Yee of Haw, gift art for jaycubed




#dc#dc comics#batman#dick grayson#bruce wayne#batfam#tim drake#batfamily#dc fanart


seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Croatia

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Australia
seen from Russia
seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
Yee of Haw, gift art for jaycubed
Title: Fragile Ties and Fractured Pride
Pairing: Alpha!Steve McGarrett x Omega!Reader x Alpha!Danny Williams (Triad)
Description: When you transferred from the BAU to Hawaii, your Omega recognized them instantly—two Alphas, a rare true-mate triad bond. But instead of a welcome, you got two years of cold denial and rejection while they hid behind Beta partners. It takes a terrifying echo of your past in Quantico breaking into your home and leaving you broken for their wolves to finally go berserk. But forgiveness isn't cheap, and you're going to make them work for every single inch of it.
An angsty, hurt/comfort AOB story featuring a complex case, an obsessed unsub, heavy groveling, dual-Alpha protection, and an accidental superfecundation twist.
PART I: THE ARRIVAL AND THE REJECTION
Steve’s POV
The scent hit the office before the person even stepped through the glass doors of Five-0 headquarters.
It was sweet, but not sickly so—like wild rain and crushed jasmine, underlying a sharp, grounding note of old parchment. An Omega. A pure Omega, unsuppressed and vibrant.
Steve McGarrett stopped dead in his tracks, his fingers tightening around the edge of his desk. Inside his chest, his Alpha roared, a sudden, violent upheaval that had him gripping the wood until his knuckles turned white. His wolf was clawing at his ribs, screaming a single, definitive word: Mate.
Then he looked up and saw Danny.
Danny was standing by the smart table, frozen. His blue eyes were blown wide, his scent spiking into something sharp, possessive, and utterly overwhelmed. Danny’s Alpha was feeling it too. The exact same pull. To the exact same person.
"Steve," Danny choked out, his voice dropping an octave, rough and strained. "Tell me you don't smell that."
"I smell it," Steve growled, forcing his posture to straighten, forcing the military discipline to lock down the chaos in his blood. "Control it, Danny."
The glass doors slid open. The Mayor’s personal recommendation from the mainland had arrived. You walked into the bullpen, looking tired from the long flight from Quantico, carrying a single leather satchel. You were a profile transfer from the BAU, hand-picked to give Five-0 an psychological edge.
You stopped, looking at the two Alphas. For a fraction of a second, your breath hitched. Your scent flared, a desperate, beautiful spike of recognition. You knew. Your Omega recognized them instantly. Two Alphas. A triad bond. Rare, powerful, and absolutely terrifying.
Steve stepped forward, his face a mask of stone. "You must be the transfer from the BAU. I’m Commander McGarrett. This is Detective Sergeant Williams."
You blinked, a flash of deep, agonizing hurt crossing your features before you masked it with professional neutrality. "Yes, sir. It's an honor to be here."
Later that night, Steve didn't go home to his empty house in Oahu. Instead, he went straight to a quiet bar in Honolulu, his skin itching, his wolf pacing in circles. He called Cheryl. She was a sweet, uncomplicated Beta nurse he’d been seeing casually for three months. Her scent was a flat, comforting vanilla—nothing like the intoxicating storm of jasmine and rain that had ruined his senses earlier that day.
In her apartment, Steve took her with a desperate, almost clinical intensity. He pushed her against the bedroom wall, lifting her hips, burying himself inside her without the usual slow prelude. Cheryl gasped, her hands gripping his shoulders, enjoying the sudden, rough passion of her Alpha partner.
“Steve, oh god,” she whimpered, her Beta scent remaining steady, unyielding.
He closed his eyes, driving into her, trying to drown out the memory of your face in the bullpen. He didn't want a true mate. True mates meant vulnerability. It meant a chemical, cosmic tether that could break a man if things went wrong. He had a team to run. He had a war to fight. He couldn't afford to be ruled by biology. He came inside her with a low grunt, his forehead resting against the drywall, feeling hollowed out and utterly full of denial.
Danny’s POV
Danny went home and locked his doors, but the scent of jasmine was stuck in his nose. It was making him crazy. He walked around his living room, muttering to himself, his hands flying wildly as if he were arguing with the universe itself.
"No," he muttered, shaking his head. "No way. Absolutely not. Two Alphas? Me and Steve? With them? It’s a circus. It’s a biological nightmare. I have Grace to think about. I’m not bringing a true-mate bond into this mess."
To prove a point to his own rebellious biology, he called Amber. She was a lovely Beta woman, completely removed from the high-stakes, life-or-death drama of Five-0. When she arrived at his place, Danny didn't waste time. He pulled her into his arms, kissing her fiercely, trying to force his mind to focus on her soft, scentless skin.
He pulled her into his bed, stripping her clothes off with trembling hands. When he entered her, he was louder than usual, his voice a gravelly chain of praises and groans, trying to convince himself that this was enough. Amber smiled up at him, wrapping her legs around his waist, moving with him in a comfortable, familiar rhythm.
But as he looked down at her, his Alpha felt numb. There was no spark, no fire, no profound sense of home that his instincts had promised when you walked into the office. He finished with a heavy sigh, pulling Amber against his chest, staring at the ceiling in the dark, knowing he was living a lie.
For the next two years, you worked alongside them. And for two years, Steve and Danny treated you like a colleague, completely ignoring the unspoken tension, continuing to date their respective Betas while your Omega heart slowly withered under the weight of their rejection.
PART II: THE POINT
Reader’s POV
Two years of looking at them. Two years of watching Steve smile at pictures text-messaged from Beta women, and Danny rushing home to dates with normal, uncomplicated people. You had learned to suppress your scent with heavy blockers, locking your Omega away in a dark corner of your mind. It hurt, a dull, throbbing ache in your soul, but you did your job.
And right now, the job was ugly.
The smart table was covered in gruesome crime scene photos. Three prominent figures in Honolulu—a judge, a high-ranking police captain, and a prominent defense attorney—had been found tortured and executed in their own homes over the past week.
"The media is calling him the 'Palace Executioner,'" Chin said, crossing his arms. "No forced entry, no DNA, no fingerprints. He's a ghost."
"He's not a ghost," you said, stepping up to the table. Your voice was calm, analytical, the product of years at the BAU. You didn't look at Steve or Danny, though you could feel their eyes on you. "He's an apex predator playing a very specific game. Look at the trophy placement. In every scene, a personal item from the victim was placed on their dining room table, surrounded by a ring of salt."
"A ritual?" Kono asked.
"No, a message," you replied, tapping the screen to bring up the files of the Five-0 team. "He’s targeting the justice system, but more specifically, he's targeting this task force's perimeter. Look at the victims' connections. The judge signed our last three high-profile warrants. The captain managed our logistics overlap. The attorney defended the cartel members we locked up last month."
Steve frowned, leaning over the table, his broad shoulders shifting. "So he's coming for us next."
"No," you said, your eyes narrowing as you looked at the behavioral patterns. "He's targeting the entire team... except me."
Danny scoffed, throwing his hands up. "What do you mean, except you? Why would a psychopath give you a pass, kid?"
"Because he’s making a point," you said, ignoring the 'kid' moniker that usually grated on your nerves. "He's isolating me. By removing the pillars around Five-0, he's destabilizing the team, trying to drive a wedge. The salt signifies purification. He thinks he's cleaning up the filth around me. He's not doing this to destroy Five-0. He’s doing this to show me that you all are incompetent, and that only he can protect me."
Steve’s jaw tightened. "Who is he?"
"I don't know yet," you admitted. "But he's moving fast. The escalation cycle is shortening. The first kill was three days apart from the second. The third was only twenty-four hours. His next hit is happening right now."
Your fingers flew across the keyboard, pulling up the GPS trackers for the remaining auxiliary personnel connected to Five-0. "Governor’s liaison. She’s at her beach house in Kailua. The security feed just went dark."
"Move!" Steve barked.
PART III: THE HIT AND THE BREAK
Steve’s POV
The Kailua beach house was pitch black when Five-0 breached the perimeter. Steve led the stack, his weapon raised, his boots silent on the hardwood floors. Behind him, Danny was covering the flank, with you right in the middle, your movements fluid and precise despite the tension.
A muffled cry echoed from the master bedroom.
Steve kicked the door open. Inside, a masked figure clad in tactical black was hovering over the Governor’s liaison, a heavy hunting knife raised above her chest.
"Drop the knife! Five-0!" Steve yelled.
The suspect didn't drop the knife. Instead, he spun around, using the terrified woman as a shield, the blade pressed against her throat. His eyes, visible through the ski mask, didn't look at Steve. They didn't look at Danny. They locked straight onto you.
"I did this for you," the suspect rasped, his voice a wet, distorted wheeze. "They don't appreciate you. They don't see what you are. They treat you like a dog, hiding you in their shadows while they play with their little Beta toys."
Steve felt a cold shock run down his spine. The suspect knew. He knew about the dynamics. He knew about the rejection.
"Let her go, Samuel," you said, your voice remarkably steady as you stepped out from behind Steve's shoulder, your weapon still trained on his chest.
Steve tried to push you back, but you stepped around him, your eyes locked on the killer. "I know it's you, Samuel. Samuel Vance. The forensic tech from the Honolulu PD pool. You’ve been altering the logistics logs."
The killer chuckled, a sickening sound. "You remembered me. See? We have a connection. Not like these Alphas. They smell like common Betas because they’re cowards. They don't deserve your light."
"You're right, Samuel," you said, taking a slow, agonizing step forward, using your profiling voice—soft, empathetic, manipulative. "They don't understand. But killing these people won't make them understand. Come with me. Let’s talk about it."
For a second, Vance wavered, his grip on the liaison loosening.
That second was all Steve needed. He fired a single, precise shot into Vance’s shoulder. The knife dropped, clattering to the floor, and Danny rushed forward, tackling the man to the ground and securing the cuffs while Kono tended to the traumatized liaison.
Steve turned to look at you. You were breathing heavily, your hands shaking slightly as you holstered your weapon.
For the first time in two years, Steve looked at you—really looked at you—not as a subordinate, but as a brilliant, terrifyingly perceptive Omega who had just cracked a serial case using sheer intellect. His Alpha gave a sharp, painful throb of pride. He reached out to touch your arm, to offer comfort, but you stepped back, your face closing off instantly.
"Good job, Commander," you said coldly, turning on your heel and walking out into the night.
Steve stood there, his hand hanging in the empty air, the faint scent of rain and jasmine mockingly teasing his senses through your blockers. Beside him, Danny was watching you leave, a strange, haunted look in his eyes.
"Steve," Danny whispered, his voice cracking. "We're idiots."
"Yeah," Steve agreed, his heart sinking into his stomach. "Yeah, we are."
PART IV: THE SECRETS WE KEEP
Reader’s POV
The call came from Quantico three weeks later. It was a secure line, direct from the Director of the BAU.
"He's out," the voice on the other end said without preamble.
Your blood turned to ice. "What do you mean, he's out? Arthur Finch was in a maximum-security psychiatric facility in Maryland."
"There was a transport accident during his medical transfer," the Director said, his tone grim. "He killed three guards. He left a note on the windshield of the transport van. It was addressed to you. He’s coming to Hawaii."
