Thursday, April 2, 2026

🐰⏳Throwback Thursday's Time Machine⏳🐰: Love Nest by Kiki Burrelli




Summary:
Welcome to Morningwood #8
A classic tale of hawk meets mouse…and falls in love.

Last summer, Gus and Blaze were just life-long best friends. They made the leap from friends to lovers and now, several months later, Gus loves Blaze more than ever. Recently, he’s wondered if Blaze still feels the same way. Gus thought their honeymoon phase would last forever.

Blaze is on cloud nine. He has his best friend and his mate. He always knew Gus was his, and now that his best friend has realized that too, Blaze’s life is perfect. He can’t wait to spend eternity with Gus, but recently, his little mouse has been acting strange. Like something has changed in him.

A sudden mission with the Elite Force comes at the worst time, separating the two when they need to talk the most. Blaze waited too long to have Gus in his arms. He’ll deal with the human hunters encroaching on shifter land and he’ll do it quickly enough to make it home in time for the big Easter barbecue—and to convince Gus that they’re mates now and forever.

Love Nest is a Welcome to Morningwood novella that continues the love story of Gus and Blaze. and contains all the steam and laughs you expect from Morningwood and can be read and fully enjoyed as a standalone.


Original Review March 2024:
When I saw Kiki Burrelli had another Easter-y themed entry in Welcome to Morningwood I had to read it now which means I jumped ahead a couple of entries(again something I rarely do, as in 99.999% never do).  I don't think I missed out on anything that I can't go back and catch up on in the coming months but time will tellπŸ˜‰.

On to Love Nest.  Unlike the two I have read, Sack of Gold and Hop On, there really is no darkness here other than relationship drama that yes, mostly comes from non-communicating but as I often feel, without drama you can't enjoy the happy.  Personally, sometimes not talking things out happens, it's just human nature to keep things tight to one's chest once in a while for a variety of reasons.  For Gus and Blaze, those reasons I think is fear of disappointment in each other's decision to leap from friends to lovers, very understandable.

In their shifter form, hawk and mouse, they couldn't be more opposites attract but as we know, in non-shifter they have been BFFs most of their life so friends to lovers it is and there is no denying their chemistry and passion for each other.  Sometimes no amount of chemistry and passion can allay those fears of crossing the friends/lovers line. I get it, it is frustrating and more than once I wanted to shake the pair yelling "TALK TO EACH OTHER!" but it's that frustrating that sucked me in so thoroughly that before I knew it, the last page was swiped.

Whether you're like me and went looking for Easter themed stories are are just on the hunt for a  fun read, Love Nest is definitely worth the read.  There is a brief mentions of Arthur and Aries from Hop On the biggest being the Easter BBQ is at their home so it was nice that I read that entry first and knew what that pair went through to get their HEA but it's not essential reading to fall in love with Gus and Blaze's journey. Another great holiday gem.

RATING:




Chapter One
Gus 
The warm spray washed away the aches of the night. With my eyes still halfway shut from sleep, I reached for my moisturizing conditioner. My fingers knocked into the navy-blue bottle. I'd been expecting it to be heavier than it was, and my miscalculation sent the container flying.

The corner of the lid landed hard against my big toe, and I growled—even though such a thing wouldn't have been possible for me in my mouse form. My lip curled.

"Blaze!" I howled. He wasn't home. He'd earned early PT for mouthing off while in the field on our last mission. "I'm going to pluck you and stuff you into a pillow!"

He couldn't hear me. Not even Blaze's hawk hearing was sharp enough to pick up my voice from across town, but threatening him made me feel better all the same. If this had been the first time he'd used my product, I wouldn't be so angry, but Blaze had been making a habit out of using my deep moisturizing hair mask as body wash for weeks now.

Yes, standing in the shower for ten minutes while the cream soaked was excessive, but I liked to spend that time thinking or jerking off. Now I'd have to go my whole day minus my think time and without my stress reliever—all of this while I had frizzy hair.

At the moment, nothing was actually keeping me from masturbating. I glanced down at mini-Gus. He was especially mini at the moment thanks to my annoyance, and I sighed. I'd use this time to enjoy a second cup of coffee before I left instead and save myself from the glop they served down at the station.

Rinsing quickly, I reached outside the shower curtain for my towel, grasping an empty towel rack instead. I wrenched the shower curtain open. My towel lay crumpled—soaking wet—on the floor. I must have missed that when I'd climbed into the shower half asleep. And yep, there were no more towels in the bathroom cupboard. Why would there be? It was Blaze's turn to do the laundry.

It had been months since I'd agreed to move into Blaze's place. Before that, my entire life had been spent pining for the man. When a bizarre accident blew away the barriers between us, I discovered he felt the same way I did. At least, I'd thought he had. Blaze was my boyfriend and my roommate, but before he was either of those things, he'd been my best friend.

I stepped from the tub to the door, shaking like a dog to knock off the excess water. I'd have to air dry today. The only one who would be upset by the water droplets I left on the floor behind me was me. And I decided to forgive myself as I padded, buck naked, into our kitchen—stopping in my tracks.

The kitchen had been spotless last night. Now, coffee grounds were strewn across the counter. A small pile sat in a puddle of milk, turning it a light tan, while the milk dried to a flaky finish. Sighing, I grabbed a paper towel and wiped up the mess. I opened the cupboard under the sink to throw the paper towel away and discovered the trash can as overflowing as it had been last night when I'd asked Blaze to take it out.

When we'd first moved in, things had been perfect. Blaze's roommate, Kyle, had been our biggest hurdle, and it hadn't taken long before Kyle begged to move out, claiming our lovey-dovey behavior made him ill. I'd smugly helped him pack and carry furniture, all the while assuming that the stage we'd been in was how Blaze and I would be forever.

I didn't understand what had happened. I still loved him as much as ever. When I looked at Blaze, my stomach fluttered the same as it used to. But I was beginning to fear the same couldn't be said for him. I didn't know what had happened. Had I changed? Maybe I wasn't taking the changes in our living situation as stoically as I thought.

