LOGINJACKSON POV
The sickening crunch of the impact cut through the air. My breath hitched as I tried to register what just happened.
Meanwhile, the car didn't stop. It just sped up and the taillights disappeared into the storm like it had never been there.
Had I just witnessed a hit-and-run?
For a second, I just stood there, frozen. My brain still struggling to process. Did that really—?
Yes. Yes, it did.
I snapped out of it and ran.
My boots slipped on the ice, and I nearly went down, but I caught myself just in time. The person was lying face-down in the snow, utterly still.
Oh God. Oh God, Oh God.
“Hey!” I yelled, my heart racing in my chest. “Can you hear me?”
I dropped to my knees beside him—it was a man but there was no movement and he was unresponsive, a dark pool of blood slowly seeping into the snow around him.
That looked bad.
That looked really, really bad.
I had basic first aid training from that summer I volunteered at the community center, but this was far beyond anything I knew how to handle.
My breathing quickened and my hands trembled so badly, I could barely get my phone out of my pocket.
I had to call 911. I fumbled with the screen, my fingers numb, barely able to get a good grip. No signal.
My stomach dropped.
“No,, no.” I panicked as I tried again but still nothing. The storm must've knocked out the cell towers.
I looked around wildly, the streets were completely deserted. Every shop was closed, every window dark and the nearest hospital was miles away. No cars, no people, nothing but snow and wind and this man helplessly bleeding out on the side of the street.
He needed help and right now, I was the only one who could help him. I closed my eyes and inhaled, summoning some inner strength. Carefully, I turned the man over so I could grab from under his shoulders only to be left mesmerized.
Even unconscious and covered in snow, this man was…striking. That was the only word for it. Pale skin, sharp features, black luscious hair matted with blood and melting frost.
He looked like he belonged in some painting somewhere rather, and not lying injured in a street during a blizzard.
And his clothes made no sense. He was wearing a thin linen shirt and a pair of dark pants. No coat, no gloves, nothing suitable for winter.
But even at that, he was still breathtaking…even as a guy.
“Focus, Jackson!” I scolded myself, shoving my phone back into my pocket and yanking off the scarf from my neck. I pressed it firmly against the gash on his temple, applying pressure.
As I wrapped the scarf around his head, I couldn't help but notice just how cold he was—his skin was actually freezing and I was pretty damn sure it wasn't from the snow.
The worst came to mind and I placed two fingers at the side of his neck. “Please be okay, please be okay,” I muttered under my breath and relief washed over me when I felt a low pulse.
I got my arms under his shoulders and God, he was heavy…sadly you couldn't expect more from an unconscious person. I wasn't strong but adrenaline was a crazy thing.
I couldn't let him freeze to death waiting for help that might not come. I had to get him inside, get him warm, get him warm, try to stop the bleeding and figure out the rest from there.
I managed to haul him up, draping him across my shoulder blade, basically something similar to a fireman's carry I'd only seen in movies while still managing to hold the grocery bag.
My legs nearly buckled. My back screamed in protest but I pushed forward anyway. Two blocks had never felt farther.
Each step was agony, my muscles shook and my lungs burned. The man's blood was soaking through my coat, warm against my shoulder before the wind swept it away.
I just hoped Santa Claus was seeing this one.
After several excruciating minutes, I could finally see my building through the foggy snow—the converted house split into four smaller apartments, its pale white paint, blending seamlessly with the snow.
My apartment was on the second floor and I could have cried from happiness.
I marched on, practically dragging him up the stairs. When we reached the front door, I had to put him down to find my keys, leaning him against me while I fumbled in with stiff fingers.
“C'mon, where is it?” I breathed in frustration until I finally felt it in one of my pockets.There. I unlocked the door and half-carried, half-pulled the man inside and eased him down on the couch.
I stood there for a moment, slightly swaying, my entire body trembling. My coat was soaked through with melted snow and blood. My hands were shaking so badly, I could barely flex my fingers but I was grateful for the warmth that etched around us now.
And the fact that he was finally inside.
Right.