Arthur Finch. The Collector. A brilliant, deeply psychotic Alpha serial killer you had profiled and captured during your final year at the BAU. He had developed a monstrous, consuming obsession with you. He didn't want to kill you; he wanted to break you, to strip away your sanity until you were nothing but a compliant shell that belonged entirely to him.
You sat at your desk, your hands trembling so violently you could barely hold the phone. You looked across the bullpen. Steve and Danny were laughing at the smart table, sharing a joke about some local football game.
They didn't care about you. Not really. If you told them, they would protect you out of duty, out of some lingering sense of guilt because they knew they were your mates. You didn't want their pity. You didn't want their duty.
You walked over to Chin and Kono, who were working on a separate file in the breakroom.
"I need a favor," you said, your voice a hushed whisper. "And you have to swear to me, on your lives, that you won't tell Steve or Danny."
Chin looked up, his brow furrowing. "What's wrong?"
You explained the situation quickly, handing them the red-flag file the BAU had faxed through an encrypted channel. "Finch is an Alpha. If Steve and Danny find out, their instincts will cause a territorial war that will compromise the investigation. They’ll lock me in a safe house and blow the entire operation. I need to be the bait. I need to draw him out. Chin, Kono, please. Do not tell them."
Kono looked torn, her eyes darting toward the bullpen where the two Alphas were still talking. "Boss, this is dangerous. If they find out we hid this—"
"They won't find out until he’s caught," you pleaded, your eyes bright with unshed tears. "Please. Just help me monitor the ports and airport arrivals. Keep it off the main Five-0 server."
Chin stared at you for a long moment, seeing the sheer desperation in your eyes. He sighed, nodding slowly. "Okay. We keep it between us. But the moment it gets too hot, we tell them."
"Deal," you lied.
PART V: THE RECKONING
Danny’s POV
The call came at 2:00 AM.
Danny was asleep when his phone blared across the nightstand. He grabbed it, groggy and irritated. "Williams."
"Danny, get to the hospital. Now." Chin’s voice was shaking, devoid of its usual calm. "It’s them. They’ve been attacked."
Danny’s heart stopped. The grogginess vanished, replaced by an icy, adrenaline-fueled terror. "What do you mean attacked? Who?"
"An old case from the BAU. Arthur Finch. He broke into their apartment tonight. Danny... it’s bad. Just get down here."
Danny didn't even put on shoes. He grabbed his keys, threw on a jacket, and flew out the door. He drove like a maniac through the empty streets of Honolulu, his tires screeching as he pulled into the emergency room bay.
Steve was already there. He was standing in the waiting room, still in his sweatpants, looking like a wild animal trapped in a cage. His scent was foul—thick, toxic, radiating a terrifying, murderous rage. His eyes were completely bloodshot, his pupils dilated so wide the hazel was almost entirely gone. His Alpha wolf was screaming, tearing at his mind.
"Steve!" Danny shouted, running up to him. "What happened? What the hell is going on?"
Chin and Kono were sitting in the plastic chairs, looking exhausted and guilt-ridden. Kono had dried blood on her shirt. Your blood.
"We didn't tell you," Kono sobbed, her hands covering her face. "They made us promise not to tell you. An Alpha killer from their past... he escaped three weeks ago. He came to the island for them."
Steve turned on Chin, his voice a low, demonic growl that vibrated through the floorboards. "You knew? You knew an Alpha was hunting our mate and you didn't tell us?!"
"They didn't want you to know!" Chin shouted back, standing his ground, though his own scent was defensive. "They knew you’d react exactly like this! You rejected them for two years, Steve! You left them alone! They didn't want your protection out of obligation!"
The words hit Danny like a physical blow. He staggered back, a sickening wave of guilt washing over him. They didn't want your protection out of obligation.
Before Steve could punch a hole through the wall, the double doors swung open and the doctor stepped out.
"Are you the family?" the doctor asked, looking wary of the two volatile Alphas throwing off waves of threatening pheromones.
"We’re their partners," Steve choked out, his voice hoarse. "How are they?"
"They’re stable, but the injuries are extensive," the doctor said, sighing. "Multiple contusions, three broken ribs, a severe concussion, and deep defensive lacerations on their forearms. The suspect used a heavy blunt object. But what’s more concerning is the psychological trauma. The suspect left a territorial scent-mark over their scent glands. It’s caused an acute stress response in their Omega biology. They’re currently unconscious, but their body is in a state of shock."
Steve’s wolf went completely berserk. A loud, guttural roar ripped from his throat, a sound so primal and terrifying that several people in the waiting room shrank back. Danny wasn't far behind; his teeth bared, his vision turning red. Another Alpha had touched you. Another Alpha had hurt you, marked you, tried to claim what belonged to them.
"Where is he?" Danny hissed, his voice dropping into a register he hadn't used since his days on the rough streets of Newark. "Chin. Where is he?"
"We tracked his rental car to an abandoned sugar mill near Waipahu," Chin said, his face hardening. "We were about to move out."
"No," Steve said, his voice deadly quiet, the calm before a catastrophic storm. "You stay here and watch over them. Danny and I are going."
PART VI: THE HUNT
Steve’s POV
The rain was pouring down in sheets over the old, rusted structures of the Waipahu sugar mill. Steve didn't care about tactical entry. He didn't care about protocol. He kicked the heavy metal doors off their hinges, his rifle raised, his mind entirely consumed by a singular, burning desire: Kill.
Beside him, Danny was a silent, lethal shadow. There was no bickering, no banter. The two Alphas moved as a single, devastating unit, their scents blending into a terrifying cloud of ozone, gunpowder, and predatory intent.
"I know you're here, little wolves," a voice echoed from the upper rafters.
Arthur Finch stepped out onto the catwalk. He was a tall, heavily built Alpha with a cruel, arrogant smile. He was holding a rusted iron pipe, the end of it still stained with your blood.
"You're too late," Finch mocked, looking down at them. "I broke them. They screamed for you, you know. But you didn't come. Because you didn't want them. You preferred your little Betas. So I took what you threw away."
Steve didn't say a word. He raised his rifle and fired.
Finch dived behind a metal shipping container as the bullets tore through the iron catwalk. He dropped down a ladder, trying to reach the back exit, but Danny was already there. Danny intercepted him, tackling him into a pile of rusted machinery.
The fight was brutal, animalistic. Finch threw a heavy punch that caught Danny in the jaw, but Danny didn't even flinch. Driven by the primal rage of a true-mate bond pushed to the brink, Danny grabbed Finch by the throat, slamming him against a concrete pillar.
"You touched them," Danny growled, his eyes completely black. "You dared touch them."
Finch laughed through his teeth, spitting blood. "They taste like sweet rain, Alpha. I left my mark right on their neck. You'll never get it off."
Steve appeared from the shadows, his face an expressionless mask of pure vengeance. He didn't use his gun. He dropped his weapon, stepped up to Finch, and grabbed him by the hair, slamming his face into the concrete pillar once, twice, three times, until the laughter stopped.
Steve pulled Finch up, his hands covered in the man's blood, his Alpha roaring to tear the throat out of the bastard.
"Steve! Steve, stop!" Danny shouted, grabbing Steve's shoulder. It wasn't out of mercy for Finch; it was out of necessity. "If you kill him, we’re in a cell, and they’re alone in that hospital. They need us. Stop."
Steve breathed heavily, his chest heaving, his fist raised. He looked at Danny, then down at the unconscious, broken body of the killer. With a disgusted grunt, Steve threw the man to the ground, pulling out his zip-ties and securing him with a bone-snapping jerk.
"Call it in," Steve whispered, his voice trembling. "We're going back to the hospital."
PART VII: THE WORK FOR FORGIVENESS
Reader’s POV
When you finally woke up, the first thing you smelled was an overwhelming, suffocating wall of Alpha pheromones.
It wasn't Finch's sour, terrifying scent. It was a rich mix of pine, ocean salt, leather, and sharp cedarwood. Steve and Danny.
You opened your eyes painfully, squinting against the harsh fluorescent lights of the hospital room. Your entire body ached, your chest felt like it was trapped in a vise, and your throat was incredibly dry.
To your left, Steve was sitting in a chair, his head buried in his hands, his broad shoulders shaking slightly. To your right, Danny was holding your hand, his forehead resting against the edge of your mattress. Both of them looked completely wrecked—their clothes were rumpled, their eyes bloodshot, and they looked as if they hadn't slept in days.
You pulled your hand out of Danny’s grip with a weak, painful tug.
Danny’s head snapped up instantly. "Hey, hey, don't move. Don't move, sweetheart. You're safe. He's gone. Finch is in a maximum-security ward under twenty-four-hour guard. He’s never coming back."
Steve sat up, his eyes bright with tears. "You're safe, beautiful. We’re here."
You looked at them, your expression cold, your Omega heart guarded and walled off behind a fortress of pain. "Get out."
Steve flinched as if he’d been struck. "What?"
"Get out," you repeated, your voice a scratchy whisper, but filled with absolute steel. "I don't want you here."
"Sweetheart, please," Danny pleaded, his voice cracking, his scent turning desperate, pleading. "We know we messed up. We know we were cowards. Chin told us everything. We know why you hid it."
"You don't know anything," you said, tears finally leaking from the corners of your eyes, sliding down into your hair. "For two years... two years I sat in that office and watched you pretend I didn't exist. I watched you go home to other people because you were too proud, too scared to accept what we are. You rejected me. You left me unprotected. You let me believe I was broken."
"We were stupid," Steve said, his voice breaking completely as he dropped to his knees beside your bed, reaching out to touch your blanket, not daring to touch your skin without permission. "I was terrified, chosen. I thought a true bond would make me weak. I thought it would destroy what I built. I was a coward. I am so sorry. Please, let us fix this."
"You can't fix two years of rejection with an apology because I got hurt," you said, your jaw tightening despite the pain. "You're only here because your wolves went crazy when another Alpha touched me. That's biology, Steve. That’s not love. That’s not a choice."
Danny let out a ragged sob, bowing his head. "Then let us choose you now. No biology. No instincts. Just let us earn it. Let us show you."
You looked at the two powerful Alphas, reduced to weeping, desperate men at your bedside. Your Omega wanted to forgive them, wanted to open its arms and sink into their comforting warmth. But your human mind, your pride, your fractured soul remembered every night you spent alone, crying yourself to sleep while they were with their Betas.
"Fine," you whispered. "You want to earn it? You're going to work for it. You don't get to touch me. You don't get to scent me. You don't get to be my mates until I say so. You treat me like your colleague at work, and outside of work, you show up every single day until I believe you. And if you can't handle that, the transfer back to the mainland is still open."
"We'll do whatever it takes," Steve said instantly, wiping a tear from his cheek. "Whatever you want."
"Anything, kid," Danny whispered. "Just don't leave."
PART VIII: THE CONSUMMATION
Reader’s POV
It took six months.
Six months of Steve showing up at your apartment every morning with fresh coffee and breakfast, never crossing the threshold without an explicit invitation. Six months of Danny driving you to physical therapy, sitting in the waiting room for hours, talking to you about Grace, about his life, opening up his soul until he had no secrets left.