I tied up the garbage and set it outside the front door, planning to take it to the can on my way to the car.

The state of the kitchen had looked like Blaze had tried to make coffee. Tried and failed, if the amount of grounds on the counter was anything to go by. During mornings when we got ready together, making the coffee was one of my tasks.

I sipped my first cup, the nutty, earthy flavor waking me up in a way the shower had been unable to. I looked around the kitchen with new eyes. My relationship with Blaze wasn't in such a bad shape; it was mostly my lack of caffeine that had made me so morose. I took another sip, doing a spin on the tile to judge my dryness.

I caught my reflection in the living room mirror and posed. Nothing had changed in my looks. Lifting my arms over my head, I flexed like one of those oiled-up body builders. My lips turned down in a frown. Maybe my body had looked a little more… put together.

As a mouse shifter, my metabolism ran at a level most people would have to make a deal with the devil to achieve, but maybe my age was finally catching up to me. Blaze had been teasing me about how I liked caramel sauce in my coffee instead of sugar or honey. Maybe the teasing had been a cover, and he was actually annoyed. And unhappy.

My fingers were slow and unsteady when I dressed in my Elite Force uniform. I winced, my pants feeling just a little tighter than they normally did. Ignoring my finished reflection, I went back into the kitchen and brewed myself and Blaze a fresh cup, placing them both in our travel mugs. I'd bought them our first weekend together, smiling as I imagined all the things we'd do together while sipping on our matching mugs. This way, when I saw him at the office, he'd be relieved to see me.

The drive through town was short, and it was only minutes before I'd parked and walked down the sidewalk to the joint building that the Morningwood Elite Force shared with City Hall, the police department and the morgue.

"Good morning, Gus," Arthur greeted me outside on the path in. He had an Elite Force hat shoved over his blond curls and a leather satchel draped over his shoulder. Captain Aries must have had to go into the office early because he was absent from Arthur's side. Captain always went in when one of us had to go in early, saying he'd never asked one of us to do something he wasn't willing to do.

"Morning, Arthur. How's the little one?" I asked.

Arthur and the captain had enrolled Harlow, their daughter, in T-ball in the hopes that the sport would help her keep climbing out of her shell.

"You should've seen it," Arthur said, already smiling. "Aries bought her the entire outfit, pads, and helmet, and she refused to take any of it off all weekend. I didn't mind. Less bumps and bruises that way—ouch." Arthur rubbed his elbow after accidentally knocking it against the building wall.

"Maybe you should've gotten your own pair," I teased, reaching for the door to pull it open.

"Did you guys make a decision about Easter yet?" Arthur asked, going through the entrance I held open.

I frowned. "Easter?" The holiday was coming up this week.

"For our Easter barbecue this weekend? We wanted to throw a shindig where everyone could enjoy themselves. I know the town comes together, but that's mostly for the kids, and some of you guys have yet to settle down and pop any out. "

My face burned red. Arthur spoke like I should know what he was talking about. Clearly, he'd asked Blaze, but Blaze hadn't mentioned a word of the party to me. Why? Because we hadn't settled down and popped any out? "Blaze and I just… we hadn't made plans to…"

Arthur's eyes widened. "No! I didn't mean you two specifically. Oh, man, that was rude of me, wasn't it?"

I hurried to respond. "No, no, it's fine. I know what you meant. So, anyway, you're throwing an Easter barbecue?"

"I gave Blaze the invitation. He said he wasn't sure but would ask you. It's Easter, starting anytime you want to come over in the afternoon. We'll be at the parade and the gold hunt before then. You don't have to bring anything. Aries and I want to treat all of you. I don't think we ever officially thanked you as a team for just how amazing you all were when Aries was going through his stuff and then with accepting me so warmly as part of the team."

I shrugged, uncomfortable with his praise. He made the way we'd all been decent humans sound like we'd done something special. "We're more than coworkers in the Elite Force, Arthur. We're a team only as strong as our weakest link." I gasped, thinking about what I'd just implied. It felt like we just kept taking turns sticking our feet into our respective mouths. "Not that you were our weakest link."

"Uh-oh," Bruno said when the two of us reached the Elite Force lobby. He was a giant of a man with a wiry beard that covered a blocky, square-shaped face and short dark hair. "Someone let Arthur and Gus alone together. They're socially awkwarding themselves into a hole." Bruno's voice boomed as loudly as his laugh.

Arthur blushed a deep red while I flashed Bruno the finger. That only made him laugh harder.

"Mouse has a bite?" he bellowed.

Blaze walked through the lobby, coming from the other side. He'd changed out of his PT clothes into his uniform, and, as I always did, I took a second to simply stare. He wore the Elite Force uniform like a second skin. His dark hair, streaked with blond from hours out in the sun, was half dry but styled neatly. He looked up at me with amber eyes—like twin pools of whiskey. I wanted to drink him dry.

"Hey there," I purred, forgetting all the little annoyances that had clung to my back, weighing me down on the drive over. This was probably why nothing ever changed between us. The moment I stood within talking distance of the man, I became a formless puddle of goo. "I brought you a coffee."

Though I'd done the same thing hundreds of times, even before we'd started dating, I still felt shy, like someone would recognize I liked him. And after hiding my love for Blaze for so many years, it was ingrained in me. His fingers brushed over mine as he grabbed the travel mug, and our eyes met. I waited for that glorious moment where the rest of the world would fall away, and the only two things that existed were him and me. Blaze and Gus.

"Thanks," Blaze murmured. "But the coffee I had this morning gave me the shits. I think it's those fancy beans you insist on. Bruno, you want it?"

"Sure, I don't mind the shits. Gives my day some excitement," he guffawed. He took the mug from Blaze, popped off the lid, and proceeded to dump in an ungodly number of sugar packets from the small coffee station.

