Chapter 32

Sugar, Sprinkles, And Surprises

~ROSEMARIE~

"Explain to me again why we're doing this."

Julian's voice carries that particular blend of aristocratic disdain and genuine bewilderment that I've come to find unbearably endearing.

He's staring at the competition booth in front of us like it personally offended his ancestors—which, knowing Julian's family history, might actually be possible.

"Because it's fun," Elias says, already bouncing on the balls of his feet with the enthusiasm of a golden retriever who just spotted a tennis ball. "And because we're going to crush the competition."

"The competition," Julian repeats flatly, "is decorating cookies."

"Heart cookies," I correct, grinning up at him. "With royal icing and sprinkles. It's the Cookie Decor Wars. Very serious business."

Tank snorts from beside me, his massive arms crossed over his chest. "The man can invest millions in stock portfolios but can't handle a piping bag. This should be entertaining."

"I can handle a piping bag," Julian protests, and the defensive edge in his voice tells me he absolutely cannot handle a piping bag and is already regretting every life choice that led him to this moment.

This is going to be amazing.

The Valentine's Day Fair has transformed the town square of Oakridge Hollow into something out of a Hallmark movie fever dream.

Red and pink decorations drape from every lamppost and storefront.

Heart-shaped balloons bob in the February breeze.

The air smells like kettle corn and hot chocolate and the sugar-sweet promise of romance, underlaid with the crisp bite of winter and the warm scents of the crowd pressing around us—families and couples and groups of friends, all bundled up against the cold and radiating various degrees of holiday enthusiasm.

The Cookie Decor Wars booth sits at the center of the festivities, a large tent with open sides that allows spectators to watch the chaos unfold.

Long tables are set up in rows, each station equipped with trays of pre-baked heart-shaped cookies, bowls of royal icing in every color imaginable, and enough sprinkles to give a dentist nightmares.

A banner above the tent proclaims "COOKIE DECOR WARS - COUPLES & PACKS EDITION" in glittery letters, and beneath it, a growing crowd of participants and onlookers mills about, waiting for the competition to begin.

This is exactly the kind of ridiculous, over-the-top, unnecessarily competitive activity that makes small-town Valentine's Day celebrations absolutely perfect.

A cheerful Beta woman with a clipboard approaches us, her smile so bright it could power the entire fair. "Welcome to Cookie Decor Wars! Are you registering as a pack?"

"We are," I confirm, gesturing at my three Alphas. "One Omega, three Alphas. Is that allowed?"

She glances at Tank—all six-foot-four of intimidating muscle wrapped in a tight thermal that's doing absolutely nothing to hide his physique—and her smile widens. "Oh, it's definitely allowed. Station seven, please. Competition starts in ten minutes."

We make our way to our assigned station, weaving through other competitors who are already strategizing over their cookie supplies.

I catch snippets of conversation—intense debates about icing consistency and sprinkle distribution and whether fondant is cheating—and I have to bite my lip to keep from laughing.

These people take their cookie decorating very seriously. I respect that.

"Alright," Elias says once we've claimed our station, rubbing his hands together with predatory glee. "Let's talk strategy."

"Strategy," Julian repeats, eyeing the array of supplies in front of us with barely concealed horror. "For cookie decorating."

"Yes, strategy." Elias picks up a piping bag filled with red icing and gives it an experimental squeeze. A blob of frosting erupts from the tip and lands on the table with a wet splat. "Okay, maybe I need to practice that."

Tank reaches past him and picks up one of the heart cookies, turning it over in his massive hands like he's examining a piece of evidence at a crime scene. "These are smaller than I expected."

"That's because they're cookies, not pizzas," I say, plucking it from his grasp before he can accidentally crush it. "Gentle touch, big guy."

He gives me a look that suggests he's perfectly capable of being gentle, thank you very much, and the heat in his gaze makes me flush in a way that has nothing to do with the now February chill.

An announcer's voice crackles through the speakers set up around the tent: "Welcome to the Fifth Annual Oakridge Hollow Cookie Decor Wars!

Competitors, you have exactly forty-five minutes to create the most impressive, creative, and delicious-looking Valentine's themed cookie display.

Judging will be based on creativity, technique, presentation, and overall wow factor.