They cut ties with their Beta partners the day you woke up in the hospital, and they hadn't looked at another person since. They courted you the old way—the hard way—with patience, respect, and deep, profound devotion. They earned every inch of your trust back, piece by piece, until the walls around your heart finally crumbled.
Tonight, the air in your apartment was thick, heavy, and hot. The tropical storm outside was rattling the glass, but inside, the atmosphere was entirely dominated by the scent of jasmine, rain, pine, and cedarwood. The blockers were gone. Your scent was free, calling out to them, ripe and ready.
You stood in the center of your bedroom, wearing nothing but a soft silk robe. Steve and Danny stood by the door, their eyes dark, their breathing heavy, waiting for your command.
"Come here," you whispered.
They moved instantly, closing the distance between you like starving men finally presented with a feast. Steve’s large hands came up to frame your face, his thumbs gently wiping your cheeks, his hazel eyes burning with a fierce, worshipful heat.
"Are you sure?" Steve rasped, his voice a deep growl. "Tell us you're sure."
"I'm sure," you said. "Take me."
Danny groaned, pulling your body against his chest, his mouth crashing down onto yours. The kiss was deep, possessive, a desperate outpouring of two years of repressed desire. His tongue tangled with yours, tasting you, claiming you, while his hands slid down your back, gripping your hips and pulling you firmly against his hard length.
Steve didn't wait. His lips found your neck, his tongue tracing the line of your collarbone before his teeth gently grazed the sensitive skin over your scent gland. A high, needy whine escaped your throat, your legs turning to jelly.
Steve caught you, scooping you up into his massive arms and carrying you to the bed, pressing you down into the soft mattress. Danny was right behind him, stripping his shirt off, his muscular chest gleaming in the dim light.
They stripped your robe away, their eyes scanning your body with an expression of pure reverence. The scars from Finch's attack were still there—faint white lines on your ribs and arms—but as Steve’s warm lips kissed each and every one of them, the lingering trauma finally dissolved into the heat of the room.
"You are so beautiful," Danny murmured, his voice thick with emotion as he knelt between your legs, his fingers gently parting your thighs. You were slick, dripping, your Omega body entirely ready for them. He slid two fingers inside you, causing your back to arch, a loud gasp escaping your lips. "Look at you. So wet for us. Two years we wasted, sweetheart. I'm going to spend the rest of my life making it up to you."
"Danny... please," you whimpered, your fingers tangling in Steve’s short cropped hair as the Commander laid over you, his heavy chest pressing you down, his scent enveloping you like a thick blanket.
Steve lined himself up at your entrance, his Alpha pre-slick mixing with yours. He looked down into your eyes, his gaze locked onto yours. "Together," he whispered to Danny.
Steve pushed inside you in one long, agonizingly slow stroke. You screamed into the room, your fingers digging into his shoulders as your tight walls stretched to accommodate his massive size. He was stretching you to your absolute limit, filling you completely, his knots already beginning to swell slightly at the base.
Before you could fully process the overwhelming sensation of Steve inside you, Danny shifted, positioning himself at your heat from behind, entering your tight back entrance with a low, primal grunt.
The double penetration was intense, an absolute explosion of sensory overload. You cried out, your head tossing back against the pillows, your vision sparking with stars as the two Alphas filled you entirely, locking you between them. They moved in a devastating, synchronized rhythm—Steve driving deep and hard from above, his mouth capturing your screams, while Danny rocked against your backside, his hands gripping your waist, anchoring you to the bed.
“Steve! Danny! Oh god, yes, right there!” you shouted, your Omega completely losing control, your scent flaring into a blinding explosion of pure, unadulterated pleasure.
The friction was unbearable, pushing you over the edge within minutes. Your internal muscles clamped down tight, triggering a shattering, full-body orgasm that had you sobbing into Steve’s neck.
The tight clenching of your release broke the last of the Alphas' restraint. Steve let out a guttural, terrifying roar, his hips snapping forward as his knot fully expanded inside you, locking him deep within your womb. He came with a violent force, filling you with thick, hot ropes of his Alpha seed.
A second later, Danny stiffened against your back, his fingers digging deep into your hips, leaving bruises as his own knot swelled, locking him inside your back entrance. He let out a ragged, trembling groan, his semen pumping deep inside you, joining Steve’s in a complete, total claim.
For thirty minutes, the two Alphas remained locked inside you, their knots holding them fast as their venomous, sweet mating pheromones flooded your bloodstream, rewriting your biology, cementing the triad bond forever.
Steve rested his forehead against yours, his breathing slowing down, his arms wrapped securely around your waist. Danny buried his face in your hair, his arms holding you from behind, his heart beating a steady, comforting rhythm against your back.
You lay there, exhausted, sore, completely filled and claimed, but for the first time since you had stepped foot on the island of Oahu, you felt entirely safe. You felt entirely whole.
"We've got you," Steve whispered, kissing your eyelids. "We're not letting go."
"Never again," Danny agreed, his voice soft in the dark.
And as you drifted off to sleep, wrapped in the protective, overwhelming embrace of your two Alphas, you finally knew that the fragile ties that had broken you had been reforged into something unbreakable.
The morning light filtered through the tropical storm’s dissipating clouds, casting long, soft shadows across the bedroom. The air was heavy, thick with the scent of pine, cedar, and the overwhelming sweetness of jasmine and rain. It was the scent of a completed bond, a room saturated with the pheromones of two Alphas who had finally locked their souls to their Omega.
You woke up slowly, your body feeling heavier and more thoroughly used than it ever had in your life. There was a dull, throb of an ache between your thighs, a visceral reminder of the night's intensity. But underneath the physical soreness was a profound, deeply rooted sense of calm that you hadn't felt in two long years. Your Omega wolf, which had been pacing a caged cell in your mind for so long, was finally asleep, curled up and content.
You weren't alone.
Steve’s massive arm was draped over your waist, his heavy hand resting flat against your stomach, anchoring you to his chest. His breathing was deep and even, his face buried in the crook of your neck where his scent glands had pressed against yours all night. On your other side, Danny was curled against your back, one of his legs hooked over yours, his fingers loosely tangled in your hair. Even in sleep, their Alphas were maintaining a protective perimeter, boxing you in so securely that not even a draft could touch your skin.
As you shifted slightly, trying to ease a cramp in your leg, both men stiffened instantly.
Steve’s eyes blinked open, the hazel irises sharp and instantly alert before softening the moment they landed on you. Danny let out a low, gravelly grunt from behind, his grip tightening on your waist as he pulled you back against his chest.
"Don't move," Danny muttered, his voice thick with sleep, his breath warm against your shoulder blades. "Too early. Stay right there."
Steve leaned up on one elbow, looking down at you. The fierce, terrifying commander who could intimidate cartel bosses with a single glance looked entirely vulnerable. His hair was a wild mess, and his jaw was covered in a thick layer of dark stubble.
"How do you feel?" Steve asked, his voice low, vibrating right through the mattress. He reached up, his thumb gently tracing the faint, fading bruise on your cheekbone—the last remnant of Arthur Finch's attack. "Are you sore? Do you need anything?"
"I'm a little sore," you admitted, your voice scratchy. "But I'm okay."
Danny sat up then, shifting so he could look at your face. The typical restless energy that usually defined Detective Sergeant Williams was completely gone, replaced by a quiet, fierce devotion. "You’re more than a little sore, sweetheart. We locked you down for an hour. I’m going to go make some tea. And breakfast. Real breakfast, not the military cardboard Steve calls food."
"Hey," Steve protested, though there was no real bite to it. He leaned down and pressed a soft, lingering kiss to your forehead, his lips warm against your skin. "I can make eggs."
"You can burn eggs, Steven. There’s a difference," Danny shot back, though he was smiling as he slid out of the bed.
Without the clothes or the armor of their badges, the two men looked different. The heavy burden of the past six months—the guilt, the desperation, the exhausting work of earning back your trust—seemed to have lifted from their shoulders. They had been forgiven, but looking at them, you knew they would never let themselves forget the cost of their delay.
Steve watched Danny walk into the kitchen before turning his full attention back to you. He slid down the bed, pulling the sheet up to cover your shoulders, then tucked his head beneath your chin, inhaling deeply.
"I used to think that ignoring the bond was a form of control," Steve whispered against your skin, his hands smoothing over your hips under the blanket. "I thought if I didn't give in to the wolf, I was keeping the team safe. Keeping myself safe. But the night we found you in that apartment... when Chin told us what Finch did... I realized I hadn't controlled anything. I just left the most important part of my life completely defenseless."
You ran your fingers through his short hair, feeling the heavy, steady beat of his heart against your ribs. "You didn't leave me defenseless, Steve. I survived."
"You shouldn't have had to just survive," he murmured fiercely, his grip tightening. "Not when you have two Alphas who would tear the world apart for you. We’re never doing this apart again. You profile, you run the desk, you go into the field—whatever you want. But we go together. Every single time."
From the kitchen, the smell of sizzling bacon and brewing coffee began to drift into the room, cutting through the heavy musk of the mating pheromones. Danny returned a few minutes later, carrying a tray loaded with food, a sheepish but determined expression on his face.
He set the tray down on the nightstand and climbed back into bed, forcing Steve to shift so they could both sit against the headboard with you between them.
"Here," Danny said, handing you a mug of tea with a generous amount of honey. "Drink. Your throat sounds like you've been eating gravel." He looked at the marks on your neck—the deep, dark purple mating bites that both he and Steve had left over your scent glands. A flash of intense, primal satisfaction crossed his face. "Those look good on you, by the way. Let's see any forensic tech or mainland lunatic try to overlook who you belong to now."
You took a sip of the tea, warmth spreading through your chest. "You two are going to be completely insufferable at the office now, aren't you?"
Steve laughed, a clear, ringing sound that filled the small bedroom. "Unbearable. Chin and Kono are already complaining about the paperwork overlap. Lou took one look at us yesterday and told us he’s taking his vacation days early if we start scent-marking the smart table."
"Let him complain," Danny scoffed, leaning over to steal a piece of bacon from your plate, though he immediately offered you a piece of toast in return. "He didn't have to live with Steve’s brooding for two years. If I have to listen to this guy sigh over your files for one more day, I’m going to shoot myself in the foot just for the medical leave."
The banter was familiar, comfortable, and exactly what you needed to ground yourself after the intensity of the past twenty-four hours. The cracks in the foundation hadn't vanished overnight—there would still be moments where the memory of the rejection would sting, and moments where the trauma of the past would make you pull back. But as you sat between them, sharing food in the quiet aftermath of the storm, you knew the foundation was finally solid.
You leaned your head back against Steve’s chest, letting Danny take your hand under the covers, their combined warmth completely enveloping you.
"Good," you said, a small, genuine smile finally tugging at your lips. "Because you both have a lot of lost time to make up for."
Steve’s arms wrapped around you tighter, his lips pressing into your hair. "We’ve got a lifetime, chosen. We’re not going anywhere."
The transition back into the bullpen at Five-0 headquarters wasn’t subtle. Omega blockers were officially a thing of the past, and your scent—now heavily laced with the sharp, possessive undertones of two dominant Alphas—carried across the glass partition before you even stepped out of the elevator.
