested the listener thought they were alone.

They weren’t.

He came out of the bathroom with a towel around his waist and nothing else.

I should describe what I noticed first, in order, the way a normal person would process a stranger: face, height, approximate age, threat level.

That’s not what happened.

What happened was: tattoo sleeve. Left arm, shoulder to wrist, all black ink — trees and mountains and something that looked like a compass rose wrapping around his bicep. Then the towel, slung low on narrow hips. Then the water still tracking down his stomach in a line I followed without meaning to. Then his face — sharp jaw, blue eyes that went wide for exactly one second before settling into something that wasn’t quite surprise and wasn’t quite amusement.

“So,” he said, “you’re either the owner or this is about to be a very different kind of vacation.”

“Neither.” I set my toolbox down harder than necessary. “I’m the caretaker. I’m here to close the cabin for winter.”

“I’m Ryan,” he said, sticking out his hand like we were meeting at a bar and not standing in a cabin where one of us was dripping wet and barely dressed.

I didn’t take his hand. “Caleb. You need to call whoever rented you this place and tell them there’s been a mistake.”

“There’s no mistake.” He dropped his hand without offense. “I booked it through StayWild. Confirmed reservation, paid through Sunday.”

We stared at each other across the small room. He was still in a towel. The stove was putting out heat, and between that and whatever was in the air between us, the cabin felt ten degrees too warm.

“Storm’s coming,” I said. “A bad one.”

“How bad?”

“Eighteen to twenty-four inches. Sustained winds. Temps in the single digits by tomorrow night.”

He turned back to the window. The first flakes were falling — fat, lazy, deceptive. The kind that looked gentle until you realized they weren’t stopping.

“Well,” Ryan said. “Good thing I brought snacks.”

I didn’t smile. But I wanted to.


We cooked dinner together because the kitchen was too small to take turns — grilled cheese and canned tomato soup, nothing special. But the space was tight, and we kept bumping into each other. His elbow against my arm reaching for the butter. My hip brushing his when I turned from the stove. His hand on my back — light, quick, excuse me — as he squeezed past to grab plates.

Every contact registered. I catalogued each one like entries in a ledger I hadn’t agreed to keep.

“It’s a king,” Ryan said, looking at the bed. “I won’t even know you’re there.”

He was wrong about that. We both knew he was wrong about that.

“Fine,” I said. “Stay on your side.”

“Scout’s honor.” He held up three fingers. I was fairly sure he’d never been a Scout.

We got into bed. Two feet apart. In a king bed, that’s nothing. In a dark cabin with a storm outside, it’s everything.

“Goodnight, Caleb,” he said. His voice was different in the dark — softer, stripped of the performance.

“Goodnight.”

I lay on my back, staring at the ceiling I couldn’t see, listening to the wind and the stove and Ryan Blake breathing four feet from my ear. And in the dark, in the space between his side and mine, something that wasn’t cold and wasn’t warm hummed quietly, waiting.

I didn’t sleep for a long time.


Want to keep reading? The full novel is available now.


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Two Weeks Later — A scene TOO HOT for Amazon

Ryan drives back up the mountain. Caleb fixed the generator but not the shower curtain. The reunion is everything the cabin promised — urgent, filthy, and impossibly tender. Plus: the east bedroom with morning light, and the shirt that finally goes in the drawer.


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