I glared at him. Those were my home beans! I had to have them specially delivered to Morningwood. Blaze knew that. Blaze knew everything about me. The fact that we'd been best friends since birth meant he'd seen me in every state of life: sad, happy, goofy. We'd had farting competitions and had been entirely too open with our bathroom behavior.

Dread made my gut uneasy. Was that what was wrong here? Most couples took years before they knew so much about each other. We'd jumped into a relationship already aware of the other's most embarrassing moments because we'd been there when it had happened. Before dating me, Blaze had no shortage of men and women willing to give up the chance for forever in exchange for a mind-blowing night of sex with him.

Our relationship had popped up so quickly. At the time, we'd also been fighting for our lives. Had enough time passed since then that Blaze now realized he'd made a mistake?

"How come you didn't tell me about Captain's barbecue?" I asked, the question sounding random and angry since no one else was in my head, and they hadn't been there for the mental lead-up.

Blaze's smile faltered. "The what?"

Captain poked his head out of his office. "Good morning, love," he said to Arthur before his tone hardened to address the rest of us. "Morning briefing, thirty minutes. Don't be late."

I pushed my wet hair back, tucking the strands behind my ear. Embarrassment made my cheeks burn. I should have waited until it was just us two before asking about the barbecue. Maybe Blaze hadn't wanted to go and not asking me was just a cover. One that I'd ruined.

"Uh-oh, trouble in paradise?" Bruno looked between Blaze and me like we were two players in a tennis match. "That didn't last long. Is your old apartment even cold yet?"

Any second, Blaze would correct our coworker. He'd tell him there was nothing wrong with us. No trouble.

Except Blaze didn't say anything. He looked at me. "Do we need to step outside?" he asked warily.

I lifted my chin, both as a reflexive and defensive movement. "Maybe we do."

"Oooo," Bruno howled.

I spun away, facing the door so I wouldn't have to see Bruno's annoying smiling face. Blaze charged ahead of me, and we walked outside together in silence until we lingered at the side of the building.

"Did something happen at home?" Blaze leaned with his shoulder balanced against the building, managing to keep his distance but also shield me from anyone walking behind him.

I sighed loudly, wondering how we'd gotten to this point so quickly. "No, nothing happened. I'm just wondering why you didn't bring up the party at Arthur and Captain's? Do you not want to go? Is that why?"

"Of course I want to go, Gus."

I folded my arms. "Oh so you just don't want me to go."

"That isn't what I said at all, Gus. What the heck? What is wrong?"

I didn't know how to verbalize what I felt. Individually, my complaints felt so petty. If I said them out loud, I'd only see how silly I was being. But they didn't feel petty. My anger simmered just hot enough to keep steaming while never exploding into a full boil.

"Are you upset because I wasn't there this morning?" Blaze asked, his tone turning deep and husky. "You know that wasn't my choice. Captain's orders. I prefer waking up with you."

My stomach clenched as my dick twitched. I was no closer to controlling my sexual reactions around Blaze now as I was able to fly without his help. Blaze and I had sex. Lots. It wasn't like our last time together was all that long ago, but my body reacted like we hadn't had sex in months. I slumped back against the wall, my arms dropping to my sides. "Maybe that's it. I don't like mornings where we don't get up together."

Blaze leaned in, his face free of the stress wrinkles that had been there moments ago. "Then I know just what to do." He kissed my nose. "Shift."

He shifted first, wiggling from his uniform and flapping his wings as he blinked expectantly.

I was wary, unsure of what his plan was. I shifted, scurrying down the sleeve of my uniform to peer up at him. Blaze swooped down, reenacting the scary part of a nature documentary as he secured me in his talons. We'd been flying together for years; it had been our favorite thing to do once we were both mature enough to shift. I still squeaked because even though it was exhilarating and amazing to soar up into the clouds, it was really freaking scary.

Though the ground quickly grew too far away, I knew I was safe in Blaze's talons. He might try to eat me later, but we'd both enjoy that.

Blaze didn't take us back to his house on the bluffs, though; he flew us to the very edge of the Morningwood city limits, over the park and forest to the boundary line where we'd constructed our top secret tree fort when the two of us had been ten. He flapped his wings, soaring in through the open window, where he released me on to a pile of cedar shavings.

I shifted and caught my footing quickly. "I didn't know you meant here, Blaze. We're gonna be late for the briefing."

Blaze surged forward, pushing my back to the wall, his front pressing against mine. "A quickie." His lips massaged my neck as he spoke, kissed, and nibbled his way down my chest.

I looked over his head at the familiar four walls. How many hours had we spent in this space as children, dreaming about the type of people we'd become? Blaze had always wanted to work in law enforcement, but in his younger years, he switched between wanting to work for Morningwood Police or the Elite Force. I'd only ever wanted to be where he was, by his side.

I sighed, wishing I could talk to the younger version of me who used to beat himself up.

"What is it?" Blaze asked, pulling back to allow a few inches between our faces. "Where are you in that head?"

Our gazes collided, my blue eyes clashing with his amber ones. "I'm here, Blaze. I think… sometimes… this is all a little surreal, you know? How many times did I imagine being with you like this, while I sat in this treehouse with you?"

Blaze smiled and kissed my nose. "I'm sorry I wasn't more confident back then. We could've been together the way we were meant to be for so long by now." He dropped to his knees and looked up from under my erection. We hadn't brought our clothes with us, so we were both still completely naked. "I'm still not finished catching up for all that lost time, though." He parted his lips and slid the head of my cock into his mouth, suckling just the tip while tiny explosions of pleasure went off over my body.

I didn't know how Blaze made other parts of me feel so good when he was really only touching my penis, but he knew every trick and tip to make sure I felt each lick and suckle everywhere. He could lick my elbow and make my big toe shiver with pleasure. The sounds of his mouth on my cock alone were nearly enough to bring me to orgasm. Lewd, sloppy, and wet, my moans were like the melody to his erotic percussion.

He took me deeper, his nose brushing my groin as his chin collided with my balls. He gripped my ass cheeks, pulling them apart with a growl that was as possessive as it was seductive. I wasn't in heat, so we didn't need to worry about protection.