Lou Grover was the first to look up from his desk. He took one deep breath, pinched the bridge of his nose, and let out a long, theatrical sigh. "Oh, wonderful. The wonder twins finally grew a brain cell and shared it. Congratulations, kid, but if those two start growling at the mailman because he looked at you too long, I’m working from home."
"Good morning to you too, Lou," you smiled, setting your satchel down at your desk.
Behind you, Steve and Danny practically flanked you like a pair of Secret Service agents. Neither of them had their hands on you—they were keeping to the professional boundaries you’d laid down for the office—but their posture was entirely predatory. Steve was scanning the upper catwalks as if an assassin might drop through the skylight at any second, while Danny was glaring at a completely innocent IT tech who had dared to walk past your desk with a stack of hard drives.
"Danny, stop it," you murmured without looking up from your monitor. "He’s just doing his job."
"I don’t like the way he walks," Danny grumbled, crossing his arms and leaning his hip against your desk. "He’s got a sneaky gait. Like a guy who steals lunches from the breakroom fridge. I’m keeping an eye on him."
"He’s twenty-two and terrified of you, Danny. Leave him alone," you said, a small smirk playing on your lips.
Steve stepped up to the smart table, tapping the glass to clear the previous night’s patrol logs. "Alright, clear out the chatter. We’ve got a backlog of cases from HPD that need a profile before the Governor's briefing at noon. Let’s get to work."
The dynamic had shifted, but the efficiency hadn't dropped. If anything, the intense, agonizing static that had choked the air for the last two years was gone, replaced by a fluid, highly synchronized rhythm. When you spoke, Steve listened without the defensive posturing that used to mask his instinctual pull. When you pointed out a behavioral anomaly in a suspect’s timeline, Danny didn't dismiss it as 'mainland voodoo' anymore—he took notes, his blue eyes fixed on you with a quiet, intense pride that made your Omega pulse thrum.
By the time the clock hit 7:00 PM, the bullpen had emptied out. Lou had left early to catch his son's baseball game, and Chin and Kono had headed down to the North Shore for an evening surf.
You were wrapping up the final psychological evaluation report for the Governor’s office when the shadow of a broad-shouldered silhouette fell over your desk. You looked up to find Steve standing there, his tactical vest discarded, his navy blue uniform shirt unbuttoned at the collar.
"Everyone’s gone," he said softly, his voice dropping into that low, gravelly register he reserved only for behind closed doors.
"Just finishing the summary," you replied, clicking save on your screen.
Before you could stand, Danny walked out of his office, tossing his car keys in the air and catching them with a sharp click. "Excellent. Because if I spend another five minutes in this building, my stomach is going to start digesting itself. We’re going to Side Street Inn, we’re getting pork chops, and then we are going home."
You stood up, stretching your tight muscles, a small groan escaping your lips. The physical remnants of the bond's consummation from the weekend were mostly gone, replaced by a deep, comfortable warmth that sat right behind your ribs.
Steve reached out, his hand finally dropping onto the small of your back. The touch was firm, grounding, and instantly sent a wave of calm through your nervous system. He leaned down, his lips brushing against the shell of your ear. "My place tonight. Danny's already moved half his closet over anyway. The house is aired out, the security system is upgraded, and the bed is made."
"Is that an invitation or an order, Commander?" you teased, turning your head slightly so your nose brushed his jawline.
"An invitation," Steve murmured, his eyes darkening as his thumb stroked through the fabric of your shirt, right above your hip. "But I'm not above begging if you say no."
"Don't encourage him," Danny said, stepping into your personal space and taking your hand, his thumb rubbing over your knuckles. His scent flared—warm cedar and sharp spice—wrapping around you like a heavy coat. "He’s already insufferable. Come on. Let’s get out of here before HPD finds another body and ruins my night."
As the three of you walked out into the cool Hawaiian night, the glass doors sliding shut behind you, the weight of the past two years felt entirely distant. The scars on your skin were still there, and the memory of the rejection would take time to completely fade into the background, but as you climbed into the passenger seat of the Camaro with Steve in the back and Danny behind the wheel, you knew the triad was finally whole. You weren't a secret anymore. You weren't an obligation. You were home.
The fragile peace of the last week shattered on a Tuesday morning, proved by a single, high-stakes delivery that arrived not via the mailroom, but through the Governor’s personal courier.
It was a thick, cream-colored envelope addressed directly to you. No postage, just your name written in an elegant, looping cursive that made the hair on the back of your neck stand up. Inside was a single document: an official, expedited request for your temporary reassignment to the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit in Quantico, signed off by the Director himself and authorized by the mainland oversight committee.
Steve and Danny were standing at the smart table when you pulled the document out. Within seconds, the mood in the bullpen shifted from efficient calm to an suffocating, high-alert tension. The Alphas didn't even need to read the paper; they read the sudden, icy spike of fear in your scent.
"What is that?" Steve asked, his voice instantly dropping into his commanding officer register. He crossed the distance between his desk and yours in three long strides, his hazel eyes locking onto the federal seal at the top of the page.
"Quantico," you whispered, your throat tight. "The Director is invoking the emergency protocol clause in my original transfer contract. Because of the... the security breach with Finch, Internal Affairs and the BAU oversight board have determined that Hawaii is an unsafe environment for a high-value federal profiler."
"Unsafe?" Danny’s voice cracked, a harsh, defensive bark that echoed off the glass walls. He threw his hands into the air, his scent instantly turning sour with defensive rage. "Unsafe! We took down Finch! We took down the tech, Vance! The guy is in a maximum-security psychiatric cage on the mainland, and we are currently running the tightest security perimeter on this entire godforsaken island! Who the hell do they think they are?"
"Danny, it’s bureaucratic cleanup," you tried to explain, standing up to face them, but your own Omega instincts were warring inside you. The bond was fresh, the mating marks on your neck still a deep, bruised pink under your collar. The thought of being forced onto a plane back to Virginia made your stomach roll with nausea. "They look at the data. I was targeted twice in three months by two separate Alpha predators. On paper, Five-0 failed to protect a federal asset."
"Asset?" Steve growled. The word triggered something feral in him. His chest heaved, his pupils dilating until his eyes looked almost entirely black. The dominant Alpha wolf in him, already on high alert since the night you were hurt, was rejecting the entire concept of the federal government trying to tear his mate away. "You aren't an asset. You're Five-0. You belong here. With us."
"Steve, look at the signature," you said, pointing a trembling finger at the bottom of the page. "The Governor already cleared the cross-jurisdictional authorization. If I don't report to Honolulu International by Thursday morning, I’m in breach of federal contract. They'll strip my credentials."
"Let them try," Steve hissed, turning on his heel and grabbing his phone from the smart table. "I'm calling the Governor. Right now."
"Steve, wait—"
"No! No waiting!" Danny yelled, stepping into your space, his hands gripping your shoulders firmly but gently, his scent projecting a chaotic mix of terror and possessive fury. "He's right. They think they can just send a piece of paper over the Pacific and haul you back to a desk in Virginia after what we just went through? After what you just went through? Absolutely not. I will personally tie myself to the landing gear of that plane before I let them take you out of this office."
The bullpen was completely silent. Lou, Chin, and Kono stood near the breakroom, watching the explosion unfold but wisely keeping their distance. The raw, unfiltered pheromones of two fully bonded, territorial Alphas defending their mate from a systemic threat was not something anyone wanted to intercept.
"Commander, Detective," Chin said quietly, stepping forward just enough to be heard without challenging them. "The Governor’s liaison is already on the line. She said the Governor is expecting your call, but she warned that Washington is putting immense pressure on the state. The Department of Justice is threatening to pull Five-0's federal funding if we interfere with a protective custody transfer."
Steve didn't care about the funding. He didn't care about the task force, the politics, or his standing with the Navy. He slammed his phone against his ear, his jaw clenched so tight the muscle was ticking violently.
"Governor," Steve barked into the receiver, his voice tight with an icy, dangerous rage. "It’s McGarrett. We need to talk about the BAU transfer. And you're going to want to listen very carefully before I come up to your office myself."
Danny kept his eyes locked on yours, his breathing ragged as his thumbs stroked over the lapels of your jacket, trying desperately to smooth down the panic radiating from your scent glands. "We're not letting them do this," he whispered fiercely, his blue eyes bright with a mixture of anger and absolute dread. "We just got you back. We just fixed this. I don't care if the President himself shows up on the tarmac—you're staying right here."
But as you looked past Danny at Steve, who was currently shouting down the highest elected official in the state, the old, analytical profiler in your mind couldn't help but see the trap. The federal government didn't care about true bonds, biology, or the complicated love story of a triad task force. To them, you were a liability. And the more Steve and Danny fought the system, the more they proved to Washington that their instincts made them a danger to the very laws they were sworn to protect.
The tension in the room didn’t just simmer; it toxicified. Steve’s conversation with the Governor ended not with a resolution, but with the violent clatter of his phone slamming onto the smart table. The screen cracked across the middle, a perfect metaphor for the fractured stability of the room.
"He hung up on me," Steve said, his voice terrifyingly quiet. The frantic, explosive rage from moments before had hardened into something far more dangerous: a cold, tactical lockdown. "The DOJ is already sending a transport team. They land tomorrow at dawn to escort you to the airport. The Governor said his hands are tied. He can’t override a federal internal security mandate when a task force member has been compromised twice."
"Compromised?" Danny let out a bitter, mocking laugh, spinning around to face Steve. "Compromised! That is a beautiful bureaucratic word for 'we let an institutional psychopath slip through the cracks on the mainland and now we're blaming the local cops.' It's a classic cover-your-ass maneuver, Steve!"
"I know what it is, Danny!" Steve snapped back, the dominance in his voice flaring so high that even Danny’s Alpha bristled, the two men momentarily locking eyes in a silent, high-stress challenge for dominance.
"Stop it! Both of you, just stop!"
Your voice broke through the thick cloud of pheromones. You stepped between them, forcing yourself to look at both of them. Your heart was pounding against your ribs, your Omega instincts screaming at the impending separation, but the BAU profiler in you—the cold, calculating part that had survived Arthur Finch—was already running the numbers.
"If you fight the federal transport team, what happens?" you asked, looking directly at Steve. "You get arrested for obstructing justice. Five-0 gets disbanded. Danny loses custody of Grace because he’s facing federal felony charges. Is that what you want? To blow up your entire lives to prove a point to a committee in D.C.?"
"We're not letting you go back there," Steve said, his jaw rigid. "They want to put you in a rubber room in Virginia and study you like a broken piece of equipment until they decide if you're 'fit for duty.' You think I don't know how the bureau works? They'll strip your field status. You'll be a ghost in a basement."
"And if I stay here illegally, I’m a fugitive," you pointed out, your voice cracking as a single tear escaped, cutting through your professional facade. "For two years, I wanted you to look at me. I wanted you to choose me. And now that you finally have, the universe is pulling the rug out from under us. But you cannot fight the Department of Justice with tactical gear and a bad attitude, Steve. It doesn't work that way."
Danny stepped closer, his fierce, protective Alpha facade dropping, leaving behind a man who looked thoroughly terrified. He reached out, his fingers lightly brushing against the mating bite on your neck, his thumb trembling. "There's got to be a loophole. A legal delay. Chin, what about the local field office? Can we pull a jurisdictional stall?"
