MasukEZRA'S POV
FOUR MONTHS LATER "Ezra! Ezra, that pass in the third, bro, where did that even come from?" "Just saw the opening," I shrugged. "Just saw the opening?" Cole repeated, throwing his arm around my neck and nearly taking me off balance. "Listen to this guy. Just saw the opening. You made Petrov look like he was skating in the sand, man." The locker room was loud the way it always was after a win, everyone was talking, hooting and hollering as they talked loudly over each other. Five months and I still wasn't used to it. Not in a bad way though, it was just I hadn't had this before. People genuinely happy and including me in that happiness without wanting anything back for it. But they were becoming family fast. I sat on the bench and started unlacing my skates while Cole kept talking. "Coach wants to push for the eastern bracket now. If we keep this form we're looking at a real shot at… hey, are you listening?" "Eastern bracket," I said. "Real shot. Yes." He squinted at me. "You good?" "I'm good." That was mostly true. To an extent. I felt like shit. My heat had been pressing at the edges since the second period, a low persistent hum in my body that made me uncomfortable and restless. It wasn't a full surge though, just enough to get me riled up. My body's way of reminding me that the suppressants I'd taken this morning were already wearing off faster than they should have been. I kept my face neutral and focused on my skate laces. Cole dropped onto the bench next to me, dropping his voice to the tone he used when he was about to say something he thought was profound. "Real talk though, where did you train? Like before. Because you skate like you've been doing this your whole life but you said you only picked it up two years ago and that doesn't add up, man, that genuinely doesn't–" My heat spiked and there was a sharp internal lurch that I converted into a slow exhale through my nose, keeping my hands steady on the laces, keeping my expression exactly where it was. "– because Petrov has been playing since he was six and you read him like a book, which means either you're some kind of natural or there's something you're not telling us and either way I feel like…" "Cole," I cut him off, my voice tight. "Yeah?" "I need five minutes." He looked at me, then nodded, easy as anything. "Yeah, yeah, of course. Good game man. Seriously." He clapped me on the shoulder and stood, drifting back into the noise of the room. I waited until he was far enough away and immediately, I reached into my bag, found the small case at the bottom, and got a suppressant out, taking it dry. I sat very still for a moment with my elbows on my knees and my head down, waiting for it to do something. It did something, it wasn't enough, but it did something, the heat pulled back to a dull pressure instead of a sharp one, sitting low and uncomfortable rather than urgent. I stayed on the floor of the locker room for a few minutes longer than I needed to. Around me the celebration continued, nobody paying me particular attention, which was exactly what I needed. Nobody needed to tell me what I already knew. It was getting worse. I knew it was getting worse. The cycles were shorter now, the suppressants lasting maybe sixty percent of what they used to. I had been managing it, I mean I was still managing it but managing it was starting to take up more mental space than I wanted to give it. With a sigh, I put the case back in my bag before anyone could spot it and stood up. "Good game," I said to nobody in particular, grabbing my things, ready to go back home. Five months ago, that was Caelan’s mansion. And now, it means my apartment. The apartment was a fifteen minute walk from the rink, which I had decided when I moved in was either the best or worst idea I'd ever had depending on the day. Tonight it was fine and gave me enough time to think. The apartment itself was small. One bedroom, a kitchen that was technically a section of the living room, a window that looked out onto the building across the street. I had furnished it slowly and practically with a bed that was actually comfortable because I'd decided that was non-negotiable, a couch that had come with the place and was fine. I dropped my bag by the door, shrugged off my coat, and went to wash my hands. The heat had settled to a background hum, still there but better. I opened the fridge and looked at it for a moment. Eggs, leftover rice from two days ago, half a block of cheese, vegetables I'd bought on Tuesday. With a hushed whisper of going to the store on the weekend, I pulled out the eggs and the rice and got the pan on, moving through the small kitchen. I ate standing at the counter, scrolling through my phone with my free