Home / LGBTQ+ / The Contract Omega( MXM Romance) / Chapter 1-The Choice That Wasn’t a Choice

Share

The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)
The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)
Author: AuroraDreamer

Chapter 1-The Choice That Wasn’t a Choice

Author: AuroraDreamer
last update publish date: 2026-01-18 21:58:51

Caelen POV

The plastic chairs in the ICU waiting room stopped hurting hours ago. Now I barely noticed them at all.

The lights flickered overhead, harsh and uneven, making everything look wrong somehow. The sharp scent of antiseptic clung to my clothes, mixed with the chemical smell of floor cleaner that never seemed to go away. Somewhere down the hall, a monitor beeped steadily. Elsewhere, a voice over the PA called someone I didn’t know, calm and impersonal.

My sneakers squeaked on the linoleum as I paced back and forth. I’d worn the soles thin from standing behind counters and registers, and now they betrayed every restless step. I pressed my hands to my thighs, then started again instinctively.

I hadn’t slept in thirty-six hours.

My body was breaking down, even though my thoughts kept racing. My hands trembled from too much coffee and too little food. The name tag from the convenience store still hung crooked on my wrinkled uniform. I’d meant to change after my shift, go home, do a lot of things that never happened.

Not when my mother collapsed.

No matter how hard I tried, the moment kept forcing its way back into my head. The sound her body made when it hit the kitchen floor. The smell of something burning was because dinner was left unattended. The way her hand clutched her chest, fingers shaking, eyes wide with confusion and pain.

I’d screamed her name until my throat burned. I remembered kneeling beside her, my hands clumsy and useless as I tried to keep her conscious. I remembered the sirens, the blur of red and white lights, and the paramedic wouldn’t look at me when I asked if she’d be okay.

Now she was behind closed doors, surrounded by machines I didn’t understand, while I sat in a chair that suddenly felt too big, like I didn’t belong in it.

This couldn’t be happening. Not now. Not after I’d finally graduated. Not when I’d begun to believe things might, at last, get better.

I shifted my bag on my shoulder; the edge of a folded envelope brushed against me, the acceptance letter. I’d read it so many times that the paper was creased and soft. I started an entry-level position at a marketing firm with a steady, modest salary. It felt like a real beginning. Monday morning.

My mother had smiled when I showed it to her. A smile full of pride and exhaustion.

Your father would be so proud, she’d said.

My father died when I was fifteen. A sudden heart attack left us with medical bills and a quiet apartment that felt too big for just two people. My mother worked herself thin afterward, three jobs, late nights, early mornings, so I could stay in school. So I could have a better life.

And now her heart was failing, too.

When the doctor approached, I recognized the look before she spoke: tired and careful, with the kind of kindness people use when they already know the answer will hurt.

She explained the diagnosis slowly: advanced heart disease, rapid deterioration, immediate surgery needed, a triple bypass, complications from untreated stress and overwork.

She talked about survival rates, recovery timelines, medications, and long-term care.

I heard the words, but they floated past me, heavy and unreal.

Then she mentioned the cost.

The number didn’t make sense at first. My mind rejected it, my mind refused to accept it, like it simply didn’t belong in the same reality. I gripped the chair until my knuckles turned white, my breath shallow and tight.

I asked about insurance, even though I already knew the answer.

Her policy had lapsed three months ago.

Three months, when she lost her main job, when she told me she’d found another, when she lied so I wouldn’t worry during my last semester.

I nodded, as if that explained everything. I thanked the doctor, though gratitude felt impossible. I watched her walk away, leaving me with numbers that would bury us.

The numbers lined themselves up in my head before I could stop them.

My savings are less than three thousand dollars. My mother’s, maybe five thousand, if I were generous. Student loans amount to sixty thousand. My new salary is less than enough to cover rent and interest.

Half a million dollars.Impossible.

By morning, my phone wouldn’t stop vibrating.

Banks, credit cards, foundations, everyone I could think of. Every call ended the same: apologies, regret, sympathy that couldn’t change the answer.

Friends offered what they could, almost nothing. Professors promised to donate to fundraisers that would take months to start. The weeks we didn’t have.

By afternoon, I sat in the hospital cafeteria, staring at my laptop. The coffee in front of me was cold. I searched for things I’d never thought I’d type: emergency funding, Omega assistance, fast money, legal loopholes.

I closed the tab too fast and stared at the screen, my stomach twisting at what I’d almost searched.

I shut the laptop and buried my face in my hands.

That’s when they found me.