Chin stepped forward, looking grim. "The paperwork is airtight, Danny. The only way to override an emergency federal reassignment based on personal safety is if the asset is currently embedded in an active, top-secret local investigation that cannot be handed off. But our docket is clear of federal crossovers right now."
Silence fell over the bullpen, heavy and suffocating.
You looked at the two men who had spent the last six months crawling on their knees to earn your forgiveness. The men who had finally claimed you, whose scents were now a permanent part of your skin. The thought of getting on that plane tomorrow morning felt like having your lungs ripped out through your throat.
"Go home," you whispered, looking down at your desk. "I need to pack my things. If I'm leaving tomorrow, I have to clear out my apartment."
"No," Steve said instantly. "We’re going with you."
"No, Steve. I need a minute," you pleaded, your eyes bright with unshed tears. "Please. Just give me two hours alone to process this. Then come to the apartment. Both of you."
Danny looked like he wanted to argue, his blue eyes scanning your face for any sign of deception, but he saw the sheer exhaustion in the lines around your eyes. He let out a ragged breath and nodded. "Two hours. Not a minute more. We'll be at your place at ten."
Two hours later, the rain had returned to Honolulu, a steady, depressing drone against the glass of your apartment window. You hadn't packed a single box. Instead, you were sitting on the floor of your living room, your back against the sofa, staring at the blank television screen.
The lock clicked. The front door swung open, and Steve and Danny walked in.
They didn't look like Five-0 anymore. They looked like two Alphas who had spent the last 120 minutes realizing their world was about to end. Steve looked entirely hollowed out, and Danny’s scent was so thick with grief it made your eyes water.
Without a word, Steve walked across the room, dropped to his knees in front of you, and buried his face in your lap. His massive arms wrapped around your waist, gripping you so tightly it almost hurt. A low, desperate whine escaped his throat—a sound a dominant Alpha should never make, a sound of absolute defeat.
"Don't go," he choked out against your thigh. "Please. We'll figure something out. I'll resign. I'll leave the task force. We can go to the mainland together. We can hide in the woods. Anything. Just don't let them take you."
Danny knelt beside him, his hands instantly finding yours, squeezing your fingers until his knuckles were white. "He's serious, sweetheart. We talked about it in the car. If they take you, we go with you. Five-0 can burn. The Governor can find someone else to clean up his beaches. We are a triad. A true bond doesn't survive a continent of distance. It'll kill us, and it'll kill you."
You looked down at them, your heart fracturing completely. You realized then that they weren't fighting for their pride anymore. They weren't fighting because their wolves were territorial. They loved you. Purely, entirely, and without the safety net of their badges.
"You can't resign, Steve," you whispered, running your hand through his hair, your tears finally spilling over. "And Danny, you have Grace. You can't leave Hawaii."
"Then we fight them on the tarmac," Danny said, his voice dropping into a dangerous, dark growl. "Let them call the National Guard. I don't care."
You pulled them both closer, shifting until the three of you were curled together on the floor in the dark apartment. The dramatic weight of the impending dawn hung over you like a guillotine, but for tonight, inside the small perimeter of your living room, the world hadn't ended yet. You breathed in their combined scents—pine, cedar, rain—and held on, knowing that whatever happened when the sun rose, the Alphas who had once rejected you were now ready to burn the world down just to keep you warm.
The dawn didn’t break; it bled through the gray Hawaiian mist, heavy and ominous. By 5:00 AM, the low, mechanical rumble of a federal transport SUV idling at the curb echoed up to your second-story window.
Inside the apartment, nobody had slept. The three of you were still on the floor, a tangled knot of limbs and heavy, suffocating pheromones. When the sharp, double-knock rattled the front door, Steve’s entire body went rigid. His Alpha surged, a low, vibration traveling through his chest that felt less like a man and more like a landmine waiting for a tripwire.
"Stay behind me," Steve ordered, his voice raw and scraping. He stood up, his posture shifting instantly into that of a Navy SEAL preparing to breach a hostile compound.
Danny was already on his feet, his fingers twitching near his holster, his face pale and twisted into a mask of pure, unadulterated venom. "Two minutes," he muttered to the door. "Give us two godforsaken minutes or I swear to God I’ll charge you with federal harassment."
You stood up slowly, your knees shaking. The mating marks on your neck felt like they were burning, a psychosomatic reaction to the sheer panic flooding your nervous system. You opened the door.
Standing on the threshold wasn't a squad of faceless bureaucrats. It was Special Agent Vance Miller, a senior BAU handler you had worked with in Quantico, flanked by two armed federal marshals. Miller looked at you, then his eyes flicked to Steve, then to Danny. He took a short step back, his nostrils flaring slightly as the combined, aggressive stench of two territorial Alphas hit him like a physical blow.
"It’s time," Miller said quietly, keeping his hands visibly away from his belt. "The transport is waiting. Your credentials have been suspended pending the safety review in Virginia."
"She isn't going anywhere," Steve said. He didn't raise his weapon, but he stepped directly into Miller’s space, his massive frame completely blocking the doorway. The sheer gravity of his Alpha presence made the two marshals instinctively shift their weight. "You tell the Director that Five-0 is exercising state-level executive immunity. The asset is vital to an ongoing counter-terrorism investigation on Oahu."
"Commander McGarrett, don't do this," Miller sighed, looking genuinely exhausted. "The Governor already signed the waiver. If you obstruct this transport, the marshals have orders to detain you. Do you really want to tear this island apart over a standard reassignment?"
"It’s not standard!" Danny yelled, pushing his way to the front, his finger jabbed directly into Miller’s chest. "You think this is a desk swap? You’re tearing a true-mated Omega away from their Alphas! You know what that does to a bond this fresh? It’s psychological torture, you bureaucratic hack! They’ll be in a psych ward within a month, and Steve and I will burn down every building between here and Quantico to get to them!"
Miller blinked, his professional composure cracking for a fraction of a second as he looked at the raw, bleed-through of emotion in Danny's eyes. He looked back at you. "Is this true? A true bond?"
"Yes," you whispered, your voice trembling but clear. "It’s true."
Miller closed his folder, looking down at the floor for a long, heavy moment. The rain outside seemed to get louder, filling the silence. When he looked up, his expression hadn't softened, but there was a distinct, calculated shift in his eyes.
"The Department of Justice doesn't care about biology," Miller said bluntly. "But the Bureau does care about assets becoming completely unstable in federal custody. If I take you on that plane in this state, your Omega is going to trigger a severe separation shock. You'll be useless to the profiling pool, and I’ll have a logistical nightmare on my hands."
Steve didn't back down. "Then leave them."
"I can't just leave them, Commander. I have a federal warrant," Miller said. Then, he looked around the small apartment, his eyes lingering on your unpacked satchel. "However... the warrant specifies that the asset must be transported via federal custody due to an active, unmitigated threat level on the island."
You frowned, your profiler mind instantly catching the subtle emphasis he placed on the words active threat. "Arthur Finch is in custody. The threat is mitigated."
"Is it?" Miller asked, raising an eyebrow. He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a fresh, encrypted data drive, holding it out to you. "HPD found a body in the harbor three hours ago. A John Doe, Alpha, found wrapped in plastic with a ring of salt around his neck. The local coroner thinks it's a copycat. I think Finch had an accomplice on the island that we missed during the initial sweep."
Steve’s eyes narrowed, his tactical brain instantly locking into gear. "An active serial killer targeting the island. That means the jurisdiction stays local until the threat is neutralized."
"Exactly," Miller said, his voice dropping to a whisper. "The paperwork will take approximately ninety days to clear through the DOJ oversight committee. If Five-0 happens to be actively tracking a serial target that directly involves their primary profiler... the federal transport order is automatically stayed until the case is closed or cleared."
Danny let out a breath that sounded like a sob, his hands dropping to his sides as the crushing weight of the execution order suddenly lifted. He looked at Steve, then at you, a wild, disbelieving hope in his eyes.
"Ninety days," Steve growled, the corner of his mouth twitching into a grim, determined smirk. "We’ll find the bastard in forty-eight hours."
"Make it thirty-six, Commander," Miller said, turning back toward the stairs. "Because the moment that committee realizes I gave you a loophole, they’ll send an entire division to haul all three of you in. You have until tomorrow morning to log the official case file into the federal database."
The door closed, the heavy boots of the marshals fading down the stairwell.
The silence that followed was entirely different. The terror was gone, replaced instantly by a sharp, electric surge of adrenaline and a feral, unified purpose. The triad wasn't being torn apart; the system had just given you a weapon, and you were going to use it.
Steve turned around, his face completely changed, the lethal commander back in full force. He reached out, his large hand grabbing the back of your neck, pulling you into his chest with a fierce, crushing desperation. He buried his face in your hair, inhaling your scent until he was shaking. "You're staying," he whispered fiercely against your skin. "You're staying right here."
Danny moved in from behind, wrapping his arms around both of you, his forehead resting against your shoulder blade as his scent spiked with a sharp, possessive heat. "We’ve got a killer to catch, sweetheart," he murmured, his voice gravelly and dark. "And then we're going to teach D.C. exactly what happens when they try to touch what belongs to us."
The smart table at Five-0 headquarters didn't just display the evidence of the new crime scene; it felt like the nerve center of a war room. The glowing blue light illuminated the grim reality of the John Doe found in the harbor. On screen, the heavy plastic wrapping glistened under the coroner's flashbulbs, and the stark white ring of coarse salt encircling the victim’s neck stood out like an accusation.
"His name was Marcus Vance," Chin said, tapping the screen to bring up a driver's license photo. "Older brother to Samuel Vance, the forensic tech you took down in Kailua. HPD found him washed up near Pier 19. Coroner says he was dead before he hit the water. Asphyxiation, preceded by blunt force trauma."
"A family affair," Danny muttered, pacing the perimeter of the table with a cup of coffee he hadn't touched. His Alpha energy was still tightly wound, a lingering aftershock from the dawn standoff with the feds. "The kid, Samuel, goes crazy trying to 'purify' the island for our resident genius here, and when he gets locked up, big brother steps in to finish the job?"
"No," you said, stepping up to the table. The exhaustion from the sleepless night was gone, replaced by the cold, razor-sharp focus of your BAU training. You didn't blink as you zoomed in on the bruising around the victim’s neck. "Look at the salt. Samuel Vance placed his salt carefully, in perfect, geometric rings. It was a ritual of protection and isolation. This ring is messy. It's frantic."
Steve leaned over the glass, his broad shoulders casting a shadow across the digital file. "An amateur trying to mimic the original?"
"Worse. It’s a distraction," you explained, looking between Steve and Danny. "Marcus Vance didn't kill anyone. He was murdered by someone who wanted us to think Samuel’s network was still active. Miller gave us a ninety-day loophole based on the assumption of an active threat. Whoever left this body knows the federal system. They knew exactly what kind of crime scene would force the DOJ to stay the transfer order."
Danny stopped pacing, his blue eyes widening. "Wait a minute. Are you telling me someone killed a guy just to keep you on the island?"
"Or to keep you two from burning down the Department of Justice," you countered quietly. "Look at the timing. The body was dumped three hours before Miller arrived at my apartment. The tip to HPD came from an anonymous routing server in Virginia. Quantico."
