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JACKSON POV
“You better leave before it gets worse.” Mrs. Chen nudged at me, forcing me to drop the stacks of books I held in my hands.
“What are you saying Mrs. Chen?” I looked back at her, hurt and confused, as she practically pushed me toward the door. “I promised to help out around the bookstore while you rest with your family. It’s Christmas eve after all.”
“Don’t be silly,” she scolded, nodding toward the windows. Thick, heavy flakes were already pouring from the sky, coating the nearly empty streets.
“And so what?” I turned back to her. “It snows every year, what's the big deal?”
Before she could answer, static crackled in the background and both our attentions snapped toward the radio on the counter.
“The latest weather update…” the announcer said, his voice sharp with urgency. “Conditions are deteriorating fast and it's looking pretty grim out here. A low-pressure system is moving in…and we're expecting a possible blizzard tonight. Heavy snowfall, strong winds, and reduced visibility. If you're not already inside…you might want to reconsider.”
The radio cut off with a harsh click.
Mrs. Chen shot me a victorious, I-told-you-so look. “See I told you so”
She shoved my coat into my arms, and my stomach dropped. Did she really expect me to just leave an elderly woman here alone in these conditions?
“I'm not going anywhere and leaving you alone with still so much to do Mrs. Chen.” I protest.
“Jackson…”
“At least let me close up the store and take you home, that way you won't—”
“Jackson!” She cupped my cheeks with her warm, wrinkled hands, silencing me instantly.
“This old lady will be just fine,” she said, certainty wrapped in her voice. “I've faced worse storms than this. Plus, you live farther away. So please…don't make me worry.”
Mrs. Chen was the owner of this book café and despite being this old, she was as fickle and as stubborn as they come.
I looked toward the storefront again, only to see that the snow had gotten a thousand times worse.
“Mrs. Chen, seriously… I insist.”
“Young people,” she mutters affectionately, bundling me into the coat herself. “Always thinking they're invincible.”
She left me at the doorway and disappeared within the bookstore. I knew there was no winning this argument. Once Mrs. Chen made up her mind, it was game over.
I sighed, pulling the coat tighter around me, and pushed the door open.
The cold hit me at once—sharp and biting, stealing the breath right out of my lungs. “I hate the cold,” I muttered, rolling my eyes as I tucked my chin deeper into my scarf. The temperature must’ve dropped at least fifteen degrees since this morning.
The streets were completely empty now. Students had fled campus days earlier for winter break, the coffee shop on the corner—the one that usually stayed open until midnight—was dark, and even the stragglers had disappeared.
The few cars that passed moved slowly, their headlights barely cutting through the fog.
I adjusted my scarf and started walking, my boots crunching through several inches of accumulated snow.
Twenty minutes to my apartment…I could do twenty minutes. I let my mind wander as I walked, probably a defense mechanism against the freezing cold.
I dreaded the thought of the next day, mostly because it meant Christmas dinner with my parents and their none-too-subtle questions about Tammy. A girl from a “good family” they kept pushing me toward.
I could already hear my mother’s voice; “Jackson, honey, Mrs. Liu says Tammy’s been asking about you. Such a sweet girl.”
And Tammy was sweet. Smart. Pretty. Studying business at my college. She laughed at my jokes and never made things awkward when I ran out of things to say. My parents loved her and her parents loved me, but I couldn’t bring myself to imagine a future with the two of us in it.
It wasn't like I disliked Tammy, but I'd given up on love a long time ago.
Stephanie in high school. Laura freshman year. Michelle from last spring? Girls who all deserved someone who actually felt something when they held their hand.
Who didn’t feel absolutely no connection or attraction towards them.
And I tried. God, I tried. I went on the dates, said the right things, even kissed them when it seemed like that was what I was supposed to do.
But every single time, it was the same. Nothing. Just this hollow feeling in my chest, like I was watching my life unfold from some far off place.
So I stopped. I stopped dating, stopped trying and stopped pretending that I'd eventually feel whatever I was supposed to feel.
I didn't want to continue with the cycle of needless break ups, so I made the decision to spend the rest of my life alone.