A rough hand shook my shoulder hard enough to jolt me awake. Three men stood over me, their presence filling the space with aggressive pheromones that twisted my stomach. An expensive suit, predatory smiles that never reached their eyes.

They said my name like it already belonged to them.

They showed me paperwork I’d never seen. My mother’s shaky signature at the bottom. A loan taken six months ago. Interest rates that made my head spin. The total owed had more than doubled.

They leaned in, their voices low and amused, when I protested.

They talked about my mother. About how vulnerable hospital rooms could be and how Omegas like me could be sold if we failed to meet obligations.

They left laughing. I locked myself in the bathroom, sliding down the cold tile wall, chest heaving, my vision blurred, the edges of the room closing in.

I couldn’t save her.

I was going to lose her the same way I lost my father.

When I finally pulled myself together, my eyes were red and dry, my face hollow. I washed my hands, even though they were already clean, just to do something.

That’s when I heard my name again.

This time, it was calm and professional.

A man in a suit that belonged in a boardroom, not a hospital corridor. He smelled neutral, Beta, safe, unlike the others. He spoke as if I should listen.

He offered information, not a loan, not charity. A contract.Marriage.

The word made me laugh, a sharp, disbelieving sound before I could stop it. He didn’t react. He simply laid out the terms, duration, compensation, and requirements, with practiced ease. He slid documents across the table like any other business meeting.

When I saw his card, my stomach dropped. Fenmore.The Fenmore.

I asked why someone like him would need someone like me.

He said I met certain requirements.

I asked to see him.

The photograph looked too controlled, too precise to be comforting: sharp lines, dark eyes that looked straight through the camera. A man who didn’t smile because he didn’t need to.

Aldric Fenmore.

Beautiful, in an almost frightening way.

The offer expired in twenty-four hours.

I sat alone with the contract and the photograph, trying to understand what two years of my life were worth compared to hers.

I told myself I’d think. I still had a choice.

Then the nurse called my name.

My mother was awake.

She looked smaller in the hospital bed, her skin pale, tangled in wires and tubes. She tried to smile when she saw me, and something inside me broke.

She told me not to ruin my future for her.

I promised I wouldn’t, even though I knew I was lying.

That night, in the hospital parking lot, the loan sharks returned.

And someone else arrived, too.

A black car, professional bodyguards, quiet power. They told me I was being protected while I considered my options.

For the first time, I saw what kind of world Aldric Fenmore lived in.

And how small my own life felt next to it

At exactly eleven forty-seven, I sat alone in my apartment, staring at my phone. Two years. I pressed call.

Tomorrow, I will become someone’s husband.

Someone I’d never met.

Someone who saw me as a transaction.

I lay back, staring at the ceiling, knowing my life as I knew it had already ended.

Whatever comes next will tell me whether I made the right choice.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Epilogue: Part 2

    Aldric POVMira arrived last. As she had always arrived at things for as long as any of us knew her, at full volume and carrying something she had definitely been told not to bring but had brought anyway. “I know,” she said before anyone could speak. “I know. We said no presents. These are not presents. These are educational materials.” “Those are toy dinosaurs,” Adrian said. “Large-scale, anatomically accurate replicas,” Mira corrected. “For educational purposes.” James took his with the gravity of someone receiving something important. Lucas had already opened his. Adrian, who was nine and had been told he was too old for this kind of thing, and clearly disagreed, accepted his with dignity. “Thank you, Mira,” he said. “See?” she said to the room. “Educational.” She had been there through everything, the pregnancy, the kidnapping, the NICU, the years of learning to be parents, the twins, and everything the past decade had accumulated. She had cried at every significant event, u

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Epilogue: Part 1

    Caelen POVThe house had been loud in the way it had been for years now. Not the sharp, alarming noise of a newborn or the exhausted hum of early toddlerhood, but a particular kind of loudness belonging to three boys who had grown into themselves, into their opinions, humor, and unique ways of moving through a room. Adrian, at nine, carried the focused intensity of someone who had already decided what mattered and pursued it with unwavering determination. The twins, at seven, engaged in a continuous bilateral conversation, James methodical and precise, Lucas perpetually in motion. Together, they exuded a gravity all their own.The house held all of this as it always had, still featuring the wooden letters on Adrian’s wall and the star mobile long since stored away but not discarded. The mobile sat in the attic in a box labeled "Adrian, First Year," one of four boxes now, one for each child, with a special box holding the twins’ first months together because there had been no other way