Any supplementary items—drinks, displays, or theatrical elements—are encouraged and will be considered in scoring. Ready... set... DECORATE!"

A horn blares, and chaos erupts.

All around us, teams spring into action—grabbing supplies, barking orders, immediately descending into the kind of organized pandemonium that only competitive baking can inspire. I turn to my pack, ready to delegate tasks based on our individual strengths.

Julian has already picked up a piping bag.

Julian has already attempted to pipe a straight line.

Julian has already made what can only be described as a frosting crime scene.

"What the fuck," he says, staring at the cookie in his hand. What was clearly meant to be a simple border has become a Jackson Pollock interpretation of icing—splatters and blobs and one sad little squiggle that might have been attempting to be decorative but ended up looking like a dying worm.

Elias loses it. Full-body, bent-over, tears-streaming-down-his-face laughter that draws the attention of at least three neighboring teams. "Holy shit. Holy shit. Julian. What did you do?"

"I followed the natural motion of the bag," Julian snaps, his cheeks flushing with embarrassment. "The icing is clearly defective."

"The icing is not defective," Tank says, and even his stoic expression is cracking at the edges. "Your technique is defective."

"I don't have technique. I have investors. I have portfolios. I have never in my life needed to pipe frosting onto a cookie, and I fail to see why that's suddenly a moral failing."

I take the mangled cookie from his hands, examine it with mock seriousness, and then toss it into the discard pile. "Okay. New plan. Julian, you're on typography duty."

"Typography?"

"Writing. Words. Letters." I hand him a fine-tipped piping bag filled with white icing. "You have beautiful handwriting—I've seen your notes. Forget about borders and shapes. Just write pretty things on the cookies once we've got the base layer done."

He takes the bag with the caution of a man handling a live explosive. "You want me to write on cookies."

"I want you to use your one applicable skill in this situation, yes." I pat his arm reassuringly. "You can do this. I believe in you. Now—Elias."

Elias snaps to attention, still grinning from Julian's failure. "Ma'am?"

"You're on base coats and designs. You've got steady hands from all that firefighting equipment—use them. Get a nice even layer of icing on each cookie, then do simple patterns. Hearts, swirls, whatever feels right. Don't overthink it."

"Aye aye, captain." He grabs a spatula and a bowl of pink icing, immediately setting to work with the focused intensity of a man who takes recreational cookie decorating far too seriously.

"And Tank..." I turn to the mountain of muscle currently examining a container of heart-shaped sprinkles like they hold the secrets of the universe. "Tank, what are you good at?"

He looks up at me. "Killing people. Surveillance. Hand-to-hand combat."

"...anything relevant to cookie decorating?"

A long pause. "I can arrange sprinkles with tactical precision."

"Good enough. You're on sprinkle duty. Make them look intentional.

" I survey my team—Julian squinting at his piping bag like it's a puzzle to be solved, Elias already humming as he spreads icing with surprising skill, Tank organizing sprinkles into color-coded piles with military efficiency.

"I'm going to work on the supplementary element.

The announcement said theatrical elements are encouraged, and I know exactly what we need. "

I spot a small setup at the edge of our station—a portable burner, some basic supplies, and what looks like a collection of drink-making equipment that previous competitors have clearly ignored. Perfect.

If there's one thing I can do, it's make a drink that'll knock the judges' socks off.

The next twenty minutes are a blur of organized chaos.

Elias turns out to be genuinely talented at cookie decorating—his base coats are smooth and even, his swirls elegant, his hearts perfectly symmetrical.

He works with the same focused intensity he brings to everything, tongue poking out slightly as he concentrates, flour somehow ending up in his hair despite the fact that we're not using any flour.

Julian struggles with the piping bag for the first few attempts, his letters coming out shaky and uneven.

But then something clicks—I watch his expression shift from frustration to concentration to something almost approaching satisfaction as he starts producing elegant script across the cookies Elias finishes.

"Be Mine." "Sweet Valentine." "Love." "Forever.

" Each word written in his precise, beautiful handwriting, the icing flowing smoothly under his careful control.

"Look at you," I say, pausing my drink preparation to admire his work. "The investor becomes an artist."

"I'm merely applying calligraphy principles to a new medium," he says, but there's a hint of pride in his voice that makes me smile.

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