hand. Team messages, a few notifications I didn't care about, a voice note from Cole that I would listen to tomorrow. I put the phone face down and finished eating and washed the pan and the plate and stood in my clean, quiet kitchen. This was it. This was the life that I always wanted. I meant that without irony. I wouldn't trade this for anything in the world. After washing up, I took my laptop to the couch and pulled up the league schedule, which had been updated that afternoon with the next six weeks of fixtures. The coach had mentioned the Eastern bracket push and I wanted to see what the path actually looked like – who we were playing, when and what the difficulty curve was. I scrolled through, quietly looking through. Three weeks out was a home game, manageable. Then an away fixture against the Northern division leaders, which was going to be rough but not impossible. Then a gap week. Then— I stopped scrolling, staring at a name. Ice Princes Of Hell. I frowned at it. The fixture was four games away, away match, and next to the team name was a city I didn't recognise. Interesting. I set my laptop on the cushion and pulled my phone out, searching the name. The results came back immediately and there were a lot of them, they had a following, clearly. I clicked the first article and read the first paragraph. Four players stood out, apparently identical even in the way they played, not exactly an old team. Even weirder. I spotted the attachment of a photo and I looked at the photo. Four players in full gear, helmets on, visors down. They had identical builds and even identical stances. You couldn't see their faces. The image had been taken from the stands and had that slightly blurred quality of a long lens shot. I scrolled for another image but I couldn't find one where the visors were up. They had to be new. The article was dated three months ago, which meant they'd come out of nowhere relatively recently or had somehow made their big mark. Fast rise and no prior league history that I could find, which was unusual. I put my phone down and looked at the fixture on my laptop again. Four games away, which was enough time to prepare properly, study their footage and figure out how they played. They were new but had already moved themselves up the league. I couldn't afford surprises. I wanted to get into the national team and I couldn't afford any mistakes. Especially not from a rookie team.AUTHOR'S POVAldric set his tablet down and looked at both of them with the energy of a man about to deliver a lecture he had given versions of before but never quite in this specific version. "Have you had that word before, Ezra?" Ezra nodded at first but then moved his head sideways. "You're an omega, child. You should know more about your body system. I blame Caelen for this." He clapped his hand and cleared his throat, "In standard omega biology, knotting is the mechanism that fully opens the womb to the possibility of pregnancy. It's the biological completion of mating. It's not just the act itself but the specific psychological event that signals to the body that a full bond has been consummated." He looked at Riven directly. "Without it, the womb remains closed and its recipient is biologically protected." "The fuck." Riven's hands dropped. "Yeah. And in a standard pairing, that would have been sufficient, one Alpha and one omega, the knotting typically oc
AUTHOR'S POVMarco stood at the railing of the balcony with his phone pressed to his ear as he watched the city do its evening thing. He appreciated the fact that he got the quieter side of Caldenmoor. At least the vampires were reasonable in that aspect. "You sound well," the woman on the other end said. Her voice was warm and soft too as if that had always been her state. "That is because I am well, Aunt." He chuckled. "I expected no less from them anyway. They have the Alpha of Alphas visiting them after all so they would treat you well." Marco nodded and sipped from his cup. "It is just that the city is colder than I expected." "It's the land of the living dead after all. Caldenmoor is always colder than people think." There was a slight pause. "And how is the proposal progressing? Has Lopez given you anything worth considering?" Marco turned his phone over in his free hand. "I'm still thinking about it. I haven't seen enough yet to commit. The numbers are sound