I set aside my coat and stumbled to the bathroom, grabbing my first aid kit from under the sink and a stack of clean towels. I had to move quickly.
When I got back to the living room, I dropped to my knees beside the couch. He was still unconscious, but his chest was rising and falling steadily. That was something.
I moved my blood-soaked scarf away from the wound on his temple. I gently parted his hair,
reached for a clean towel—
And froze.
I stared down, blinking as realization crashed over me.
The bleeding had stopped.
The breath in my lungs seized and I stumbled back. “What?” I uttered in complete shock.
Was I starting to imagine things? The gash had been large and deep…I had seen it and now there was nothing?
Swallowing hard, I leaned closer, my heart tremouring in disbelief and confusion. My fingers pushed back a good chunk of his dark hair from his forehead. The skin underneath was flawless, not even a scar. Like he'd never been hurt at all.
“What the hell?”
This wasn't possible. People didn't just get hit by cars, sustain a major injury and then were perfectly fine some minutes after. Wounds didn't just close themselves. I'd seen the blood soak into the snow, my scarf, my coat.
My eyebrows knitted as I tried to make sense of any of this. I wasn't crazy. I reached out again, convinced that if I just looked closer, the wound would be there and I’d been too panicked to see it.
But before my fingers could even touch his skin—
His eyes snapped open.
They were ice blue. Piercing, pale blue eyes that reminded me of glaciers and for just a fraction of a second—so brief I thought I might have imagined it—they flashed gold.
His hand shot out with impossible speed, clang around my wrist with an iron grin.
I couldn't move. I couldn't do anything but stare into those eyes while one thought echoed through my stunned brain;
Just what the hell did I bring into my home?
JACKSON’S POVFor a moment, I just watched him, unsure whether stepping in was the right thing to do or not.He had his pride—I knew that much. And something told me that the wrong kind of help, the kind that felt like pity, would make him shut down faster than anything else.But then I saw his chest hitch on an uneven breath, and I decided I’d rather risk it than watch him fall apart alone.Without thinking further, I reached for his hand and gave it a gentle squeeze.Just like that, Nether’s attention snapped to me, and I gave him the biggest smile I could manage.“You can do it,” I whispered. “I know you can. There’s nothing older brothers can’t do, right?”Nether still looked shaken, but something in his expression softened, and somehow, that felt like enough.“Caelan is counting on us,” I said quietly. “It’s our turn to take care of him now. Just think of your father as…another person. I know you can do it.”Within seconds, that wall of nervousness and uncertainty slowly crumbled
JACKSON’S POV“What?!” I and Nether spat in unison.“Information like this is shared among all the Betas reporting to the Pack officials. Beta Alex just told me now. Silas walked straight into your father’s quarters demanding to speak with him as the Alpha of Glacier Moon.”I stared at Kieran wide eyed and Nether’s jaw was on the floor. There was no way he was serious, right?“Tell me it isn’t true.” Nether’s hands slid down my shoulders as he turned to Kieran and just as quickly… that shock turned into pure, raging anger.“What in the blood moon do you mean he went to speak to Father, on his own?!” Nether yelled and I could hear the growl from the depths of his stomach. “That wasn’t the plan.”A deep sinking feeling began to form in my stomach.Why would Silas meet his father on his own?Was Nether right?Was he really bad news afterall?After I stood up for him?Soon enough my own shock quickly turned into white, burning rage.We had agreed that Nether would be the one to speak to h
Jackson PovBy the time Nether and I had returned, Lyria had already started on dinner. Kieran was in the kitchen and Silas…Silas was gone?“Where did Silas go?” I asked, looking around the cottage and seeing no sign of him.“I don't really know…” Kieran muttered as he popped his head out of the kitchen. It looked like he was helping Lyria. “He said he had some business to take care of.”“Some bus—”“Some business to take care of?” Nether cut me off, one brow arching in obvious suspicion. “Here? In WinterCrest?”“Apparently…”“Why didn’t you stop him?”“He’s an Alpha, Nether,” Kieran said. “How exactly were you expecting me to stop him? If he said he had business here, he probably did.”“Or maybe he just didn’t want to tell us what he was really doing.” Nether dropped the woven basket onto the table with more force than necessary. “I don’t trust him. Alpha or not. How well do either of you even know him? What if he’s bad news?”“He offered to help us find Frost, and that’s all that s
