Page 42 of Snowed In With Jack Frost

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“Perfect,” Fiona grins. “I’m looking forward to it.”

As we prepare our ship for departure to the outer rim colonies, I catch myself smiling at the thought of Ginzar’s inevitable reaction to our news. Within hours, he will have contacted every corner of the galaxy, sourcing ingredients and decorations and probably composing ceremonial menus in seventeen different languages.

My mate settles against my side in the pilot’s cabin, and I can feel her contentment through our bond like warm starlight. “So,” she says sleepily, “how long before he shows up with detailed wedding plans?”

“Knowing Ginzar? He is probably already drafting them.” I press a kiss to her hair, breathing in the scent that has become synonymous with home. “But first, we deliver medical supplies to Kepler Station. Some traditions are worth maintaining.”

“The important work comes first,” she agrees. “But after...”

“After, we let our friends help us celebrate the best decision I ever made.”

Through the viewport, The Junction falls away as we jump to hyperspace, carrying critical supplies to beings who need them and carrying between us something infinitely more precious: the promise of forever, witnessed by friends who understand that some gifts are worth crossing galaxies to deliver.

Behind us, I know Ginzar is already composing messages to his vast network of contacts, while Mother pretends she isn’t secretly pleased by the prospect of planning what will undoubtedly become legendary among OOPS personnel.

Perfect.

The universe tastes like cinnamon and promises, and for the first time in my life, I understand exactly why Ginzar believes the most important cargo isn’t what you carry—it’s who you carry it home to.

12

Fiona Epilogue

Twelvemonthslater

The scent of cinnamon and vanilla fills Frost Walker's galley, mixing with the ever-present ozone of recycled ship's air to create something uniquely ours. I pull the last batch of snickerdoodles from the compact oven, their golden surfaces cracked perfectly, and set them on the cooling rack beside two dozen others. Steam rises from their sugared tops, carrying the warm spice scent that's become synonymous with our holidaycelebrations aboard the ship.

Thank the stars for Ginzar's increasingly frequent "supply runs" to Earth. Six months ago, I would never have imagined having access to genuine Madagascar vanilla extract and Ceylon cinnamon in the depths of space, but somehow our favorite holiday-obsessed courier keeps showing up with carefully temperature-controlled containers of Earth spices and baking supplies. The man has turned cargo manifests into an art form—officially delivering "cultural exchange materials" and "nutritional supplements," but really smuggling me the good stuff from home.

The galley counter is covered in the evidence of my afternoon's work: flour dusting every surface, cinnamon sugar sparkling like alien stardust under the lights, empty mixing bowls stacked beside cooling racks heavy with golden cookies. I've been at this for hours, driven by some nesting instinct I can't quite name, needing to create something warm and welcoming in our metal home among the stars.

"The atmospheric readings are spiking again," Ja'war says from the doorway, his voice carrying that familiar hint of amusement. "Are you certain you're not conducting some form of chemical warfare?"

I turn to find him leaning against the frame, still in his courier uniform from our latest delivery run—medical supplies to a research station near Proxima Centauri. His pale blue skin gleams under the galley lights, the dark circulatory patterns that map his alien physiology more pronounced after the long day of piloting through hyperspace. Even after twelve months of bonding, the sight of him makes my pulse skip, makes the claiming patterns on my arms pulse in response with a gentle throb that's become as natural as breathing.

His silver hair is mussed from removing his helmet, and there's a satisfied tiredness in his posture that speaks of another successful mission completed. We've been partnered for six months nowofficially—the first human-Xarian courier team in OOPS history—and watching him work never gets old. The way he navigates hyperspace anomalies with casual expertise, how he can calculate jump coordinates in his head while I'm still figuring out the navigation computer, the quiet competence that made me fall for him in the first place.

"It's called baking, alien boy. Humans have been doing it for thousands of years without poisoning themselves." I dust flour off my hands and gesture at the cooling racks with obvious pride. "These are snickerdoodles. Traditional Christmas cookies that happen to be my grandmother's recipe, passed down through three generations of women who knew their way around a kitchen."

"Christmas." He pushes off from the doorframe and moves closer, drawn by curiosity and something warmer. His enhanced senses mean he's been tracking the developing aromas all afternoon, probably cataloging every ingredient by scent alone. "The winter solstice celebration where humans exchange gifts and consume excessive amounts of sugar while decorating evergreen trees with small lights."

His formal way of describing human customs always makes me smile. Twelve months together, and he still approaches our traditions with the methodical precision of someone conducting scientific research. Though I've noticed he's gotten better at understanding the emotional significance behind the rituals—last month, he spent three days researching the cultural importance of birthday celebrations before presenting me with a gift he'd commissioned from a Altairian metalsmith: a pendant that holds a small piece of Earth snow in a stasis field.

"Don't knock it until you've tried it." I break off a piece of cookie, still warm from the oven, and hold it up. The cinnamon-sugar coating sparkles in the light like edible glitter. "Open."

He obeys without question, a level of trust that still makes my chest tight with emotion. After everything we've been through—the hunting parties, the ship repairs, the slow process of learning to love someone whose biology operates on completely different principles—this simple gesture carries weight. His lips part, revealing the slightly pointed canines that mark him as predator, and when I place the cookie fragment on his tongue, his eyes widen in genuine surprise.

I watch the claiming patterns on his skin brighten with pleasure as the sweetness hits his enhanced taste buds. His alien pupils dilate, the pale blue irises contracting to thin rings as his nervous system processes flavors with an intensity I can only imagine. The way his face transforms—from polite curiosity to something approaching reverence—makes all the flour-covered chaos worth it.

"Sweet mother of nebulae," he breathes, his voice dropping to that sub-harmonic register that makes my bones vibrate. "What manner of sorcery is this?"

I break off another piece, but this time I pop it into my own mouth, letting the buttery sweetness melt on my tongue before I answer. The familiar flavors transport me instantly: Christmas mornings in my childhood kitchen, my grandmother's hands guiding mine as we rolled dough, the way the whole house would smell like cinnamon and love. Strange how something so simple can carry so much memory across the vast emptiness of space.

"Butter, sugar, cinnamon, and a little vanilla extract," I explain, watching his alien features process this information with the same intensity he brings to navigation calculations. "All courtesy of our mysteriously generous friend."

"Ginzar has been... unusually accommodating with his Earth cargo manifests lately," Ja'war agrees, though something in his tone suggestsamusement rather than surprise. "Three unscheduled trips to your home system in the past two months alone. Yesterday's delivery included not just baking supplies, but also something called 'single-origin coffee beans from a small farm in Northern California' and what appeared to be artisanal honey varieties."

I set down the cookie and give him my full attention, because this is new information. "Northern California? That's oddly specific. When I asked him about Earth coffee last month, he gave me this whole lecture about different growing regions and flavor profiles. I thought he was just being thorough."