Page 10
Story: Alphas on the Rocks
Sascha tosses the empty cup into the bag stuffed with discarded wrappers.
It nearly tips on its side, leaving him muttering curses as he crushes the trash to fit better.
Avery smothers a laugh behind his hand, but it cuts off abruptly when Sascha settles back in his place—except his forearm is now pressed against the wrist Avery’s propped himself up with.
Avery’s awareness of the movie implodes, but he pretends he’s still watching.
The sensation of fine blond hairs tickling his nerve endings leaves his tongue leaden in his mouth, and even though the warm summer air isn’t as humid as the past few nights, Avery breaks into a sweat .
Not long after, Sascha asks, “Are you okay?” His voice is hesitant, as if he’s worried about the answer.
Too embarrassed to admit how aggressively his body is responding to even the slightest hint of skin-on-skin, Avery tries to blow it off.
“I’m fine,” he says, but Sascha’s brows knit.
Of course he’d be able to spot the weak lie.
Avery makes a more honest attempt: “I don’t want to make things awkward. ”
Sascha elbows him gently. “You aren’t. I’m not… expecting anything. You know that, right?”
Avery can’t imagine Sascha pressuring him past his boundaries. Despite—and because of—the fireworks in his stomach, he really, really doesn’t want Sascha to think more than brushing arms is off the table. “I’m not worried about that.”
“Are you worried about something else?”
“Define ‘worry.’” Avery can’t help but laugh when Sascha rolls his eyes.
“If there’s nothing you’re worried about,” Sascha begins, turning onto his side and leaning further into Avery’s space, “then you won’t mind me pulling you closer, will you?”
At first, Avery freezes, a shock of cold racing down his spine, stark against the summer heat.
As his brain reboots, Avery realizes the brief paralysis is anticipation, not fear.
So he allows Sascha to draw him in, an asteroid being coaxed into the atmosphere of a foreign celestial body.
When Sascha encourages Avery’s cheek to rest against the warmth of his shoulder, it feels like breath rushing back into his lifeless body.
This isn’t an anonymous fuck he can hide behind.
Sascha chose to seek him out even knowing what he is, despite his unglamorous circumstances.
It’s the first time someone has genuinely wanted to be around Avery since he fled Indiana, and for a terrible moment, he’s seized by emotion.
Tears threaten what’s left of Avery’s composure, but a deep inhale calms the urge, allowing him to relax—for the second time—against Sascha’s firm chest.
“Why are you so fuckin’ comfortable?” Avery mutters. Sascha merely laughs and gets his arm around Avery’s back, thumb teasing the sliver of skin between his t-shirt and jeans.
Sascha doesn’t stop touching him during the movie.
Tinny gunfire spits from the speaker, but Avery can barely focus on the fight choreography with the way Sascha’s middle finger is circling the protrusion of his hipbone.
He swallows hard, keeping his eyes on the screen through the climactic final fight despite the long fingers that have shifted to pluck at his curls.
The credits creep up the screen, white text washed out by the lights that come up around the lot.
Sascha finally moves, sliding out from under Avery to stretch his arms and roll his back.
Avery cracks his knuckles idly, joining the pops of Sascha’s spine.
There are dimples at the small of his back, exposed when Sascha extends from his toes to his fingers, interlocked and reaching skyward.
Avery watches him, smiling faintly when Sascha relaxes with a loud exhale.
“I get stiff being still for so long,” he informs Avery. “Movies should have intermissions. Hey, I gotta run to the bathroom. It’s right by the concession stand—do you want anything?”
Avery barks a surprised laugh. “All that DQ wasn’t enough for you?”
A grin spreads Sascha’s mouth, which started looking really goddamn appealing about two thirds into the movie. “I’ve shifted twice today. Puts a lot of pressure on my body, so I need to keep up with my metabolism.”
“I see. Well, get your snacks. I’ll be fine.”
Sascha spreads his hands in acknowledgement, then turns toward the footpath leading toward the concession stand and bathroom. He only pauses once, looking over his shoulder to send Avery a wink that steals all the moisture in his mouth .
Fuck. He should have asked Sascha to bring back a water bottle. The best he’s got is melted ice at the bottom of one remaining drink cup. The faint taste of leftover pop is nasty, but at least he can swallow without his tongue sticking to his upper palate.
Avery grabs the bag stuffed with trash and carries it to a nearby bin, but sudden understanding stops him dead with his hands hovering over the refuse.
This is a date .
How in fuck’s name did Avery get halfway through a date without realizing what it was?
Like it’s normal for handsome guys to hunt down failed hookups, buy them food, and take them to the movies.
And cuddle . They cuddled, and Avery didn’t even freak out.
Not enough to extricate himself from Sascha’s easy embrace, much less ask to be taken home before even finishing the first film.
God, that would be mortifying. It’s too far to walk, and Avery doesn’t know the way besides.
A shudder chases the thought from his shaggy curls downward, like ice dropped under his collar.
Avery scratches at the prickling sensation on his scalp, which only makes it worse.
There’s a hive of hornets under his skin, building a nest inside his ribcage.
Trying to shake it loose only angers them further.
When Sascha returns, he’s carrying a shopping bag full of junk food. His goofy wave when he sees Avery peering through the windshield sets the hornets off again, and by the time Sascha parks his ass on the blanket next to Avery, the buzzing has become unbearable.
“Looks like you got enough snacks to last you the ride home,” Avery notes, rubbing at his chest.
“We’ll see,” Sascha says.
The fabric of Avery’s cheap t-shirt scrapes over his top surgery scars, leftover from the incisions that took a bunch of unwanted stuff off his chest. He’s lucky he had it done long before turning into a werecreature because dealing with farm work in a binder would be such miserable hell, he’d opt for the ‘death in a drainage ditch’ any day.
The scars don’t hurt anymore, but the rough texture doesn’t feel great.
Unlike Sascha’s shirt. A tank-top of soft, breathable cotton. Probably brand name, not bought from a bargain pack at Wal-Mart. Avery wouldn’t mind removing his uncomfortable shirt from the equation entirely. As nice as it is, Sascha’s tank is welcome to take a hike as well.
Sascha reaches into the snack bag, withdrawing a candy bar at random and tearing it open. He reclines propped up on one elbow, eating quietly until he pauses to check his phone.
Avery feels every fraction of Sascha’s movements like gusts from a hurricane. He’s never been so attuned to someone, and it feels weird , but also…
Bracing himself, Avery reclines against the musty blanket, mirroring Sascha so that when he lowers his phone, Avery’s face is only a short distance away. Far enough to not be invasive, but close enough that if they were to lean forward at the same time, something important might happen.
Without breaking eye contact, Sascha slowly returns his phone to his pocket. Or, he tries. He misses the opening, and Avery has to bite his lip against the smile when Sascha gives up and throws the device behind him.
Avery licks over the impression his teeth left in his bottom lip. “So,” he says.
Sascha smiles, playful but not condescending. “So?”
“I… We, um.” The words get stuck. “I thought…”
With that gentle curve still shaping his mouth, Sascha thumbs a wayward curl off Avery’s forehead. “Remember back in the hotel room, when I first asked if I could kiss you?”
Suddenly, Avery’s heart is pounding so hard he can feel it in his teeth. “Yeah, I do.”
“I’m gonna do it again, okay?”
“You don’t need to ask,” Avery breathes, and crosses the distance to press his lips lightly against Sascha’s.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10 (Reading here)
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45