The tequila hit Ezra’s throat like fire and regret.
He slammed the empty shot glass onto the sticky bar, letting the burn chase away thoughts of that woman—her packed bags, her parting words, her smug little smile like she'd been waiting to drop the bomb. “You’re not enough for me,” she’d said. The club pulsed around him, all bass and dim lights, strangers grinding out their Friday night demons. Ezra leaned against the bar, shoulders tense, jaw clenched, jawline stubbled and sharp with three days’ worth of not giving a damn. His hand curled around the edge of the counter like he needed something to hold him up. “Another?” the bartender asked. Ezra nodded. “Double.” He wasn’t sure how many drinks he’d had. Enough to numb the ache. Not enough to forget her eyes when she said, “You’ll never be a father, Ezra. You don’t even know who you are.” That one hurt the most. Not because it was true—but because he wanted to be. He turned away from the bar and scanned the crowd. Bodies moved like shadows—too close, too loud, too alive. He didn’t belong here. Not tonight. Not with a hole where his future used to be. “Someone broke your heart.” Ezra blinked. The voice was smooth, confident, laced with just enough flirt to make him pause. The man beside him leaned against the bar with practiced ease. Soft brown curls framed a face too pretty to belong here—delicate cheekbones, lips too full for a man, and eyes like twin galaxies. His shirt was black silk, unbuttoned enough to hint, but not promise. Ezra looked away, swallowing against the sudden dryness in his throat. “Not your business.” The man chuckled—a low, rich sound that Ezra felt more than heard. “You’re right. Just figured, anyone who glares at a tequila bottle like it owes him child support probably needs a better distraction.” Ezra snorted despite himself, the corner of his mouth twitching before he could stop it. “You always this nosy?” “Only when I see someone drowning in their own bravado. What did she do?” He hesitated, fingering the edge of his shot glass. “Left.” “Her loss,” the man said easily, and for the first time, there was no flirt, just a simple certainty. “I’m Sebastian, by the way.” Ezra didn’t answer immediately. His tongue felt heavy in his mouth. Names made things real. Names meant remembering. Still, something about the way Sebastian said it—like he wasn’t expecting anything in return—made Ezra relent. “Ezra.” Sebastian’s smile softened. He tapped the rim of Ezra’s abandoned glass with his finger. “Ezra. Good name. Solid. Like you could build a house with your bare hands.” Ezra gave him a sideways look. “You profiling me now?” Sebastian grinned, unbothered. “No. Just observant. And you’re not denying it.” “You’re annoying,” Ezra muttered, though his lips twitched again. “You’re still talking to me,” Sebastian replied, taking a sip of his drink—something with citrus and sparkle. Of course. “You thinking about leaving with someone tonight, or just punishing your liver?” Ezra laughed, short and humorless. “You offering?” The look in Sebastian’s eyes changed—heat flaring behind the softness. His lashes lowered slightly, and he stepped closer, shoulder brushing Ezra’s. The contact was brief, but it burned like an ember under Ezra’s skin. “That depends," Sebastian said lowly. "You looking for company, or an escape?” Ezra’s breath hitched. He was drunk. Hurt. Angry. But Sebastian's presence felt warm, grounding, dangerous in the way cliffs are—beautiful and easy to fall off. “Escape,” he said hoarsely. “Definitely escape.” Sebastian took the last sip of his drink, set the glass down with a deliberate clink, and leaned in. The scent of him—something clean, a hint of lavender under the citrus—washed over Ezra like a goddamn memory he hadn't lived yet. His Omega scent was so potent it was almost overwhelming, calling to Ezra’s Alpha instincts, coaxing him closer in a way that was almost too familiar. “Then come with me.” They stumbled into Sebastian’s apartment somewhere between midnight and regret. The elevator ride had been tense, silent, save for the slow burn of anticipation winding between them. Ezra didn’t think. Didn’t want to think. He let his hands roam. Let Sebastian’s mouth trace the outline of his jaw like he already knew the territory. Sebastian’s apartment was soft light and clean lines. Too elegant. Too personal. Ezra barely registered the artwork on the walls or the plush gray couch before Sebastian pulled him in, fingers hooking in his belt loops like he wasn't willing to let Ezra drift too far. Their mouths crashed together like waves—hard, frantic, unrelenting. Ezra gripped Sebastian’s hips, surprised by how small he felt, how lithe his waist was. Sebastian tugged Ezra’s shirt up, fingers grazing