Blaze withdrew, letting my dick fall out of his mouth with a sharp pop. "Grab the branch," he ordered, and my hands flew to the tree branch overhead that grew out of the window.

The tree creaked, but it was sturdy enough for me to hang my weight from, and I did as Blaze rose to his feet, lifting me with my legs around his waist.

"I promise I'll be on my best behavior from here on," he said as he lined our bodies up.

"Your what?" I frowned.

"So I don't get morning PT. You're always grumpy when I have morning PT."

That wasn't one hundred percent accurate, but Blaze thrust inside me in the next moment, stealing my breath and my concentration. Sometimes, he took hours lovingly preparing my body to accept him. Other times, our lovemaking was more primal. I loved both types, but right now, I needed his dominating strength. It was possible that he was more correct than I gave him credit for. Maybe it really was just his absence that got to me. I closed my eyes and pushed the thoughts out of my mind. While my alpha's cock was inside me—giving me a good dicking, as Blaze would call it—I would think only of him and now. Of us.

He kept one hand gripped tightly over my nape, holding me in place while his other hand held my hip. My feet were off the ground as I remained suspended, helpless. I couldn't control the rate of his thrusts or the speed. All I could do was hang on and let my alpha fuck me in the exact manner that he desired.

In our old childhood treehouse.

"You're milking my cock," Blaze growled. "So tight and hot. You're my hole, my perfect hole."

Fuck, that shouldn't have thrilled me as much as it did, but when Blaze started talking like that, I was lost. It felt like something else inside of me took over, like Gus had taken a break, and some other version, one that was needy and wanton, took over. I squeezed my legs around his hips, earning me another low growl. "I can't hold it back," I gasped. I'd done all I could to keep my orgasm from crashing. I'd hung suspended on the precipice for so long that it didn't take long to plunge me into pleasure.

"Don't," Blaze commanded. "Don't ever hold back, my omega."

There was no one around to hear us, and that was a very good thing. The noises I made had likely cleared our section of the forest, spooking small and large animals alike. My vision blurred, going dark before snapping back into perfect clarity. Seeing Blaze fuck me was almost as much fun as being fucked, and I didn't want to miss a single moment, not even while I was coming so hard I'd feel the aftershocks all day long.

Blaze continued to buck and thrust, drawing out both of our orgasms until I could do nothing but collapse against him, sweaty, panting, and satisfied.

"I'm gonna need a second shower," I groaned.

"Don't worry, sweet cheeks. I have that covered," Blaze said, jumping to his feet with an exuberance I wasn't capable of right just then. "Shift. I'll get us washed up and bring us back."

There wasn't any time to argue; we were likely late as it was. But the ridicule we'd get for returning sweaty-faced and smelling like sex would be unbearable. I shifted and waited.

I was still me as a mouse, but my thoughts were clearer, more focused. It was almost like as I shrunk, so did the world, my problems and worries, all of it, shrinking right along with me. But Blaze was still big. He grabbed hold of me with his sharp, brown talons and then took off.

My tiny mouse stomach flew into my throat, and I squeaked but kept my eyes open. The ground below zoomed away before rapidly growing close again. I looked up, but I couldn't see Blaze's face in this position. His beak was pointed down, in the same direction we were flying. When he said he'd handle the problem, I thought he'd fly us home really quickly, but that wasn't the direction we were going. We went down, through the canopy of trees.

The blue of Morningwood Lake grew larger and larger. I squeaked loudly, realizing what Blaze had planned. He screeched as if to tell me to calm down and that he had it all under control. At the last moment, I sucked in a breath and then nearly lost it the moment we plunged beneath the ice-cold water. My heart pounded rapidly, and my lungs stretched tight, demanding I inhale.

Blaze took us back up, using his wet wings to get distance between us and the water. If he tried to dip us a second time, I already decided I would bite his foot and take my chances falling. His wings lifted us higher. The wind whipping by was cold, but it also helped dry my fur so that by the time I spotted the Elite Force building below, I was nearly dry.

That had been my second shower for the day, and I couldn't help but compare the two. I much preferred this one, even if there still wasn't a towel waiting for me after.



Saturday Series Spotlight


Kiki Burrelli
Kiki Burrelli lives in the Pacific Northwest with the bears and raccoons. She dreams of owning a pack of goats that she can cuddle and dress in form-fitting sweaters. Kiki loves writing and reading and is always chasing that next character that will make her insides shiver. Consider getting to know Kiki at her website, on Facebook, or send her an email: kikiburrelli@gmail.com.


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Love Nest #8



Monday, March 30, 2026

🐰Monday Mpreg Mania🐰: Bunny Hop Beau by Lacey Daize




Summary:
Holiday Surprise #5
Saint Patrick's Day was the best day of Avery's life, the day after was the worst.

Avery left home for Valle Granja at the insistence of his instincts, and the urging of his mama, who'd always supported him. When he meets his fated mate, Cam, at the Saint Patrick's Day Dance he understands why. But joy is soon replaced with grief when only hours later he learns that his parents were killed in a car accident—having never heard that he met his mate and leaving Avery's five-year-old brother behind.

Finding his fated mate was like a dream come true for Cam, but their bond is immediately put to the test.

Cam knew that Avery was his fated mate as soon as he saw him, and he was excited to begin their lives together. However an early-morning phone call shatters the peace of their new bond. Suddenly he finds himself as the surrport for his grieving mate and orphaned brother, a position which brings up memories of his own.

Can new love survive grief and loss, and can they come together as a family?

Bunny Hop Beau is a 23K word , non-shifter, M/M, mpreg, omegaverse romance

Content note: Loss and grief play prominent roles in this book.


Original Review March 2024:
First off I'm going to say I found Bunny Hop to be a companion piece to Lucky Dance Date(Holiday Surprise #3) as the first chapters are a recap of Lucky but from Cam and Avery's POV.  If you haven't read Lucky, I highly recommend doing so, not because you'll be lost in regards to what is going on but to some degree I would say it has spoilers for Lucky, not word-for-word but enough that I would not enjoy Lucky as much knowing what we see here first. For those who think the first chapters are wasted as "rehashing" they aren't, I was excited to see those events from Cam and Avery's POV as the friends of the MCs, not something you often get to see.

