MasukSebastian left the office at 8:47 p.m., later than planned. Every line of code he had written that day now felt like a potential trapdoor. The photo the one that should have been impossible played on repeat in his mind, every detail burned into his memory: the angle, the darkness, the way the faint light from his bedside lamp had caught the sheen of sweat on his skin. He scanned the lobby once, twice. No one lingered. Just the night guard, stoic, barely raising an eyebrow as Sebastian passed. The elevator doors slid open. Empty. Polished steel walls reflected them both: Sebastian sharp in black, Kane a dark monolith.
Kane waited, arms crossed, jacket open just enough to show the faint outline of a shoulder holster. He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to. His presence alone was a warning. Sebastian’s heels clicked against the marble floor as he approached, and Kane pushed the call button with a calm, deliberate motion, eyes never leaving him.
The elevator doors slid shut. Sebastian stepped in first, careful, deliberate. Kane followed, close enough that his presence brushed Sebastian’s back, a reminder that he didn’t need to speak to be felt. Kane hit the penthouse button. The car hummed upward in silence, only the numbers flicking upward breaking the tension.
“You don’t have to ride up with me every night,” Sebastian said, voice controlled, but the edge in it betrayed how much he resented the closeness.
“I do,” Kane said, low and matter-of-fact. “Threat came from inside your home. Until we know how, I’m the only thing between you and whatever’s already been there.”
Sebastian turned. Mistake. The space was too small, and Kane filled it, shoulders broad, chest just enough behind him to limit his escape. His gaze mapped Sebastian in slow sweeps, cataloging micro-expressions, muscle tension, posture, balance everything a predator would notice.
“You think I’m helpless?” Sebastian asked, voice taut.
“I think you’re valuable.” Kane stepped half a pace closer, just enough for Sebastian to feel the heat radiating from him. “And someone already proved they can get to you without tripping an alarm.”
A flicker of power made the elevator shudder. Instinctively, Sebastian’s hand shot out, bracing against the wall. Kane reacted faster. One arm pressed flat against the panel beside Sebastian’s head, steadying the car. The other landed lightly on his waist, low, firm, controlling the sway so Sebastian didn’t stumble. Not groping. Controlling. Dominant.
Heat bloomed under Kane’s touch. Sebastian froze, pulse hammering under his skin. He had told himself he hated being watched. But now… now someone’s fingers on him, deliberate, informed, confident… and he couldn’t breathe normally.
“Easy,” Kane murmured, leaning just enough that Sebastian caught the warmth of his breath grazing the shell of his ear. “It’s nothing.”
Sebastian’s jaw clenched, a tension that had nothing to do with anger. “Take your hand off me.”
Kane didn’t immediately comply. His gaze dipped to Sebastian’s mouth for a heartbeat, then lifted. “You tense when people get close. Like you’re waiting for the hit.” Fingers flexed, adjusting pressure ever so slightly. “But you didn’t pull away.”
Sebastian felt heat crawl along his spine. Anger surged, familiar, sharp but beneath it, a strange uncoiling curiosity. Something he couldn’t name yet. Want? Intrigue? The thought made him grind his teeth. He hated it. He hated feeling… acknowledged in a way he couldn’t control.
The elevator dinged. Penthouse floor. Doors opened. Kane withdrew, slow, deliberate, leaving Sebastian feeling the absence of contact like a physical ache.
“Stay in the hall,” Sebastian snapped, stepping out first, shoulders rigid.
Kane followed anyway. “Protocol says”
“I don’t care about protocol.” Sebastian’s thumbprint pressed into the scanner, the door sliding open. “You guard the building. Not my bedroom.”
Kane stopped just inside, eyes sweeping the open-plan space: kitchen island, floor-to-ceiling windows, gym through glass doors. “Someone was here. In this room. Watching you lift weights at three in the morning.” He gestured toward the gym. “I’m not leaving you blind.”
Sebastian spun. “I have cameras. Alarms. Systems I built myself.”
“And they failed.” Kane closed the door behind him, a soft click that sounded louder than it should have. Locked. “You sleep four hours. Run on black coffee and adrenaline. Keep lights low because bright ones give headaches you won’t admit to.” He stepped forward, eyes glinting. “I read the medical file too.”
Sebastian’s fists clenched. “Get out.”
Kane didn’t move. He reached up, slow, deliberate, and straightened Sebastian’s tie. Fingers brushed his collarbone this time, lingering just long enough for Sebastian to notice, heart stuttering.
“You fix it yourself every time someone touches it,” Kane murmured, voice low, careful. “But you let me do it twice today.”
Sebastian slapped his hand away. Hard. The echo reverberated through the penthouse, a small, hollow sound.
Kane didn’t flinch. He just looked down at his knuckles, red from the impact, then back up at Sebastian. “Angry works. But it won’t stop whoever sent that photo.”
Sebastian breathed through his nose. “I don’t need you touching me to do your job.”
“You might,” Kane said, mouth curving in something small, dangerous, and unreadable. “When the threat gets closer.” He finally stepped back. “I’ll be outside the door. Twenty feet away. But close enough to hear if you need me.”
Sebastian laughed, short and bitter. “I won’t.”
Kane studied him a long moment, calculating. “You flinched in the elevator. Not from the jolt. From the touch.” He glanced over his shoulder as he moved toward the door. “Next time, don’t fight it so hard. Might save your life.”
The door clicked shut.
Sebastian remained standing, alone, in the quiet penthouse. Curtains still open. City lights glittered like a million silent eyes, watching. He crossed to the gym, staring at the pull-up bar, imagining someone hidden in the shadows, observing every movement, memorizing every detail.
Then he looked at the front door. Kane was out there. Waiting.