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 128-What We Chose, Again

    Aldric POV Back at the hotel, we took our time.That was the particular luxury of these forty-eight hours. Not the expensive room, or the adult furniture or the uninterrupted sleep. The time. The specific, unhurried quality of being together without something immediately requiring our attention.I kissed him, which was the only adequate response.This time, there was no rush behind it. No urgency driven by interruption or exhaustion or the quiet ticking pressure of responsibilities waiting just outside the door. Just him, warm under my hands, familiar in a way that settled something deep in my chest.Caelen shifted closer, his breath soft against mine, and I felt it, the way we always found each other again, no matter how much time had passed, no matter how much life had layered itself over us.We moved slowly, learning each other all over again in the quiet. Every touch lingered longer than it needed to. Every kiss deepened without demand, just a quiet, steady pull. There was no nee

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 127 — Five Year Wedding Anniversary

    Caelen POVFive years.Half a decade since I had signed a contract to marry a stranger for money to save my dying mother. Three years since we had chosen each other for real, properly, in front of a fireplace with the contract burning to ash and a ring that said Always choose you. Three beautiful, chaotic boys who had transformed us from reluctant partners into something neither of us had known how to want until we had it."You're sure you can handle all three?" I asked Eleanor for the fifth time, watching her arrange snacks with the calm efficiency of someone who had been managing this household's logistics for years."Caelen, I raised you alone. I can manage three boys with Sebastian and Mira as backup." She steered me toward the door with the gentle authority she had always had. "Go. Have an actual anniversary. Be adults who remember they're married to each other, not just parents surviving together.""But what if Lucas has one of his nightmares? Or James refuses to eat vegetables?

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 126- The Letting Go

    Caelen POV Work was impossible.I sat at my desk with marketing proposals open on my screen and checked my phone every few minutes for calls that would only come in an emergency. The rational part of my brain understood this. The other part generated emergencies at regular intervals that required the phone to be checked again."How's Adrian?" Rachel appeared in my doorway around ten."No idea. Apparently, you can't call to check. This is apparently a policy that exists.""He's fine.""What if he's crying? What if someone is unkind to him? What if...""Then he'll learn to handle it." She sat down across from my desk with the directness she had always had. "That's what school is for. Not just reading and maths. Learning to navigate other people without your parents in the room.""He was premature. He almost died. I should be allowed to be more worried than other parents.""You are more worried. And you're still sending him anyway." She held my gaze. "That's good parenting, not bad pare

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 125 — Adrian's First Day of School

    Caelen POVThe school supply shopping trip happened on a Saturday in late August.All five of us in the SUV we had bought specifically because three car seats and the logistics of going anywhere required it. Adrian was in his booster with the supply list his kindergarten teacher had mailed, reading it aloud with the careful pronunciation of a five-year-old still mastering longer words."Twelve crayons." He tracked each word with one finger. "One backpack. Two fold-ers." He looked up. "What's a folder, Papa?""A special holder for papers. We'll find you the coolest ones." I glanced back at him. This child. This specific child who had arrived eight weeks early at four pounds two ounces with a breathing tube and a NICU incubator, is now going to actual school. "What color backpack do you want?""Dinosaurs! And space! And trucks!""Pick one theme. We can't find all three in the same backpack."He considered this with the gravity it deserved. "Dinosaurs. Because dinosaurs are the most cool

  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 33 — Emergency Heat (Part 3: The Lockdown)

    Aldric POVThe first time was desperate and fast and everything Caelen's biology was screaming for.He was too far gone in his heat to appreciate slow or gentle. Too deep in the instinctive need to care about anything except being filled and claimed and knotted properly.So that was exactly what I

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-21
  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 31 — Emergency Heat (Part 1: The Start)

    Caelen POVThe meeting started at two o'clock on Friday, as always. I had checked my calendar that morning for the third time this week, counting days with increasing anxiety. My heat was not due for another two weeks. Fourteen days. I had planned everything around it, suppressants ready, days off

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-21
  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 32 — Emergency Heat (Part 2: The Rescue)

    Aldric POVThe quarterly board meeting had been dragging for forty-five minutes when my phone buzzed in my pocket.I ignored it. Board meetings required full attention, especially when discussing fiscal projections. My CFO was mid-presentation, walking through Q4 revenue forecasts with the kind of

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-21
  • The Contract Omega( MXM Romance)   Chapter 30 — Dion's First Appearance

    Caelen POVThe morning after the Tanaka dinner, I walked into Fenmore Group feeling lighter than I had in weeks. Last night proved something big to Aldric, the clients, and mostly to me. I belonged in his world. I was an equal partner who could finally contribute something real and meaningful.I wa

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-21
More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status