The city apartment felt too big for one man, even though it wasn’t all that large.
Just two bedrooms and a galley kitchen that Ezra never bothered to cook in anymore. It was clean, in a half-lived-in kind of way: mail stacked on the counter, an unmade bed, a pile of takeout containers waiting by the door. He hadn't unpacked the boxes Clara had left behind. Not really. Her coffee mugs still sat in the top cupboard, out of sight but never really out of mind. A single bobby pin in the bathroom drawer, an old flannel of hers buried at the bottom of the laundry basket, the scent of her perfume still lingering faintly in the fibers of the couch. Ezra Anderson used to like coming home. Now the silence pressed in like humidity. He sat at the small dining table, boots kicked off, still in the dark jeans and canvas work shirt he’d worn to the construction site. His hands were raw from sanding beams, but he hadn’t noticed until he saw the cracked skin around his knuckles. Work was the only thing that made sense. Custom renovation—kitchens, attics, restoring old beams in vintage homes—Ezra loved the satisfaction of it. The clean lines, the smell of sawdust, the rhythmic hum of power tools. Out there, he knew what he was doing. He didn’t have to talk. He didn’t have to feel. At least not about the things that kept him up at night. His phone buzzed beside him. He didn’t reach for it. It had been ringing more than usual since the breakup. Mostly their mutual friends—Clara’s friends, really—checking in on him like they were poking a wounded dog. He appreciated the concern, but every call was a reminder that he was alone now. [Missed Call – Liana (4x)] Ezra sighed and finally picked it up. The glow of the screen cast a pale light on his face. He looked older than thirty-two lately. Maybe it was the circles under his eyes, or the way his shoulders always seemed tense now, like he was bracing for a hit. A minute later, it buzzed again. [Liana]: You okay? I know Clara’s being a mess. You want me to come over? We could do a wine-and-vent? Or bourbon-and-break-stuff? [Liana]: Also, I heard she told people you cheated. WTF? Want me to correct the record? I still have that one pic of her kissing that barista. Ezra stared at the messages for a long moment before replying: [Ezra]: I’m good. Just tired. Appreciate you. He wasn’t good. But he didn’t want to talk about it. He tossed the phone onto the table and went to open a beer. The hiss of the bottle cap releasing echoed too loudly in the quiet. He took a sip, not because he craved it, but because it was there. A distraction. A numbing agent. From the other side of the wall came muffled voices—his neighbors, Mrs. June and Mr. Alverez, both retired, both avid listeners of every creak and whisper that happened in the apartment complex. “Poor boy,” June said, not even trying to lower her voice. “Been moping around for weeks.” “I heard Clara left him for someone younger,” Alverez added with an audible sniff. Ezra leaned his forehead against the fridge and closed his eyes. He wasn’t sure if he wanted to laugh or punch the drywall. They meant well, probably. Everyone meant well. That didn’t make it easier. Sometimes, when he caught himself thinking too long about it, it wasn’t even the betrayal that hurt the most. It was the waste of time. The years spent trying. Fixing things that were already cracked beneath the surface. He’d spent the last six months trying to patch over fractures with flowers, with effort, with quiet apologies for things that weren't really his fault. He hadn’t even liked who he was becoming around her at the end. He made it through two sips of beer and a half-hearted rewatch of some old renovation show before the doorbell rang. He didn’t move at first. But it rang again. And again. When he opened the door, he was surprised to find the teenager from down the hall—Sam—holding a Tupperware container and trying not to look awkward. “Uh, my mom made lasagna,” he said. “She says it’s the ‘pity kind’ but like, the good pity. You know?” Ezra blinked, then smiled faintly. “Thanks, kid.” Sam shuffled. “Also, she says if you don’t eat it, she’ll assume you’re dead and call 911.” Ezra chuckled despite himself. “Tell her I said thanks. And I’m still breathing.” Barely. He closed the door behind him and stood in the entryway for a moment, staring at the lasagna in his hands like it might tell him what to do next. He set it on the counter without opening it. He didn’t eat that night. He didn’t really sleep, either. He lay on his back, fully dressed, staring at the ceiling fan spinning overhead and wondering if this was it—if this was how it was going to feel from now on. Empty. Echoing. Like being halfway out the door of a life that had already moved on without him. It