bare skin, and Ezra growled low in his throat. “This what you want?” Sebastian murmured, voice rough now, less tease and more truth. Ezra kissed him in response. Hard. Desperate. Clothes hit the floor in chaotic rhythm—shirts, belts, shoes. Sebastian’s shoe caught on Ezra’s as he kicked it off, making him stumble a little, and Sebastian laughed breathlessly against his mouth. "Careful, tough guy," he teased. "Wouldn’t want you spraining something important." Ezra smirked and caught Sebastian’s chin between two fingers. "Worried about me, Pretty Boy?" The nickname slipped out—unthinking, raw—and for a beat, Sebastian froze. Then he smiled slow and wicked, a little color blooming high in his cheeks. "Only if you promise to call me that again." Ezra didn’t answer. He kissed him instead. He pushed Sebastian back onto the bed, kissing down his neck with the desperation of a man trying to forget himself. Sebastian arched into him, hands pulling, anchoring. He tasted like lavender and confidence. Ezra hated how much he liked it. They moved together, friction and heat and something too honest to be just sex. Ezra lost himself in it. In the sweat. The moans. The sound of his name on someone else's lips for the first time in months. At one point, Sebastian grabbed Ezra’s hand, twining their fingers together over his head. Ezra barely registered it—too drunk, too lost—but later, he'd remember that grip, the trust in it, how Sebastian, his Omega, had given himself fully to Ezra, unguarded. When it was over, they lay tangled in silence. Ezra stared at the ceiling, heart thudding, lungs burning. Sebastian's head rested on his chest, breaths steady. “Still thinking about her?” he asked softly. Ezra hesitated. “No.” A pause. “Good,” Sebastian said. His fingers lightly tapped a pattern against Ezra’s ribs—three beats, a tiny, absentminded rhythm. Ezra didn’t know it yet, but Sebastian would do that whenever he was nervous or thinking. "You don’t deserve to be haunted." Ezra closed his eyes. He woke up to sunlight and a headache. The first thing he noticed was the ceiling—white and unfamiliar. The second was the warm weight pressed against his side. A male. Still naked. Still asleep. Ezra sat up, heart pounding. The events of the night before crashed back like a hangover: the bar, the drinks, the kiss, the sex. “Shit.” Sebastian stirred. “Morning to you too,” he mumbled, hair a wild halo around his face. His voice was rough, a little amused, like he'd seen this before. Ezra slid out of bed, grabbing his jeans. “I shouldn’t have—” Sebastian’s eyes opened slowly, lashes fluttering. “Regretting it already?” Ezra avoided his gaze, fingers fumbling the zipper on his jeans. “I was drunk.” “I noticed,” Sebastian said, sitting up and dragging a sheet over himself. “Still, didn’t hear you complain when I had you—” “Don’t.” Sebastian raised a brow, but his expression softened. “Touchy.” Ezra pulled his shirt on inside-out and cursed under his breath. “I’m not—this isn’t—” He stopped. He didn’t know what this was. But he knew he couldn’t stay. Sebastian didn’t push. “You want coffee or a cab?” Ezra hesitated. “Cab.” Sebastian nodded. “Bathroom’s down the hall. Cab app’s on the tablet by the door." Ezra turned to leave but paused. “You… You’re not gonna tell anyone, are you?” Sebastian looked at him like he’d grown a second head. “Tell who? I’m not twelve.” Ezra nodded once and left the room. The door clicked shut behind him like punctuation. Outside, the city felt too bright. Too loud. Ezra lit a cigarette with shaking hands, staring down at the cracked sidewalk. What the hell had he done? One night. That’s all it was. Just a way to forget. But Sebastian’s voice lingered like a melody. You don’t deserve to be haunted. Ezra didn’t know how to feel about that. Didn’t know how to feel about any of it. He wasn’t attracted to men, for crying out loud. So he walked away, jaw set, heart heavy. And told himself it didn’t matter. That he'd never see Sebastian again. That forgetting was enough.Ezra didn’t move for a long time after Sebastian left. The air was still thick with his scent—lavender and salt, sharper now, cut through with a spike of distressed Omega. It clung to Ezra’s skin, heavy in his lungs. It made his body ache in ways he didn’t want to name.He stared at the crumpled condom wrapper on the floor like it was some cursed thing—evidence of want without promise, possession without belonging.When he finally turned to go, the mirror caught him.He looked older. Worn down. Like someone who’d taken everything he wanted and hated himself for it.Downstairs, the front door creaked open.“Oh, you’re home?” Clara’s voice called up, syrupy sweet. “Anyone miss me?”Ezra pinched the bridge of his nose and exhaled slowly, the last remnants of Sebastian’s scent still ghosting his clothes. It made his pulse quicken again—unbidden.Clara appeared at the foot of the stairs. Her long curls were freshly