As for Bunny Hop, it goes from unbelievably happy happy to devastatingly saddy saddy in a heartbeat, which life tends to do once in a while.  As heartbreaking as the death of Avery's parents is, the flip of a coin change in emotional fortune for the pair was in a way refreshing because of the reality of it.  Hard to think in terms of reality when dealing with mpreg and omegaverse genres & tropes but the heartache leaves you even more emotionally attached to the characters than one often finds themselves.  Let's face it, Cam has been handed the perfect get-out-of-jail-free card(for lack of better phrasing) but he doesn't bite and he shows Avery just how all in he truly is, yet another reason Bunny Hop is a heart grabber.

Once again Lacey Daize has once again proven mpreg can be both realistic and fantasy all at the same time.  Can't wait to read more of her awesome stories.

RATING:




Chapter 1 - Avery 
 ~January~ 
I side-eyed the fax machine as it picked up a piece of paper and started printing. The thing was a constant thorn in my side, but no matter how often I tried to convince my bosses that it was obsolete, they insisted that we keep it. 

Apparently some people still preferred to fax documents, no matter how secure and convenient the web portals we offered. 

I blinked as it picked up a second sheet. The spam adverts that it usually printed always fit on a single page, which meant that it was one of the rare real faxes. I snagged the cover sheet and noted the number of expected pages, and whom in the office I needed to hand it over to. 

I smiled when I saw that JosΓ©—a handsome alpha mortgage broker—was the intended recipient. It gave me an excuse to talk to him.  

I’d met JosΓ© six months earlier, when I first arrived in Valle Granja, and my instincts had immediately insisted that I get close to him. The urge was almost as strong as the one that had made me move there. 

I didn’t question it at first. My mama had always stressed that the universe knew what it was doing, and that it guided us through our instincts. But after months of flirting, and him seemingly oblivious, I was starting to wonder if that inner voice had been wrong. 

Once the fax finished printing I checked to make sure that it had all arrived properly, then took it to JosΓ©’s office. 

Unfortunately, several minutes—and even an invitation to lunch—later, he still seemed as immune to my flirting as ever. 

I forced a smile as one of the other mortgage brokers, Morgan, headed towards me, and passed him as I walked to the break room.

I was almost there when I realized that I’d left my cell phone at the front desk. I turned around to grab it, but stopped when I heard something that stopped me in my tracks. 

“...I ran into my old highschool boyfriend, and… I’ve still got it bad for him,” Jose said 

“From high school?” Morgan asked. “Man, you’ve gotta move on. It’s been more than a decade, right? Why not give Avery a chance? He’s obviously interested.” 

I plastered myself against the wall. Listening was wrong, but I needed to know. 

“No omega should ever be an alpha’s second choice,” JosΓ© replied. “They deserve a mate who looks at them, and knows that there could never be another. We owe them that much since all the consequences of a failed mating falls on them.” 

“I didn’t say mate him, just date him.” 

“That would be leading him on, and I’m not down for that.” 

“Whatever man. Your loss, but maybe you should let him know so he can move on too.”

Jose sighed. “You’re probably right.” There was a pause, then he continued. “So what did you need?” 

I stepped away and decided to return to the break room without my cell phone rather than walk past the open office door and give away that I might have heard the conversation. 

I needed to think. How had my instincts been so wrong to lead me to a man who was in love with somebody else?

 ∞∞∞ 

I flopped on the couch and removed my glasses. I rubbed at a spot with the hem of my shirt until I was satisfied that whatever it was was gone, then I started to put them back on. It was then that a lock of blond hair decided to fall in front of my eyes. I huffed and smoothed it back into place, making a mental note to get a haircut, then put my glasses back on. Finally I picked up my phone. It was time for my weekly call with my parents, and I really wanted to talk to my mama. 

JosΓ©’s words had echoed in my head for days. “No omega should ever be an alpha’s second choice…”

There was a finality in the statement. He would always love his high-school boyfriend, and it would never change. Anybody else would be the backup option. 

I knew in my core that the universe wouldn’t pair me with an alpha who would forever carry a torch for somebody else. But I still had a strong urge to be near him. 

I blew out a breath and tapped my parents’ number from my contact list. 

“Avery! Sweetheart!” my mama said as she answered. “How are you doing?” 

I smiled. Somehow just hearing Mama’s voice always lifted my spirits. “I’m good, Mama. How about you?” 

She laughed. “Busy as always. You know how it is.” 

“I know. But you’ll have to slow down at some point.” 

“Ridiculous!” she replied. “Only death itself can slow down your dad and I.” “Somehow I’m not surprised,” I laughed. “How’s Eric?” 

Mama sighed happily. “He’s good. He’s at a birthday party for one of his classmates right now.” 

I chuckled. “And you were worried that he wouldn’t make friends.” 

“All the other parents are your age or younger!” Mama protested. “Your dad and I are in our fifties.”

“I don’t think anybody cares about that,” I argued. “What they care about is Eric, and what they see is a happy and healthy five-year-old.” 

Mama sighed happily. “He reminds me so much of you at that age. Full of energy, and so kind to everybody. I bet he’ll even look like you when you grow up. He’s got the same blond hair and slight frame. Just missing the glasses, though the pediatrician’s keeping an eye on his vision.  I just wish you’d have been born closer together.” 

“Life does funny things. It just decided that I needed a baby brother to keep you busy until I have kids of my own.” 

“That it does, and we’re happy to have him around.” Mama paused. “Did you want me to call in your dad?” 

I licked my lips, trying to decide. 

“Ave? Honey?” 

“Mama?” 

“Yes dear? 

“Do you remember when I moved out here, that I felt that my instincts were pulling me?” 

“Of course.”