Fingers went to his tie, still slightly askew from Kane’s touch.
He didn’t fix it.
He shouldn’t. Because somewhere deep, dangerous, a part of him wanted to feel that presence again. Wanted the heat. Wanted the control. And he hated himself for it.
Chapter 29: YieldingThe third night in the safe house marked a turning point.Sebastian’s body had finally begun purging the last remnants of Adrian’s cruel cocktail. The artificial, merciless edge to his heat had softened into something deeper, more natural still overwhelming, but no longer pure torture. The desperate, empty ache remained, but now it came with clarity.Kane felt the shift immediately.They were tangled on the bed, skin to skin, when Sebastian looked up at him with clearer eyes. The glassy desperation had receded, replaced by something sharper. Hungrier. Deliberate.“Kane,” Sebastian breathed, voice hoarse but steady. His fingers traced the hard line of Kane’s jaw, then down to his chest. “The drugs… they’re almost gone. I can feel like myself again.”Kane hovered over him, braced on one forearm, his other hand resting possessively on Sebastian’s hip. His rut had been a constant, burning presence for days, held back only by rigid control. “Are you sure?” he asked, vo
Chapter 28: Safe HavenThe secure medical facility was actually a private safe house on the outskirts of the city one Marcus had prepared the moment Sebastian went missing. Fully stocked, heavily fortified, and completely off the grid. No staff. No cameras in the inner rooms. Just the essentials an alpha would demand when protecting his Omega in heat.Kane carried Sebastian inside without letting anyone else touch him. The Omega was still trembling violently in his arms, face buried in Kane’s neck, soft desperate sounds escaping with every breath. His body burned like a furnace against Kane’s chest.Marcus stood at the entrance, keeping a respectful distance. “Everything’s ready. Private wing. IV fluids, hydration packs, suppressants if needed though I doubt you’ll use them. Medical supplies on the left table. I’ll stay in the outer perimeter. No one gets close.”Kane gave a curt nod, alpha instincts too raw to speak. He trusted Marcus with his life, but right now, the thought of anyo
Chapter 26: Shattered ControlKane’s world narrowed to the trembling Omega in his arms.The sedative gas burned in his lungs, making his movements sluggish and his vision blur at the edges, but he refused to let go. Sebastian clung to him desperately, face buried in the crook of his neck, inhaling Kane’s scent like it was the only thing keeping him sane. The Omega’s body was a furnace flushed, sweat-slicked, shaking violently with the merciless force of the drug-enhanced heat.“I’ve got you,” Kane growled, voice rough and strained. One arm wrapped around Sebastian’s back, the other cradled the back of his head, pressing him closer. “Breathe. Just breathe through it.”Sebastian whimpered, a broken, needy sound that tore straight through Kane’s chest. “Kane… it hurts… so empty… please…” His hips shifted helplessly against Kane’s thigh, seeking any friction, any relief after two full days of engineered torment. Slick soaked through what remained of his ruined trousers, the sweet, despera
Chapter 26: DescentKane descended the metal stairs with deliberate, measured steps, each one echoing faintly in the vast warehouse space. His hands were raised just enough to appear compliant, but his body remained coiled like a spring ready to snap. The rut burned hot beneath his skin, fueled by two days of helpless waiting and the devastating sight of Sebastian bound and suffering below.Adrian Crowe stood beside the mattress, remote in one hand, a satisfied smile on his face. “Good. You’re smarter than I expected, Maddox. Most alphas would have charged in blindly.”Kane’s gaze never left the man. But in his peripheral vision, he tracked every detail of Sebastian’s condition. The Omega’s chest rose and fell in rapid, shallow breaths. Sweat glistened across his flushed skin. His wrists were raw from the zip ties, and his body continued to tremble with the unrelenting waves of the drug-induced heat. The sweet, desperate scent rolling off him was almost overwhelming pain, need, and ex
Chapter 25: Into the DarkKane’s POVThe service tunnel was damp and narrow, the air thick with mold and rust. Kane moved through it like a shadow, every step measured, every breath controlled. His tactical boots made almost no sound on the cracked concrete. The only light came from the faint glow of his wrist device mapping the layout.Two days.Forty-eight hours of Sebastian being held by that delusional bastard.The thought fueled the rut burning low in Kane’s veins, but he kept it locked down with iron discipline. Losing control now would cost Sebastian everything.He reached the access hatch and paused, listening. Distant sounds filtered through — the low hum of a generator, faint footsteps. And underneath it all, the faintest thread of Sebastian’s scent. Sweet. Distressed. Heat-drenched and desperate.Kane’s jaw clenched so hard it ached. He carefully lifted the hatch and slipped into the main warehouse floor, melting into the shadows behind a stack of old crates.The space was
Chapter 24: The Hunt BeginsKane’s POV – Two Days LaterTwo days.Forty-eight agonizing hours since Sebastian had disappeared.Kane stood in the center of the penthouse, which he had transformed into a war room. Multiple screens glowed across the kitchen island and dining table, displaying maps, thermal layouts, financial trails, and every scrap of data Marcus’s team had pulled on Adrian Crowe. Empty coffee mugs and half-eaten protein bars littered the surfaces. Kane hadn’t slept. He barely ate. The only thing keeping him functional was the cold, burning rage that had settled deep in his bones.Sebastian was still out there. Suffering.Kane could almost feel it, His distressed scent haunting his senses even from miles away. Sweet. Desperate. In heat. The thought of Sebastian bound, aching, empty because of that bastard’s drugs made Kane’s fury surge violently beneath his skin. His hands clenched into fists, knuckles cracking.Marcus Reed entered the room, looking exhausted but determi