JACKSON’S POV “Let us inside first,” Kieran said. “We’ve had a long journey.”Once we were inside, Kieran told them everything without leaving a thing out. The training, the crossing, the fight. The fact that Frost had held his ground and genuinely stood a good chance but in the end, was still taken by Seraphina.Nether and his Lyria went very still.I knew exactly how they felt.Even Sora, who was sitting beside his mother, stopped swinging his legs.“But,” Kieran continued, “his mate and the Alpha of Glacier Moon have both committed to getting him back.”Nether’s eyes moved to me slowly. “Mate?”I’d been sitting with my hands clasped tightly in my lap, silently apologizing for all the pain they must’ve been put through from the very day they kicked Frost out. I stood and cleared my throat.“I really wish we were meeting like this under better circumstances,” I said. “I’m from the human realm. Frost found me there—or I found him, depending on how you look at it.” I held his gaze. “I
JACKSON’S POVThe carriage hadn't survived the journey as well as we'd hoped. One of the wheels damaged during the wolf attack, had nearly collapsed by the the time we started our Journey, so we had to use the horses instead. And since I wasn't so good with horses, I had to ride with Silas. The scenery looked so beautiful, yet my brain was somewhere else entirely, stuck on that moment with the rogue wolf—the way it had frozen in mid-air like something had hit pause on reality. The way I’d felt that surge move through me, cold and strange and completely unexplainable. I hadn’t said anything about it but maybe it was best for me to mention it to Kieran later? “Jackson.”I blinked.I turned. Silas was watching me with that patient, concerned expression he’d been wearing since the incident.“I’ve been calling your name.”“Sorry.” I shifted abit. “I was—yeah. Sorry.”“You’ve been quiet since the wolves,” he carefully. “Are you alright?”“I’m fine,” I said quickly, it was best to not ma
THIRD PERSON POVTammy looked like she hadn’t slept in just as long as Maya hadn’t. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her face pale beneath her usually perfect complexion, her hair pulled back in a way that suggested she’d stopped caring about it or how she looked a long time ago. She looked at Maya, gave a weak smile, and said “hi,” her voice completely worn out.Maya blinked at her.“How…how are you here? Better question, who gave you my address?”“Jackson’s parents.”Of course they did. Maya exhaled slowly and rubbed her face. Tammy was honestly the last person she wanted to see right now…she knew Jackson had hurt her, but it was still her fault he’d been on the spot, and if that made her a bad person, then she’d gladly be one.“I just needed to ask personally,” Tammy started. “Do you really not know where he is?”“I really don’t know where Jackson is Tammy,” Maya sighed. “I really wish I did.”“But Jackson is your best friend, isn’t he? You of all people should know where he—”“Be careful
JACKSON'S POV“A name, Caelan.” He says it carefully, “It feels right, like it belongs to me. But—” He looked up at me. “I want you to keep calling me Frost. That’s who I became when you found me and that’s who I want to be.”“Frost,” I repeated, and he smiled.“There’s other stuff too. But just fr
JACKSON'S POVI was still smiling like an idiot when Maya slapped my arm.“Don’t just sit there grinning, say something.”The words were stuck somewhere between my chest and my throat, tangled up with fear and hope and this overwhelming sense of happiness.Frost was watching me intently with those
FROST POVSo I did.I told her about being hurt in the snow and Jackson finding me. About discovering my powers, the connection me and Jackson shared—all the looks and accidental touches that felt like fire.I told her about the courtyard scene and the fever, the recent developments with my powers
jackson's povThe ice continued spreading, slowly across the table legs then onto the floor.It wasn't exactly freezing or vicious—it was breath taking, like living art. But downer, it showed no signs of stopping."Um…Frost?” I called out but the ice continued spreading. “You have to—""I don't kno