“Did I tell you about the alpha at my work?” 

Mama hummed as she thought about the question. “You mentioned that there was a handsome alpha there, but that was all. Are things going ok?” 

I sighed. “I don’t know. My gut says to stay close to him, and I thought that meant that I was going to end up with him at some point. But I don’t know what to think anymore.” 

“Oh honey, what happened?” 

I took a deep breath. “I overheard him talking to another mortgage broker at the firm. Apparently he’s still in love with an omega he dated in high school.” 

Mama hummed. “Ok…” 

I paused. “Mama… he said something that I can’t get out of my head.” 

“What was it?” 

“He said that no omega should ever be an alpha’s second choice.” 

Mama sighed softly. “He’s right.” 

I blinked. “Mama?” 

“He’s right. But it goes both ways. Nobody should ever be the second choice, alphas or omegas. You want a partner who looks at you and can’t imagine anybody better.”

“What’s it mean though? Why are my instincts insisting that I get close to him if I would only be second best?” 

“Just because the universe says to get close, doesn’t mean they’re supposed to be your mate. I don’t think it’s ever really discussed, but if we can have fated mates, then surely we can have fated friends.” 

“Fated friends?” 

Mama laughed. “Why not? If the universe wants people to be close, it doesn’t have to limit it to romantic partners.” 

I was silent as I thought about it. Was I meant to have JosΓ© as a friend, not as a mate? Somehow it felt right. 

“Did that answer your question honey?” 

I smiled. “It did. I feel better now. Thanks Mama.” 

“I think you already knew the answer, but sometimes it helps to talk things out.” 

“You’re probably right.” 

Mama laughed. “Only on good days. Let me call in your dad so he can talk too.” 

“Ok.”

She set down the phone and I closed my eyes, running over our conversation while I waited for my dad to join her. 

Mama always knew just what to say to make me feel better about myself, and I couldn’t imagine life without her.



Saturday Series Spotlight

Cutie  /  Cupid
Date  /  Beau  /  Crush



Lacey Daize
Lacey lives in New Mexico with her four critters. She’s a Jill-of-all-trades by day, but loves writing in her spare time. She dabbles in a variety of pairings, but jumped feet-first into the deep end of omegaverse the first time she read it. She loves the play on social expectations and the different ways to express romance.


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Bunny Hop Beau #5



Sunday, March 29, 2026

πŸ€πŸŽ­Week at a GlanceπŸŽ­πŸ€: 3/23/26 - 3/29/26

















πŸ€Sunday's Short StackπŸ€: Winning Bracket by Annabeth Albert




Summary:

Can a sexy bet on a basketball tournament change their relationship status from frenemies to something more?

Bubbly Oliver Marshall has long been a pain in Edwin Schultz’s side. Now seniors and competing dorm resident advisors, the two are in constant conflict. However, Edwin’s been nursing a secret crush on Ollie for years. When Ollie proposes a bet on a basketball tournament, Edwin seizes the chance to get over his inconvenient feelings for Ollie.

One kiss. That will get Ollie out of his system. But Edwin’s not the only one suffering a case of unwanted attraction. Ollie doesn't understand why Edwin makes his pulse pound even as he drives Ollie up a wall with his strict adherence to rules. And now Ollie’s never been so eager to lose a bet in his life.

One kiss. Then another. Before they know it, they’re burning up the sheets. When their real challenge becomes avoiding their emotions, the two frenemies must risk their hearts to win a shot at lasting love.

Winning Bracket is a standalone, steamy, low-angst, opposites attract novella between a nerd and party boy. Originally published as part of the Campus Cravings bundle, Winning Bracket is now available on its own with a bonus epilogue/short story! The Winning Wedding bonus features a lost receipt which threatens their special day. Brand new cover, but same great story!



Chapter One 
TO: Residents of Gilmore Hall 
FROM: Oliver Marshall ohmarshall@cathia.edu 
SUBJECT: Watch Party!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 
Greetings my pretties! 

Can you believe it? Cathia is in the NCAA March Madness for the first time in twenty-three years! And the second floor lounge in Gilmore Hall is your place for all your tournament watching. We’ll have the TVs tuned to the tournament starting with the first game Thursday all the way through the weekend. And don’t forget to get your brackets registered for the Cougar Bracket Challenge! Wouldn’t it be awesome if someone from our hall wins? I’ll have prizes for the best brackets from Gilmore as well. 

For Friday’s BIG game, we’ve got pizza sponsored by the LGBT Alliance. Studying can wait! This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to cheer our guys on national TV! So bring your munchies and bring yourself and come make some noise for our boys! Go Cougars!

~Your faithful 2nd Floor RA, Ollie 


TO: Residents of Gilmore Hall 
FROM: Edwin Schultz ezschultz@cathia.edu 
SUBJECT: Rules Reminders 

As I’m sure you are all aware, Cathia is a fifteenth seed in that national basketball tournament. I am told this means we will most likely have to deal with only one weekend of the “madness.” However, I wanted to remind ALL Gilmore Hall residents that all the usual rules will apply this weekend—including noise restrictions for quiet hours, visiting-hours, alcohol prohibitions and respect for fellow residents and property. MANY of your fellow residents will have no interest in these games, and their need to study MUST be respected above all else. Win or lose, let’s not be like those low-class schools and have a riot over a GAME. It’s just a game, people. One we are very likely to lose. Did you know that the graduation rate for Division One basketball players is under fifteen percent? How about we respect the students who are committed to their studies and graduation by not going too crazy this weekend? I WILL be enforcing the rules to ensure that we ALL have a safe and productive weekend. 

Respectfully,
Your First Floor RA, Edwin 


Rat-tat-tat. Edwin’s door rattled with building-on-fire forceful knocking. Before he could get the door halfway open, Ollie was waving his phone in Edwin’s face. 

“Dude! I hope you’re happy.” Ollie barged into the room, door slamming shut behind him. Even the door knew to be wary of amped-up Ollie. This was exactly what Edwin’s Sunday night did not need. 