Steve’s jaw tightened, a low, dangerous rumble vibrating in his chest. "Miller."
"He knew his bosses were making a mistake by pulling me," you said. "He couldn't break protocol openly, but he could create a sandbox where we have to fight to keep the case local. He sacrificed an unindicted co-conspirator from Samuel’s files to tie our hands to the island. It’s a setup, but it’s a setup that keeps us together."
"Then we play the hand we’re dealt," Steve barked, his eyes flashing with a predatory light. "Chin, look into Marcus Vance’s phone records for any incoming calls from the mainland over the last forty-eight hours. Kono, get down to Pier 19 and see if any security feeds caught the drop vehicle. Danny, you and I are going to the morgue."
"I'm coming with you," you said, reaching for your jacket.
"No," Steve said, his voice dropping into that firm, unyielding register. He stepped around the table, his hand finding the back of your neck under your collar, his thumb stroking the sensitive skin right over your mating bite. The heavy scent of pine and leather enveloped you, grounding your frantic thoughts instantly. "You stay here where it's secure. Lou is outside the door. You build the profile on Marcus Vance from the data we have. We don't risk you in the open until we know exactly who is pulling the strings."
Danny stepped up on your other side, his hand squeezing your hip gently. "Listen to the big brute for once, sweetheart. We just pulled your feet out of the fire with the feds. Let us do the legwork. You stay in the castle."
You looked at both of them, seeing the fierce, uncompromising protectiveness in their eyes. For two years, you had craved this kind of solidarity, and now that it was yours, it felt like an impenetrable wall. "Thirty-six hours," you reminded them. "That's all the time we have before the D.C. oversight committee catches on."
"Thirty-six hours is a lifetime," Steve murmured, pressing a quick, fierce kiss to your temple before pulling away. "Let's move."
By midnight, the bullpen was entirely quiet save for the hum of the smart table. The data was beginning to line up, but the picture it painted was disturbing. Marcus Vance hadn't been killed by a faceless bureaucrat; his phone records showed three encrypted calls originating from a burner cell located within a five-mile radius of the maximum-security psychiatric facility where Arthur Finch was currently housed.
You sat at your desk, massaging your temples, the puzzle pieces clicking into place with a sickening thud. Finch wasn't behind bars; he was running a secondary network from inside the walls, using the bureaucracy of the mainland to manipulate the board. The transfer order wasn't an accident. He wanted you back in Virginia. He wanted you in a controlled, clinical environment where Five-0 couldn't reach you. And Miller’s 'loophole' might have just walked you straight into a secondary trap.
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime.
Steve and Danny walked out, both of them splattered with rain and smelling of sulfur and wet asphalt. Steve’s face was grim, his knuckles bruised.
"We found the drop vehicle," Danny said, tossing a bloody tactical knife onto the smart table. "And the driver. One of Finch's old cult followers from the mainland. He was waiting near the harbor to see if Five-0 took the bait."
Steve walked straight to your desk, pulling you up from your chair and folding you into his arms without a word. He held you so tightly you could hear the frantic, rhythmic hammering of his heart. "The profile was right," he whispered into your hair. "It’s Finch. He’s trying to force the feds to extract you because he can’t break through our perimeter here."
You pulled back slightly, looking up into his hazel eyes, then at Danny, who was leaning against the desk, looking exhausted but fiercely resolved. "If we stay here, we fight his network on our terms," you said. "But if I get on that plane, I'm walking into his territory."
Danny reached out, his fingers tangling with yours, his blue eyes burning with an ancient, instinctual fire. "Then we don't get on the plane. And we don't wait for ninety days. We close this case tonight."
Steve released you, his hand dropping to his holster as he looked out the dark glass windows toward the city. The triad bond was humming between the three of you, a high-frequency current of pure, unadulterated intent. The Alphas who had once denied the bond were now entirely ruled by it, and as the storm raged outside, you knew that whoever was coming for you would have to go through the teeth and claws of the two most dangerous men on the island.
Three months after the storm of Arthur Finch’s final network was thoroughly dismantled, the silence in Steve’s house on the beach was thick, warm, and entirely peaceful. The Department of Justice had finally rescinded the transfer order, forced to concede that the triad of Five-0 was a permanent, highly classified localized unit.
The morning sun was rising over the Pacific, casting a brilliant gold light across the hardwood floors of the master bedroom. The sliding glass doors were wide open, letting the rhythmic sound of the waves and the salty sea breeze wash over the massive bed.
You sat on the edge of the mattress, wrapped in one of Steve’s oversized linen shirts, staring down at the small plastic stick in your hands. Two distinct, dark pink lines stared back at you.
Your breath hitched. Inside your chest, your Omega wolf didn't panic; it purred, a deep, resonant rumble of absolute completion. The chemical shift in your body had been subtle over the last two weeks—a slight change in your appetite, a bone-deep tiredness that profiling couldn't account for, and a sudden, sharp alteration in your scent that had been driving your Alphas entirely crazy without them realizing why.
The bathroom door squeaked open. Steve walked out, a towel slung low around his hips, his damp hair catching the morning light. On the other side of the bed, Danny stirred, his blue eyes blinking open as he pulled a pillow over his head to block out the sun.
"Hey," Steve murmured, his brow furrowing slightly as he caught the sudden, sharp spike of emotion in your scent. He crossed the room in two strides, dropping to his knees on the floor in front of you. He placed his large, warm hands on your thighs, looking up into your eyes with instant, fierce protectiveness. "What is it? What’s wrong?"
Danny dragged the pillow off his face, sitting up instantly, his Alpha alert. "Sweetheart? You smell... different. Like sweet cream and heavy rain. What's going on?"
You didn't say a word. You simply turned the plastic stick around and held it out between them.
Steve froze. His hazel eyes locked onto the two pink lines, his pupils dilating instantly. For a man who had faced down terrorists, cartels, and rogue federal agencies without flinching, he looked completely paralyzed. His hands on your thighs began to tremble slightly.
Danny scrambled across the mattress, leaning over your shoulder to look down at the stick. He let out a sharp, ragged breath, his jaw dropping. "Oh. Oh, wow. Steve... look at that. Those are... that’s two lines. That’s a definitive positive."
"I see it, Danny," Steve choked out, his voice dropping into a rough, emotional whisper. He looked up from the stick to your face, his eyes bright with unshed tears. "Are you... we’re..."
"We're having a baby," you whispered, a tear finally sliding down your cheek, a bright, joyous laugh escaping your throat. "A pup."
The reaction from both Alphas was instantaneous and primitive. Steve didn't just hug you; he buried his face straight into your abdomen, his massive arms wrapping around your hips, a low, rumbling vibrate erupting from his chest. It was the deep, instinctual purr of an Alpha claiming his growing family, his scent flaring into a thick, suffocating cloud of pure, protective pine and leather.
Danny was right behind him, throwing his arms around your shoulders from behind, his lips pressing fierce, desperate kisses into the crook of your neck, right over the dark purple mating marks that had permanently claimed you as theirs. "A pup," Danny breathed against your skin, his voice cracking with an intense, overwhelming joy. "We're going to have a baby. Grace is going to be a big sister. Oh, god, Steve, we’re going to be fathers again."
"I've got you," Steve murmured against the fabric of your shirt, his hands sliding up to cup your stomach with a reverence that made your heart ache. "We've got both of you. Nothing is ever going to touch this family. Never again."
You leaned back into Danny’s chest, your fingers tangling in Steve’s damp hair as the two Alphas completely enveloped you in their warmth, their scents, and their fierce, uncompromising devotion.
Two years ago, you had arrived on the island broken, rejected, and hiding behind federal armor. You had fought through the teeth of predators, the cold indifference of bureaucracy, and the stubborn pride of the two men holding you now. But as you sat in the golden morning light, wrapped in the unbreakable circle of your triad, you knew the scars of the past had finally been rewritten. You were no longer just a profiler, an asset, or a secret. You were the center of their universe, and your family was finally whole.
The smell of burning toast was what finally broke the quiet reverence of the bedroom.
Danny was the first to snap out of the pack-trance. He sniffed the air, his blue eyes widening in sudden, frantic realization. "Steven. Tell me you turned off the broiler before you went into the shower."
Steve didn't move his face from your stomach, his arms tightening just a fraction. "I thought you turned it off."
"I was asleep, you giant Neanderthal! I was sleeping off a twelve-hour stakeout while you were busy playing Navy SEAL in the bathroom! It’s burning! The kitchen is going to look like Pearl Harbor if you don't move your oversized rear end right now!"
Steve groaned, a long, dramatic sound that vibrated right against your hip, before he finally pulled away. He tossed the damp towel onto the floor, completely unbothered by his state of undress, and rushed out the door toward the kitchen, his bare feet slapping loudly against the hardwood.
Danny let out a ragged sigh, sliding down the pillows until his chest was pressed against your back, his arms locking around your waist. His face buried into the crook of your neck, his teeth lightly grazing the edge of his mating mark—not to hurt, but to soothe, his scent pumping out thick waves of warm cedar to calm the residual flutter of your pulse.
"A pup," he whispered against your skin, the manic irritation from seconds ago completely melting into something soft and incredibly fragile. "We’re really doing this, huh?"
"We're doing this," you said, resting your hands over his forearms. "Are you ready for the five-mile radius restriction Steve is going to place around my desk?"
"Five miles? Sweetheart, you're optimistic," Danny muttered with a soft chuckle. "He's going to build a bulletproof glass cage around your office and hire a personal taster for your lunch orders. Lou is going to quit. He’s going to walk right out the door the first time Steve growls because someone dropped a stapler too loud near your workspace."
A loud, metallic clatter echoed from the kitchen, followed by Steve cursing loudly in Hawaiian, then the sharp beep-beep-beep of the smoke detector.
"See?" Danny sighed, kissing your shoulder. "Incompetent. The man can dismantle a bomb with a hairpin but he can't manage a slice of sourdough."
You laughed, the sound bright and clear, completely clearing out the last shadows of the dark months that lay behind you. You turned in Danny's embrace, looking at his face—the fine lines around his eyes, the deep blue of his irises that looked at you with nothing but absolute, worshipful adoration. The man who had once stood across a bullpen and denied the very breath in his lungs to keep from acknowledging you was now holding you like you were made of spun glass.
Steve walked back into the room a minute later, holding a plate of severely blackened toast and two perfectly unburned poached eggs. He had managed to throw on a pair of grey sweatpants, his hair sticking up in wild spikes from the steam of the kitchen.
"The detector is off," he announced proudly, setting the plate down on your lap before climbing back onto the mattress. He wedged his massive frame right into your side, his shoulder broad and solid against yours. "Eat. Both of you."
"Steven, this is charcoal," Danny said, lifting a piece of the black bread with two fingers. "You're trying to give our pregnant mate carbon poisoning on day one."
"It's fine, the eggs are perfect," you intervened, smiling as you took a forkful. The taste was rich, warm, and exactly what your shifting biology was suddenly craving.
The two Alphas watched you eat with a intensity that would have been intimidating to anyone else, but to your Omega, it felt like a heavy, protective shield. The bond between the three of you was no longer a raw, bleeding thing born of trauma and defensive fury. It had settled into the marrow of your bones—steady, quiet, and completely unbreakable.