That's why I'd been making excuses to avoid Tammy, I didn't want to hurt her but my parents were getting insistent.
The snow was coming down harder now, thick flakes that stuck to my glasses and melted almost immediately, leaving a wet streak across the lenses. I could barely see five feet in front of me.
My fingers were going numb going numb despite the gloves, and my face felt raw from the wind. Good thing my apartment wasn't too far along now.
Speaking about my apartment—I barely had any supplies. If the storm really was as bad as the radio said, I'd be stuck with nothing to eat until it passed.
The 24-hour convenience store on Maple Street flashed through my mind. It might still be open, but obviously not for long. It was out of my way, but I might as well try than send up starving in a blizzard.
I turned right, toward Maple Street.
The walk felt longer, and the wind had picked up even more. My glasses fogged over completely, and I finally gave up, shoving them into my pocket. Everything turned into a blur behind the curtain of snow, the streetlights practically useless.
By the time I reached the convenience store, my teeth were chattering.
The warmth inside felt like a miracle. Mr. Parker, the owner of the store, looked up from behind the counter, surprised to see anyone.
“Bad night to be out,” he said.
“Tell me about it.” I grabbed a basket and started throwing in everything I thought I needed. From groceries to random flashlights in case the lights went out.
Mr. Parker rang everything up and handed me the plastic bags. “Be careful out there, kid.” He gave me a concerned look, and I offered him a reassuring smile before stepping out of the store.
The snow was worse now.
The wind nearly shoved me back into the door. Snow wasn’t just falling anymore, it was coming down in torrents.
I pulled my hood up, clutched the bags tighter, and started toward home. My apartment was about a yard away now. I could make it.
I was halfway across an intersection when I heard something. My head snapped up at the piercing sound and I caught the moment just in time.
Headlights cutting through the snow and then—Impact.
My eyes widened.
A dark car barreled through the snow and slammed into someone.
The body lifted off the ground, folding like a ragdoll before tumbling through the air and hitting the ground hard.
FROST’S POVMy eyes slowly open as consciousness began to settle back in.Colors blend into each other, shapes refusing to stay in place no matter how hard I tried to focus my vision.Pain was the next thing I registered.It arrived with enough force to drag a groan out of me before I could stop it. It felt like all the air was slowly leaving my lungs, my chest tight and heavy like something was crushing it from the inside out.I tried to catch my breath, fingers digging weakly into what felt like earth beneath me. Earth?I forced my eyes open.Where was I?I tried to sit up and immediately regretted it.Pain exploded across my chest and sides, radiating down my arms and into my fingertips like my entire body had been used as a punching bag.Everything burned.I lay still for a moment, breathing through gritted teeth and waiting for the worst of it to pass. Then I tried again. Slower this time.I managed to prop myself onto my elbows. Then, ignoring the violent protest of every muscle
JACKSON’S POVThe carriage began moving, slow at first, then steady. The world outside started to shift—Glacier Moon fading behind us as the road stretched into white silence.Kieran stayed focused ahead with the coach while Silas leaned back slightly. And I—well, I tried very hard not to notice how close he was. Which was exactly when he shifted even closer and his shoulder was practically rubbing against mine.I froze immediately.Silas didn’t move away. If anything, he seemed perfectly comfortable. I wanted to say something but decided to just drop it since it really wasn’t that big of a deal.I focused my attention back outside to the frost-covered trees blurring past us, the sound of the horses’ heavy footsteps filling the silence. The air inside was warm enough thanks to the thick furs lining the seats, but somehow, I still felt weirdly tense.A few minutes passed before I noticed Silas’s breathing beginning to slow.At first, I didn’t think much of it.Then, before I could proc