“Can I help you with something?” 

“Did it occur to you that you might want to talk to me before you went all Emperor Palpatine on our residents? Aren’t we supposed to be a team?” 

“What? I merely reminded people that there are rules—” 

“Dude. You’re trending as hashtag ‘buzzkill RA.’ People are sharing your email.” The fake crystal “O” on Ollie’s purple phone case caught the florescent light in Edwin’s room. Ollie shoved the phone in Edwin’s face. Scowling, Edwin snatched the phone from Ollie’s hand and looked at the screen. It showed some social media app, where indeed #buzzkillRA was appended to several posts. 

“People put my email on Twitter? Campus emails are not supposed to be shared off-campus.” 

“Oh yeah. Like that’s going to stop people from talking about your crazy-pants rant.” Ollie strode over to Edwin’s bed, not waiting for an invitation before he plopped down, rumpling Edwin’s blue comforter. He had a perfectly serviceable desk chair, but Ollie always ignored it in favor of occupying as much of Edwin’s personal space as possible.

Kicking off his sandals, Ollie tucked his feet—which were clad, of course, in rainbow argyle socks—underneath him, getting all cozy like he planned to stay for a nice long chat. As usual, he was dressed like a thrift store exploded. Wrinkled blue striped oxford shirt, colorful socks, plaid shorts—never mind that it had snowed last week—and hair sticking every which way. The hair was intentional. Edwin had watched his complicated blow-dry and product routine a time or twenty back when they had been freshmen in this dorm. 

Edwin tossed Ollie’s phone on the bed. “The hashtag simply proves people are way too obsessed with a game.” 

“Oh yeah. ‘Game.’” Ollie paused to make air quotes. Very dramatic air quotes. “Could you have used more all-caps in that email? Maybe get some bold and italics in there for variety? Just in case, you know, we’ve forgotten that floor one is a quiet floor. But, dude, not all of us are planning to do laundry Friday night. I’ve been planning the watch party for weeks!” 

“For weeks? And you want to get mad at me for not talking to you before I sent my message? Did you ask me about the party? Did you submit a request for funds for the Alliance to pay for pizza?” Edwin paced from the bed as far as his tiny room allowed. RAs might have the perk of single rooms with private baths, but the room was barely big enough for Edwin’s bed, desk, and the bookcases he’d squeezed in along the back wall. 

“Oh please, Mr. Scrooge, please can I have a tuppence for a crust of bread for me and my lads?” Ollie emphasized his atrocious British accent by leaning forward with cupped hands outstretched, his expression urchin-like, eyes wide and pleading 

“Submit. A. Form.” Edwin refused to be moved by the cute. Everyone was moved by Ollie’s cute. Everyone overlooked the rules and procedures for Ollie. He was just that damn fun. Everyone loved him. But Edwin hadn’t been the treasurer of the Alliance for three years only to watch all his hard-won policies fly out the window for another one of Ollie’s crazy schemes. 

“Do we have the funds, Mr. Treasurer?” Ollie picked up his phone and tapped at the screen. “Here. I, the over-burdened social chair, have formally submitted an email request. And didn’t you say at the last meeting that we were over nine hundred bucks in the black?” 

“Maybe.” Edwin’s phone buzzed in his pocket. Ollie’s email no doubt. “Is sponsoring a party to watch a game played by straight, bigoted jocks really the best use of our resources?” 

“Oh come on. Don’t you read Out Sports? Two Division One guys are out now. And you are unreasonably jock-biased. Don’t you think after three years you could learn some tolerance and acceptance of unfamiliar lifestyles?” Ollie batted his big brown eyes. Annoyingly appealing, those eyes. Their tilt, their burnt-sugar color, their perpetual mischievous twinkle. 

Ha. He doubted tolerance and acceptance were what drove Ollie to be a jock chaser. More like hormones and unrealistic aspirations. Edwin had watched him through several obsessions—Ben the soccer player freshman year, Larry the lacrosse god sophomore year, Marco the seriously straight quarterback junior year. This year’s winner was Jace, the also probably straight star of the basketball team. Closest Ollie would come to scoring with Jace would be having one of Jace’s frat buddies pinch his ass. Getting ignored and dissed wouldn’t stop Ollie from trying—he would nurture his crush right up until the next hot jock caught his eye. 

Not that Edwin was bitter. No. Not even a little. Ollie was just… Ollie. He was the human equivalent of a campus-wide hot tub party, spewing hot, bubbly affection for the athletically inclined. Meanwhile Edwin was the frozen North, plodding along, trying to endure his way to graduation. Whatever. Not like Edwin wanted to be on the receiving end of any of that affection. He might smother to death under the cute. 

“Fine. Have the party. But I’m not budging on the usual rules. And you better keep receipts this time—I’m not cutting you a check for the pizza without a real receipt.” 

“Hey, my credit card bill totes counts as real.” Ollie bristled like his inability to keep good records was all Edwin’s fault. 

Edwin didn’t point out how nice it must be to have a parent-provided credit card that could easily absorb a hundred-dollar pizza hit. Instead, he looked meaningfully at his door. “You need anything else?” 

Ollie didn’t take the hint, stretching out on the bed so the tails of his shirt rode up along his lean torso. Oh God, Edwin’s bed was going to smell like Ollie again. And tonight when he climbed into that bed, the image of Ollie’s shirt coming this close to showing some of that pink-gold skin combined with the intoxicating strawberries-and-Ollie smell would plague him until Edwin was forced to do something about it. 

“You know, you don’t have to be Buzzkill RA. You could at least come to one of the watch parties. Help supervise?” 

“I’ve got a Business Ethics mid-term paper due on Monday.” Edwin rubbed the back of his neck. His ethics professor was a major prick, and he was not going to let this class wreck his GPA. 

“Aww.” Ollie made a sympathetic face. “Instead of going all spastic in an email, you could try this thing called talking. ‘Hey, Ollie, I’ve got a huge paper due. I’m worried about the noise level. Think you can keep a lid on things?’ Or other words that don’t get you immortalized in Internet memes.” 