EZRA'S POVImmediately I came out of the cab, I looked around the residence. It was one of the properties of the Lopez hence the feeling of familiarity. It was one of the guest residences the family had kept for visiting business partners and they all had the same specific quality of furnishings and layout. One of Marco's men opened the door and showed me to a sitting room without much conversation. I sat in the chair nearest to the fireplace. Caelen was nice enough to let him stay here. The irony was not lost on me. He appeared ten minutes later in a red robe with a kind of ease that showed he was entirely comfortable making a visitor wait while he finished his morning at his own pace. His hair was still slightly damp. "You look more like a vampire than a wolf," he said, by way of greeting. "Good morning to you too." I replied. He looked me over with amusement. "Good morning. I am just amazed...honestly, it's difficult to tell what you are." "I'm part of them," I answer
EZRA'S POV "I wonder what burden you're carrying in mind this time around. I can feel your troublesome spirit from miles away."Riven said as he patted my head and then wrapped his hands around my waist. Honestly, I didn't have the strength to tell him whatever my problems were. I climbed on him the same way I had seen Kaola do to a tree. His hands supported me by holding onto my ass. "I am not carrying any burden." I mumbled. "I am just a bit tired." He chuckled, my body feeling the rhythm of the vibration and so I bit my lips, expecting the teases that were about to come thereafter. "Yeah, right. I will believe you on that." He replied and carried me to the window. "You haven't even started working fully in the company and now you're tired?" He continued and I wiggled my legs before he slowly brought me down from the position I had been. As soon as my face turned to the window, a cold wind blew against my skin, evoking some kind of nostalgic feeling in me. Riven put h
RIVEN'S POV.I leaned against the wall and waited for Dorian to knock on the door first. I was too lazy to do such a thing. Lucien was also on the other side. It was just normal that Dorian would take the lead here. "Come in," Father's thick voice came from the other side and I went through with Dorian, closing the door gently behind us. "Good evening, Father." We greeted. "Good evening. You can have a seat." He instructed and removed his glasses which I believed was performative. Father could clearly see without the glasses, he just seemed to be fascinated with the aesthetic. "How are you boys doing? How is the business coming up?" He started. "Not too much. From my angle, things are going well and there are no troubles regarding our security." "Things are also fine on my side." I chirped in quickly. "Same here." Lucien followed. "Right, I wanted to speak to Lucien majorly about the deal we are planning to make with Alpha Marco as regards expansion
EZRA'S POV "Again?" Caelen looked between us. I retracted my hand from Marco's and tried my best to keep my expression neutral as I had been caught off guard by this situation and I wasn't going to let it show fully. "Oh, Ezra and I met in Voss City," Marco said, smoothly turning to Caelen easily. "We crossed paths a few times and then, suddenly, he disappeared. I tried to reach him on the phone but couldn't get through." He smiled. "So when the opportunity arose to request this meeting, I may have had a secondary motivation."Caelan looked at him. "That's why you asked to see him specifically." "Forgive me for being slightly underhanded." Marco's smile had that quality of warmth and self awareness simultaneously. He knew what exactly he was doing and was comfortable owning it. "Your son is..." he paused, glancing at me briefly. "...difficult to forget. I wanted to make sure he was alright."I couldn't utter a word. Caelen looked at me for exactly one second with the exp
EZRA'S POV "What do you mean sex night?" I asked, completely clueless of the situation going around me other than the fact that I felt restless. I was itching so badly to be touched by something cooler. But I tried to hold in this restless feeling I was having. I would sort myself out once I lea
EZRA'S POV "I thought you wouldn't go anymore. What were you both doing inside?" Cole whispered to me after we had both sat at the back of the car. We were leaving for Arclock's party in three cars. Caelen's was the first while ours was in the middle and the quad was at the back, following us tigh
EZRA'S POV I was standing in front of my mirror, not sure if I wanted to do this or go along with the idea of it in the first place. My hands were tied. Someone knocked on my door, interrupting my chain of thoughts. "Come in." It creaked open, revealing Dorian standing at the entrance. He
EZRA'S POVThe dream came back worse than before and this time around, it wasn't even in the pit. It was somewhere else that appeared to be a wilder space. A crowd had gathered, moving inward from the edges of my vision like water finding a drain and in the center of them was a figure, kneeling wit