JACKSON’S POVMorning came quickly.The moment consciousness swam back into my senses, the very first thing I thought about was Frost.It had been three whole days. Three days since I’d seen him. Held him. Heard his voice. Or touched him. And somehow, the realization hurt more than anything else ever could.A sharp ache settled deep in my chest, so sudden and overwhelming that for a second, breathing felt harder than it should’ve. I blinked rapidly as tears burned at the edges of my eyes, threatening to spill over.I wished—God, I wished—this had all just been some horrible dream.That I’d wake up back home. That Frost would somehow be there beside me, teasing me about sleeping too long or making some sarcastic comment while pretending he wasn’t worried about me.But it wasn’t a dream.This was real.Frost was gone. And every second that passed felt like another second too long without him.I drew in a shaky breath and pressed the heels of my palms against my eyes for a moment, forcin
JACKSON’S POVWe walked quitely through the garden, which was somehow beautiful even in its frozen state and I realized this was the perfect time to bring it up.“Um, Silas…” I called out and he looked back at me curiously. “I was wondering if you could maybe tell me more about your mate. If you don’t mind talking about it,” I said carefully.“I just… I’m trying to have a better understanding of it. In hopes that I can use it to save my mate when the time comes?”Silas was quiet for a moment, and when he spoke, his voice carried heavy grief.“Zephyr was… unimaginably beyond this realm. His beauty was ethereal. Breathtaking. People would stop and stare in awe when he walked by.”A soft smile touched his lips. “His hair was soft and long, this beautiful brown that caught the light. And his eyes—light brown, almost glowing were the most beautiful things I’d ever seen in my long years. He carried himself with such grace, such quiet dignity. It was impossible to not get lost in him.”The
JACKSON’S POVI pulled the furs up around me, surrounded by warmth and softness and the gentle glow of ice walls, and let myself drift off.Then few hours later, I woke in darkness.For a moment, I had no idea where I was. Then it all came back in pieces—the beast, Silas, Glacier’s Moon, the room made of ice and wood. I sat up slowly, blinking in the dim light.Kieran was still asleep in the other bed, his breathing deep and even. Whatever time it was, it was clearly night now.I should go back to sleep.Should stay in this warm bed and rest like Kieran had told me to until they called us for dinner.But I was wide awake now, my mind too active to settle back down. And there was a window right there, showing me a world I’d never seen before.I slipped out of bed as quietly as I could and padded over to the window. When I looked out, my breath caught.The view was stunning. The city spread out below, ice structures glowing softly in the darkness. But above it all was the sky—deeper and
JACKSON’S POVMy body ached by the time we climbed up a hill, but all of that was worth it because I was genuinely blown away.At the edge, we could see everything below. Glacier’s Moon was more breathtaking than I could have ever imagined. I’d been thinking it would be a bunch of normal buildings or houses made of wood and stone or something, but—It was obvious that I was devestatingly wrong because I simply forgot how to breathe at the sight.Below us stretched an entire winter wonderland so beautiful it almost didn’t look real.Massive structures of ice rose from the snowy landscape, intricate and impossibly detailed, their frozen walls gleaming beneath the pale light like something crafted by gods themselves. Towers spiraled toward the sky, carved with delicate patterns that looked too precise to exist naturally, while bridges of crystal-clear ice arched elegantly between buildings.Some looked like grand palaces, others like bustling shops and taverns, every single one sculpted
FROST'S POV“This is the last time I’m going to let Father make a fool out of you,” Nether grunted as he moved so fast through the snow, I could barely keep up.“Nether, Father didn’t do or say anything to me. I’m fine.”And truly he hadn’t.Or at least I thought he didn’t. I didn’t know if this wa
JACKSON POVI didn’t know how I managed to get myself to campus.One moment I was sitting on my apartment floor surrounded by all the destruction, hurt and pain and the next, I was walking through the university gates with my backpack slung over one shoulder and absolutely no recollection of how I
FROST POVI didn’t know how long I just laid there, completely still in bed, just staring up at Maya’s plain white ceiling.The emptiness inside me was so vast and consuming I hardly knew what to do with it. It was…it was like I’d been emptied out and nothing remained but this aching void where my
THIRD PERSON POV Jackson pulled his knees to his chest, still holding that photograph, he let himself break completely. Because Frost was right about one thing—Jackson had only known him for a few weeks.But somehow, in those few weeks, Frost had become everything to him.And now he was gone.