Edwin took a steadying breath.

Ollie meant well, he really did. He was one of the nicest guys on campus, but Ollie seldom walked his talk. He would promise to keep an eye on his residents and the noise, but then two a.m. would come and he’d be right in the thick of whatever noisy game they had going in the lounge, reluctant to send his guys packing off to their rooms. Not surprisingly, the residents all loved Ollie. 

If anyone was going to keep the dorm from sliding into chaos, it would have to be Edwin. It had been that way ever since they had been freshmen—Ollie’s mom had checked the “quiet floor” box on his housing application for him, landing him next door to Edwin, and Edwin had spent the next three-and–a-half years trying to outrun Ollie’s party train. 

Ollie kept looking at him, dark eyes patient and kind, like he really did care about Edwin and Edwin’s GPA. The dark slashes of his eyebrows were a contrast to his creamy skin and heart-shaped mouth, offsetting his elfin features with a masculine edge that had always intrigued Edwin. 

Edwin exhaled a long, you-win sigh. “Maybe I’ll try not to go all RA Buzzkill while the games are on.” 

“Awesomesauce! You should come grab some pizza too.” Ollie grinned widely, showcasing a row of perfectly white, straight teeth. Having an orthodontist dad had its perks—high limit credit cards and a gorgeous smile. “And you should do the bracket challenge!” 

“For what reason?” Edwin refused to be dazzled by Ollie’s smile. Or charmed by Ollie’s attempts to rearrange the English language. If he wasn’t adding “-ie” sounds to perfectly good nouns, he was coining his own adjectives. Like “awesomesauce.” Ridiculous word. 

“For fun.” Ollie snorted like Edwin had asked an absurd question. Like randomly picking game-winners from an array of schools Edwin had never heard of was the best way to spend Sunday. “I’ve got some great prizes lined up.”

“I don’t need a prize.” 

“Oh come on. We could bet.” Ollie’s eyes sparkled. “Like if my final-four bracket beats yours, you host the watch party.” 

“Dream on.” Edwin tried to ignore the feeling of intrigue curling low in his gut. 

“Oh come on, Eddie. Think about what would happen if you won! Isn’t there something you want from me?” 

You have no idea. Really, none. Edwin had spent the last three years being very, very careful to hide even a hint of “something” from the too-perceptive Ollie. This year had been the worst. Ever since August… 

And okay, he was not going to think about August right then. Not with Ollie sitting on the bed looking all eager. Like he’d enjoy nothing more than making Edwin’s dreams come true, though Edwin knew that was far from the case. 

Edwin wasn’t a jock, he wasn’t a party guy, he wasn’t tall, he wasn’t cute—he was nothing like the guys Ollie crushed on. No, Ollie was a lit firecracker, and Edwin knew better than to grab on and hope the bang wouldn’t explode in his face. 

“I don’t know anything about the teams—no point in doing random guesses.” 

“No point? The whole point of the tournament is random guesses! Grady won our floor’s pool last year by picking all dog mascots to advance and all cat mascots to lose. I kept track of the teams the whole season, and I came in second. There’s no way to predict which big-time teams are going to choke.” 

“Choke?”

Ollie’s hands grabbed at his own throat, his fingers curving like claws, his eyes crossing, his mouth emitting horribly realistic gagging sounds. Right when Edwin started to get a bit worried, Ollie dropped his hands and grinned. “You know. Choke. Whiff on their chances. Lose even though everyone thought they’d win. But that’s the absolute best part of March Madness—the Cinderella stories. The tiny teams that no one sees coming, and they seize the moment!” Ollie’s hands grabbed at the air in front of him. Like the moment was a real thing to seize. Like randomness and chaos were things people should want. 

“Cinderella stories?” 

“Because they finally get a chance to go to the big dance.” Ollie’s hands stopped moving. His face sagged. Like Edwin’s lack of basketball IQ was zapping his energy. “Come on. You make some guesses, and if you’re right, I’ll do whatever you want. And if you’re wrong—” 

“Hold up. If I filled out a bracket and mine beat yours, you’d do whatever I wanted? Like anything?” 

“Sure.” Ollie shrugged, an insolent lift of surprisingly wide shoulders inside a too-big shirt. “I mean not all day. But sure, you want me to be a slave for an hour or something, I can take it.” 

Ka-pow. The firecracker exploded, hot want raining down on Edwin, sparking against his skin. Anything. Ollie-as-slave images began to run on repeat in his brain, Ollie getting considerably less clothing with each pass. Edwin could ask for anything, and it would just be a joke to Ollie—a lark to be laughed over later, no more of a big deal than opening up with a can of silly string or shorting his sheets every night for a week. 

Oh my God. Would it work? Could he use something like this—a stupid bet on stupid basketball—to exorcise the Ollie demons that had plagued him for years, all without having to admit how he felt about Ollie? Because while Ollie had been busy with the jock-crush-of-the-month plan, Edwin had been hung up on Ollie. For three and a half years. If a stupid bet could shake Edwin free, then it was worth having to learn something about basketball. 

“Okay,” he whispered. 

“Yay!” Ollie clambered off the bed, springs squeaking as he hit the floor. “You’ll see. This is going to be a great couple of weeks! So what are we going to play for this week? If my bracket does better by Sunday night, you send an email supporting the next watch party and you show up. And if you win…” 

“I want a kiss.” The words escaped Edwin before he could call them back, before he could temper them with logic or suppress them with reality.


Author Bio:
Annabeth Albert grew up sneaking romance novels under the bed covers. Now, she devours all subgenres of romance out in the open--no flashlights required! When she's not adding to her keeper shelf, she's a multi-published Pacific Northwest romance writer.

Emotionally complex, sexy, and funny stories are her favorites both to read and to write. Annabeth loves finding happy endings for a variety of pairings and is a passionate gay rights supporter. In between searching out dark heroes to redeem, she works a rewarding day job and wrangles two children.


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