The house was warm with weekend noise—the low hum of cartoons, the patter of socked feet over hardwood floors, the clink of mugs in the kitchen. Ezra stood at the sink, elbow-deep in suds, eyes flicking out the window toward the field, still damp from last night’s rain.Behind him, the twins raced through the living room chasing Mr. Biscuits, the dog’s tail a happy blur as he dodged and weaved between their legs. Mia sat curled up on the couch, one leg tucked under her, her eyes half on the television and half on the chaos. Every now and then, Mr. Biscuits would leap into her lap for safety. She looked better than she had Friday—less pale, her cheeks flushed with the faint return of energy. She even laughed when Camden shrieked about being “attacked” by the dog.But beneath it all, something was off.The air felt… crowded. Saturated.Ezra noticed it in the back of his throat first. A sweetness, thick and floral, curli
The house was quiet.Not silent—quiet in the way of soft blankets and held breaths. The kettle hissed low on the stove, steam curling lazily into the chill of early morning. From the cracked window came faint birdsong, the kind that made the world feel gentler. Toast browned on the counter. The air smelled of ginger jam and butter—and faintly, soothingly, of lavender and nesting musk.Mia hadn’t moved from the couch.She’d come down alone just after dawn, wrapped in a throw blanket, curled sideways like she was trying to vanish into the cushions. Her cheeks were flushed, her brow pinched in a sleep-sour wince. Her scent was sharp with pain and hormonal shift—citrus tangled with discomfort. She hadn’t asked for water. Or food. Or Ezra. She just... laid there.Sebastian moved barefoot through the kitchen, quiet and purposeful. His scent lingered low and constant in the room: warm lavender and the soft spice of omega phe
The knock on the bedroom door was soft at first. Barely a sound—just a faint tap, like a leaf brushing glass. Then again. A little firmer. A little faster.Ezra stirred, thick-limbed and sunk deep in the warmth still clinging to his skin from Sebastian's touch hours earlier. The scent of lavender still lingered faintly on the sheets—intimate, sweet, unmistakable. Beside him, Sebastian shifted with a low hum, brows creasing as his lashes fluttered open.Another knock. Ezra blinked awake.The door creaked open.Sebastian sat up sharply, tension drawing his spine taut. “Mia?”She stood framed in the dim hallway light, arms wrapped around her middle, swallowed in one of Ezra’s old band tees that clung damply to her legs. A sharp citrus note reached them—her scent, usually faint and clean, was suddenly bright and sharp. Wild. Unfiltered. The kind of primal shift that tugged at something deeper in both men, something instinc
He bent Sebastian forward over the shelf, one hand braced against his hip, the other roaming freely beneath his clothes. Sebastian’s scent flooded the space, sweet and trembling, ripe with need.Ezra’s mouth followed the line of his spine. He groaned at the sight—the bared back, the trembling legs, the soft Omega smell that clung to Sebastian’s skin like a secret.Belts fumbled.Zippers. Jeans shoved down to thighs.Ezra exhaled, shaky, hand dragging down Sebastian’s back to grip the base of his spine. “Fuck, Omega…”Sebastian moaned at the name. His fingers curled around the edge of the shelf, the wood grounding him while his mind spun.Ezra entered him in one smooth, devastating push—groaning deep, jaw clenched, hands tight on Sebastian’s hips like he couldn’t bear to let go.Sebastian gasped, the sound strangled against the shelf. His knees trembled, back arched instinctively to take more. His scent poured o
Ezra's hand slid to the small of his back, thumb pressing slow circles into soft cotton.Sebastian didn’t look at him.“I’m mad,” Sebastian said. “Not just at Clara. At you.”“I know.”“I feel like I’m holding all of this together while you get to come in and play hero.”Ezra rested his forehead against Sebastian’s temple. “I’m not playing anything. I’m fumbling through it just like you.”“You’re not the one getting hit.”Ezra closed his eyes. “You’re right.”His hand came up, fingers grazing Sebastian’s cheek, just under the red mark that had already started to fade.“I should’ve stopped her at the door,” Ezra said. “I should have. I didn’t—and that’s on me.”Silence stretched between them like a held breath.Sebastian still hadn’t looked at him.But Ezra didn’t let go.“You called me baby,” Sebastian said finally, voice brittle.Ezra’s voice dropped to a wh