"We need to tell Grace," Danny said softly after a moment, his hand smoothing over your knee under the sheet. "She’s been asking when you’re officially moving the rest of your books into the house anyway. She’s going to lose her mind."
"We'll tell her tonight," Steve agreed, his large hand coming up to rest over yours, his thumb rubbing small, soothing circles into your skin. He looked at you, his hazel eyes clear and filled with a peace you hadn't seen since the day you arrived on the mainland transfer. "And tomorrow, we log the paperwork with the Governor. No more field duty for the next six months. You're the lead analyst from the desk, and Danny and I are your personal security detail."
"I can still do field sweeps, Steve," you protested lightly, though the thought of a quiet desk and a warm office actually sounded incredibly appealing.
"No," both Alphas said in perfect, unyielding unison.
Danny grinned, leaning forward to steal a piece of your egg before you could stop him. "See? Total lockdown. Welcome to the triad, kid. You're stuck with us."
You looked at the two of them—the commander and the detective, the two Alphas who had once broken your heart and then spent every waking hour rebuilding it from the floor up. You leaned your head against Steve’s shoulder, letting Danny pull your legs over his lap, the golden Hawaiian sun completely filling the room with warmth.
The fragile ties had finally held. You were safe, you were claimed, and the home you had spent years looking for was currently arguing over who got to wash the breakfast dishes.
By noon, the bedroom had been abandoned for the shaded comfort of the wrap-around lanai. The heat of the Hawaiian sun was fierce, but the steady trade winds rolling off the Pacific kept the porch cool. Steve sat on the heavy wooden lounger, his long legs stretched out, while you sat between them, your back pressed firmly against his solid chest. His large hands were laced loosely over your flat stomach, his thumbs tracing slow, repetitive patterns over the linen of his shirt.
Danny was pacing the edge of the deck, a legal pad in one hand and a pen in the other, his reading glasses perched on the edge of his nose. He looked like he was preparing for a federal trial, his brow furrowed as he scribbled furiously.
"Alright, let's talk logistics," Danny said, pointing the pen at Steve. "First of all, the Camaro is out. It’s a death trap. There is no way a standard rear-facing infant seat is fitting in the back of a two-door muscle car without me throwing my back out every time I try to secure the latch. We need an SUV. A real one. Something with a high safety rating and sensible fuel economy."
Steve let out a low rumble against your spine, a sound of pure disdain. "I am not driving a minivan, Danny."
"Who said anything about a minivan? I’m talking about a mid-size crossover, Steven! Something with side-curtain airbags and crumple zones that don't involve your knees acting as the bumper! And don't give me that look. You have a child on the way. The tactical truck stays in the Five-0 garage unless we're breaching a cartel compound."
"The truck has reinforced steel plates," Steve countered, his grip tightening just a fraction around your waist, his scent shifting into something territorial. "It’s the safest vehicle on the island."
"It doesn't have a cup holder that fits a bottle warmer, you absolute lunatic," Danny shot back, though the edge of his mouth was twitching. He looked at you over the top of his glasses, his expression softening instantly. "Tell him he’s being ridiculous, sweetheart. Back me up here."
"He's right, Steve," you murmured, shifting slightly to look up at Steve’s jawline. "The truck is too loud. It'll wake the baby."
Steve went entirely still. The tactical argument died instantly in his throat, replaced by a soft, almost sheepish look that always took you by surprise. "The baby," he repeated, the word still tasting new and heavy on his tongue. He leaned down, his lips pressing into the crook of your neck, right against the scent gland that was currently broadcasting your news to the entire universe. "Fine. We look at crossovers. But it’s getting a V8 engine."
"Deal," Danny muttered, crossing something off his list with a small smirk. He walked over, dropping the legal pad onto the small wicker table, and sat on the edge of the lounger by your feet. He reached out, his hand wrapping around your ankle, his fingers warm against your skin. "We need to talk to Chin and Kono before the morning shift tomorrow. If we don't clear the air about the desk restriction, Kono is going to think you're benching her for field leadership."
"Chin already knows something is up," you said, resting your head back against Steve’s shoulder. "He looked at me yesterday before we left the office and asked if I was changing my laundry detergent. My scent is overriding the suppression blocks I used to wear."
"Good," Steve growled softly. "Let them smell it. Let the whole island know."
"Steven, control the wolf, please, it’s Sunday," Danny sighed, though he reached up and placed his hand over Steve’s, his palm resting right above your navel. The two Alphas’ scents—the deep, rich pine of Steve and the sharp, comforting cedar of Danny—tangled together in the air, creating a thick, invisible barrier around the porch.
For two years, the space between the three of you had been defined by what wasn't being said. The heavy silence of the bullpen, the averted eyes when a casual touch lasted too long, the toxic guilt of their denial. Now, the space was filled with the mundane, beautiful chaos of a family in the making.
"We're going to need a bigger dining table," Steve said quietly, his eyes tracking a sailboat cutting through the blue water of the bay. "The one in the dining room only has four chairs. When Grace is here, and the baby... and if the team comes over..."
"We'll build one," Danny said, looking at Steve with a rare, genuine smile. "You’ve got enough scrap koa wood in the garage to build a battleship. We'll make it a project. Before the third trimester."
You closed your eyes, listening to them plan, the rhythmic sound of the waves providing the perfect background to their bickering. The scars from Arthur Finch were hidden under the white linen shirt, and the memory of the mainland transfer was nothing but a stack of closed files in a federal archive. You were tethered to the island now, not by a contract or a Governor’s mandate, but by the deep, pulsing life growing inside you and the two Alphas who had finally stopped running from the dark to hold you in the light.
The peaceful domesticity of the lanai lasted exactly until your first official prenatal appointment at Queen’s Medical Center three weeks later.
Because of the high-profile nature of Five-0 and the lingering security flags on your file, the appointment was scheduled in a private wing after hours. Naturally, Steve and Danny had turned the doctor’s visit into a tactical operation. Steve had personally vetted the ultrasound technician, and Danny had spent the forty-five-minute drive from the beach house lecturing Steve on the proper way to install a medical-grade air purifier in the nursery.
Now, you were lying on the examination table, the cool, clear gel being smoothed over your abdomen by Dr. Jennifer Alana, a seasoned Beta physician who had worked with Five-0 on several sensitive cases.
Steve was standing on your left, his massive hand holding yours so tightly his knuckles were turning white. Danny was on your right, leaning so far over the monitor his glasses were practically touching the screen. The air in the small room was thick with the Alphas' anxiety—a sharp, electric ozone scent that had Dr. Alana raising an amused eyebrow.
"Relax, boys," Dr. Alana said, her voice a calm, practiced soothe. "The heartbeats are strong, the hormone panels look excellent, and your Omega is perfectly healthy. Let’s just take a look inside and see how our little citizen is doing."
She moved the transducer across your stomach. The monitor flickered, the gray-and-white static resolving into the distinct, dark shape of a gestational sac. Inside, a tiny, flickering pulse of light thumped rhythmically.
Thump-thump-thump-thump.
"There's the heartbeat," Danny breathed, his voice cracking instantly. He gripped your other hand, his blue eyes bright with sudden tears. "Look at that, Steve. That's... that's our kid."
"Yeah," Steve choked out, his chest heaving as his Alpha wolf melted into pure, unadulterated mush. "I see it, D."
"Hold on a second," Dr. Alana murmured, her eyes narrowing as she slid the transducer a fraction of an inch to the left. She tapped a few keys on her console, freezing the image, then moved the wand again.
Another dark sac appeared on the screen. Another tiny, perfectly distinct flickering pulse of light.
Thump-thump-thump-thump.
The room went completely, dead silent.
Steve stopped breathing. Danny froze mid-sentence, his jaw dropping so low it looked unhinged. You sat up slightly on your elbows, your heart hammering against your ribs. "Dr. Alana? Is that..."
"Twins," the doctor announced, a wide, fascinated smile spreading across her face. "But wait... look at the uterine positioning and the separate placental structures. This isn't a standard split, guys. Let me run a quick localized genetic frequency scan on the fetal heartbeats."
In elite triad dynamics involving two Alphas and a single Omega, a phenomenon existed that was so rare it was considered a medical myth on the mainland—superfecundation. If an Omega conceptualized during an intense, dual-Alpha mating cycle where both partners knotted, the biology could release multiple eggs, allowing both Alphas to fertilize a pup in the same cycle.
The machine beeped, a digital readout displaying the genetic markers of the two separate sacs.
Sac A: Maternal markers matching yours. Paternal markers... Steven J. McGarrett.
Sac B: Maternal markers matching yours. Paternal markers... Daniel J. Williams.
"Well," Dr. Alana laughed, shaking her head in sheer disbelief. "Congratulations, Five-0. You don't do anything halfway, do you? You’re having two pups. One from each of you."
The explosion of pheromones that hit the small room was so intense it nearly set off the hospital’s environmental sensors.
Steve let out a raw, guttural sound—a mix of a sob and a territorial roar—and dropped his forehead straight onto your shoulder, his broad shoulders shaking violently as he wept. His Alpha wolf went completely feral with pride, his scent of deep, rich pine flooding the room so heavily it was almost suffocating. He was a father. His bloodline was continuing, intertwined with yours and his brother-in-arms.
Danny, conversely, looked like he had been struck by a lightning bolt. He stared at the monitor, his hands shaking so hard he had to drop the legal pad he’d brought along. "Mine," he whispered, his voice a ragged, breathless squeak. "And Steve's. In there together. At the same time."
He looked down at you, his face completely pale but his eyes burning with an ancient, fierce, primal worship. He dropped to his knees beside the table, joining Steve, his arms wrapping around your waist as he pressed his face against your hip. "Two of them. You're carrying both of our pups. Sweetheart... oh my god."
You looked at the monitor, tears streaming down your face as you watched the two tiny, independent heartbeats pulsing in perfect harmony. The sheer, cosmic symmetry of it overwhelmed you. For two years, they had both denied you. For two years, you had been isolated. And now, your body was literally housing the perfect, equal union of the triad.
"You two are going to be a nightmare," you cried softly, your fingers tangling into Steve's damp hair while your other hand stroked Danny's neck, comforting the two weeping Alphas anchored to your sides.
"A nightmare?" Danny sobbed out, a wild, ecstatic laugh breaking through his tears as he kissed your stomach through the gown. "Are you kidding me? We’re going to be a catastrophe. I have to buy two car seats, Steve. Two cribs. We need an entire fleet of crossovers!"
"I'll build the table bigger," Steve choked out, lifting his head, his face a mess of tears and a massive, uncharacteristic grin. He looked at Danny, then at you, his hazel eyes completely consumed by the true-mate bond. "A ten-seater. We're going to need a ten-seater."
As Dr. Alana print out the ultrasound pictures, leaving the three of you wrapped in a suffocating, fiercely protective pile of limbs and mating pheromones, the last lingering ghost of your past was utterly obliterated. The mainland, the killers, the rejection—it was all dust. You were an Omega holding the future of two Alphas inside you, and as their twin purrs vibrated through your very bones, you knew there wasn't a force on earth that could ever break the circle they had built around you.