was around midnight when the call came. Ezra was brushing his teeth in the bathroom, wearing sweatpants and an old concert T-shirt, eyes glassy from exhaustion. The electric toothbrush buzzed like a distant drill against his molars. He didn’t even hear the first buzz of the phone on the sink. The second one caught his attention. He glanced down at the screen. Unknown number. He wiped his hands on a towel and picked up anyway. “Hello?” A voice on the other end—female, gentle, clinical. “Mr. Anderson?” His stomach tightened. “Yes?” “This is Officer Raines from the Grayson County Sheriff’s Department. I’m calling about your sister, Megan Anderson.” Ezra’s hand went cold. “There’s been an accident. I’m so sorry. There was a car crash earlier tonight. She didn’t make it.” The silence that followed felt like someone had pressed pause on the entire world. Ezra couldn’t speak. Couldn’t breathe. The officer kept talking, gently, explaining the logistics. Something about the kids. About next of kin. About needing him to come down. Words washed over him like static. “Highway 83... hit head-on... rain was bad... kids are safe... CPS is on standby... you’re listed in the will...” Ezra stood in the bathroom, shaking, toothbrush still in hand, the mint foam slowly dripping into the sink. He stared at his reflection in the mirror. His face looked pale, mouth parted, pupils blown wide. His mind was trying to process it—Megan, gone? The kids—Mia, the twins? They didn’t even know yet. Or maybe they did. Maybe they were already at some holding center, surrounded by strangers, wondering why their uncle hadn’t come. And just like that, his old life was over. The city lights still glowed outside. The fridge still hummed. The lasagna still sat untouched on the counter. But Ezra had already left this place in his mind. He was somewhere else now. Somewhere far from the familiar buzz of apartment walls and awkward neighborly gossip. Somewhere colder. More real. Somewhere with grief waiting just beyond the next breath.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
Mia lowered her eyes. “She slapped Seb,” she whispered. “So I slapped her.”Ezra’s head turned toward Clara slowly, deliberately, like every vertebra in his neck had to be convinced.“Did you hit him?” he asked, voice quiet, almost disbelieving. Too gentle to be safe.Clara’s jaw tightened. “She poured cold tea on me,” she snapped. “That little brat—”“She made you tea,” Sebastian cut in, sharply. “You called her a stupid brat. An orphan. You said Ezra would sell her cos she's an omega.”Ezra’s entire body locked up. His stance didn’t shift, but something in the room did—like all the air had gone still and heavy.The twins whimpered softly, like they could feel it too.“She’s a pup,” Sebastian added, voice calmer now, but no less sharp. “My pup.”Clara scoffed, arms crossing. “You’re not her father.”“I am in every way that matters.”Ezra moved then. Just a step forward—but it felt like the gro
Sebastian rose. Slow. Purposeful. The faintest hint of lavender wafted around him, soft and intoxicating, wrapping Ezra’s senses before Sebastian even touched the dryer. He turned it off, the quiet hum cutting out, leaving only the scent and the silence.His shorts slipped to the floor in one graceful motion, the fabric whispering against the wood. He climbed onto the machine with the same calm certainty he used when soothing a child mid-meltdown—only now, his fingers trembled slightly as they braced the edge. Legs parted openly, unashamed, the scent of lavender growing stronger, warmer, sinking deep into Ezra’s skin, unspooling something raw and unfamiliar.Ezra stood between them, sweatpants already pooled at his ankles, but it was the sharp, spicy undercurrent of his own sandalwood and spice scent mixing with Sebastian’s gentle lavender that set the air electric.Sebastian reached for him—not the waist,
It was two a.m. The house was silent. Not peaceful—heavy. Sebastian padded into the laundry room barefoot, hoodie sleeves pushed up, curls still damp from his last restless toss in bed. The room was dim, lit only by the faint blue flicker from the washer’s display. He didn’t hesitate. This was habit now. Folding shirts, pairing socks, smoothing out creases. He moved like the rhythm kept him sane. He was scenting heavy tonight, glands no longer tucked neatly beneath control, and the air around him pulsed with it. The dryer’s hum filled the room. Lavender clung to the air—his own scent, soaked into every breath, every thread. It was everywhere. Stronger than usual. Clinging to Ezra’s clothes, coating the walls, seeping into the house like a territorial fog. Sebastian knew why. Earlier that day, his doctor had frowned over the results. The bloodwork. The scent tests. The scent sa