The drive back to the beach house was the quietest it had been in three years. The manic, defensive energy that usually characterized the Camaro's cabin was completely gone, replaced by a heavy, almost reverent stillness.
Steve drove with both hands locked on the wheel, his eyes darting to the rearview mirror every three seconds to check on you in the passenger seat. He was driving exactly five miles under the speed limit, taking every turn with the agonizing precision of a man transporting a crate of unstable nitro. Danny sat in the back, entirely silent for once, staring out the window with the ultrasound printout held gently between his fingers like it was a holy relic.
The moment the front door of the house clicked shut, the dam broke.
Steve didn't even let you walk into the living room before his arms were around you. He didn't pull you into a crushing embrace this time; instead, he slid down to his knees right there on the hardwood entryway, his large hands flat against your stomach, his forehead resting against your hip. A deep, continuous, bone-rattling purr vibrated through his chest—a primal Alpha frequency that sent an immediate wave of warmth sliding straight down to your womb.
"Steve," you whispered, running your fingers through his short cropped hair. "I'm okay. We're okay."
"Two," he muttered against your shirt, his voice thick and rough. "One of mine. One of Danny's. Growing together in the dark. It’s... my wolf hasn't stopped screaming since the doctor said it."
Danny stepped up behind you, his hands dropping onto your shoulders, his thumbs rubbing firm, soothing circles into your collarbones. His scent—usually a sharp, energetic cedar—had deepened into something incredibly thick and sweet, almost identical to Steve’s pine. The two Alphas’ pheromones were bleeding into each other, creating a unified, suffocating canopy of protection that completely saturated the small entryway.
"He's right, kid," Danny said, his voice dropping into that quiet, Newark-grit register he only used when his armor was completely off. "The bond... it’s humming. I can feel the change in the air. It’s like the universe looked at the two years we wasted being stupid, stubborn bastards and decided to give us the ultimate cheat code to make sure we never look back."
He leaned forward, his lips pressing firmly against the mating bite on the side of your neck, his teeth gently scraping the edge of the bruised skin. You let out a soft, helpless sigh, your head tilting back against his chest as the pure comfort of your Alphas completely unlocked the remaining tension in your muscles.
"Come on," you murmured, tugging gently at Steve's shoulders until the big commander finally stood up, though he didn't take his hands off your waist. "Let's go inside. I need to sit down."
The living room was quickly transformed into a nest. Without a word of discussion, Steve and Danny began stripping the house of every soft item available. Heavy linen throws from the sofas, the thick down comforter from the guest room, pillows from the master bed—all of it was piled systematically into the deep, wide sectional sofa facing the ocean.
It was a primitive Alpha response to a dual-occupancy Omega pregnancy. They weren't just building a place for you to sit; they were marking a territory.
They settled you into the center of the plush pile, wrapping the heavy blankets around your legs despite the afternoon heat. Steve sat immediately to your left, pulling your upper body against his chest so your head rested on his shoulder, his large palm instantly returning to its post over your navel. Danny claimed your right side, stretching his legs out parallel to yours and pulling your feet into his lap, his fingers gently massaging your arches while his blue eyes remained fixed on your face.
"We tell the team tomorrow morning," Steve said, his voice a low command that brooked no argument. "No exceptions. Chin and Kono need to know the logistics are changing effective immediately. Lou handles all field liaison work with HPD. Danny and I are strictly tactical oversight from the bullpen."
"Steve, the Governor is going to have a stroke if both leaders of Five-0 bench themselves from active field duty at the same time," you pointed out, though you were already melting into the comfort of the cushions.
"Let him have a stroke," Danny snapped, though there was no real heat in it. He lifted one of your feet, pressing a soft kiss to the top of your toes before continuing the massage. "The Governor has an entire police department and a National Guard. We have two pups in this room that represent the entire future of this triad. If some low-life cartel runner thinks he’s getting within a mile of this house or the headquarters, he’s going to find out exactly why you don't mess with two fully bonded Alphas who have a nest to defend."
You looked between the two of them—the lethal Navy SEAL and the cynical city detective. For two long years, you had been an island within an island, surviving their rejection by locking your Omega away behind cold, analytical BAU profiles. Now, as you sat encased in the literal physical manifestation of their devotion, listening to them plan a total systemic lockdown of the entire island just to keep you safe, you felt a deep, profound sense of justice.
They had broken you, but the repair was beautiful.
"I love you both," you whispered, your eyes growing heavy as the dual-Alpha purring from Steve’s chest and the rhythmic movement of Danny’s hands began to lull your changing biology toward sleep.
Steve’s grip tightened just enough to let you know he was there, his lips brushing your temple. "We love you more, chosen. Sleep. We've got the watch."
"Always," Danny murmured from your feet, his fingers squeezing yours under the heavy linen.
And as the sun began its slow, spectacular descent into the Pacific, painting the room in deep shades of crimson and gold, you fell asleep wrapped in the heavy, unbreakable circle of the men who had once walked away, but who would now spend the rest of their lives ensuring you never had to face the dark alone again.
Seven months later, the ten-seater koa wood dining table was finally finished. It sat in the center of the beach house dining room, polished to a mirror shine, reflecting the warm, golden light of a quiet Hawaiian evening.
But tonight, nobody was sitting at it.
The house was entirely silent save for the rhythmic, soothing crash of the tide outside the open sliding doors. In the master bedroom, the deep sectional sofa had been completely disassembled and moved, replaced by a massive, custom-built family bed that took up nearly the entire room.
You lay in the center of that bed, propped up by a mountain of soft linen pillows, exhausted but filled with a profound, consuming peace.
To your left, a tiny, dark-haired boy was curled against your side, his little fist tucked under his chin, snoring with a soft, whistling rhythm that he had inherited entirely from his biological Alpha father. John McGarrett-Williams was a perfect blend of Steve’s sharp jaw and your own soft eyes.
To your right, tucked into the crook of your arm, a pale, blue-eyed little girl was wrapped in a yellow blanket, her tiny mouth open as she slept with an intense, serious expression that was terrifyingly identical to Danny’s. Zoe McGarrett-Williams had already mastered the art of frowning in her sleep.
Superfecundation was a medical marvel on paper, but in reality, it was a beautiful, chaotic masterpiece. One from Steve. One from Danny. Born twenty minutes apart, forever cementing the triad in a way the universe rarely permitted.
The heavy wooden door pushed open with a quiet creak.
Steve walked in first, carrying a warm mug of tea. He had discarded his Five-0 uniform hours ago, now wearing nothing but a soft pair of grey sweatpants. His hazel eyes immediately locked onto the bed, his entire posture softening into something loose, vulnerable, and completely content. His Alpha scent—deep pine and clean salt—flared with an overwhelming, protective warmth that instantly made the pups shift and settle deeper into the blankets.
Danny followed right behind him, carrying a fresh plate of fruit. He had his reading glasses pushed up into his hair, his blue eyes bright with a quiet, fierce adoration as he looked at the three of you. The restless, high-strung detective who used to pace the bullpen had been replaced by a man who looked thoroughly anchored to the earth.
Steve dropped to his knees on the edge of the mattress, setting the tea on the nightstand before leaning over to press a soft, lingering kiss to your forehead. His large hand slid down to rest over both babies, his palm easily covering their tiny bodies.
"They're asleep?" Steve whispered, his voice a low, gravelly vibration that instantly triggered a deep, instinctual purr in his chest.
"Finally," you smiled, your voice a tired but happy murmur. "Johnny fought the swaddle for twenty minutes, but Zoe gave up the moment she smelled Danny’s shirt."
Danny climbed onto the bed from the other side, careful not to jostle the mattress, and slid down until his shoulder was pressed against yours. He reached out, his thumb gently stroking the cheek of his little girl before his fingers tangled with yours. His cedar scent wrapped around the bed like a heavy, protective shield.
"Of course she did," Danny murmured, a soft, proud smile tugging at his lips. "She’s a Williams. She knows quality comfort when she smells it. Unlike the giant barbarian on your left who thinks a military wool blanket solves everything."
Steve let out a low, amused huff, but he didn't snap back. Instead, he shifted up onto the mattress, lying down on your left side so the five of you were completely boxed in together—a tight, seamless circle of limbs, blankets, and deep, blended pheromones.
For two long years, you had been an island. You had carried the heavy, suffocating pain of their rejection, the terror of the predators who hunted you, and the cold isolation of a life spent in the shadows of their denial. You had made them crawl for their forgiveness, and they had done it gladly, shedding their armor, their pride, and their fear until there was nothing left but truth.
Now, looking down at the twin heartbeats sleeping against your chest, and feeling the heavy, uncompromising warmth of the two Alphas locking you into the center of their universe, you knew the ledger was completely clear.
Steve leaned over, his lips brushing against the permanent, deep purple mating marks on your neck, his breath warm against your skin. "We've got the watch, chosen," he whispered fiercely. "Forever."
Danny squeezed your hand under the covers, his eyes locking onto yours with a quiet, eternal devotion. "Always, sweetheart. Sleep."
You closed your eyes, sinking back into the soft linen pillows, completely enveloped by the deep, resonant purring of your mates and the sweet, milky scent of your pups. The fragile ties that had once fractured your soul had been reforged in the fire, and as the Hawaiian night closed in around the beach house, you finally knew that you were exactly where you belonged.
You were home.
Five years later, the ten-seater koa wood dining table was no longer pristine. It bore the beautiful, chaotic scars of a family fully lived-in: a faint ring from a spilled juice box, a microscopic dent from a plastic toy dinosaur, and a permanent, faint smudge of blue fingerpaint near the head of the table that Steve had flatly refused to sand out.
It was a Saturday morning, and the beach house was a symphony of high-energy domesticity.
"Johnny, do not feed your bacon to the dog! The dog does not need bacon, he has a diet, unlike your father who eats like a stray goat!" Danny’s voice carried from the kitchen, high-pitched and frantic, accompanied by the furious clatter of a spatula hitting a skillet.
In the living room, five-year-old John McGarrett-Williams—a miniature clone of Steve, complete with wild hazel eyes and a streak of stubbornness that could stop a freight train—giggled widely. He dropped the bacon anyway, watching with absolute glee as the family’s aging golden retriever vacuumed it off the floor.
"I didn't see anything," Steve muttered from the sofa. He was lying flat on his back, wearing nothing but a faded pair of cargo shorts, completely paralyzed because five-year-old Zoe McGarrett-Williams was currently sitting squarely on his chest.
Zoe, a striking blue-eyed force of nature who had inherited Danny’s expressive hand gestures and your sharp, analytical brain, was busy tying a pink satin ribbon into Steve’s short, cropped hair. The lethal commander of Five-0, a man feared by international cartels, sat perfectly still, his large hands resting gently on his daughter's hips to keep her from tumbling off.
You walked out of the master bedroom, buttoning a soft flannel shirt, your scent—now permanently infused with the deep, grounding blend of pine, cedar, and the sweet warmth of a fully settled Omega—drifting through the house.
The moment your foot hit the hardwood, three things happened simultaneously. Johnny sprinted across the room, tackling your knees in a ferocious hug; Minnie abandoned her ribbon project to scramble off Steve’s chest and demand to be picked up; and Steve’s head snapped toward you, his eyes instantly darkening with that fierce, protective hunger that hadn't faded a single fraction in seven years.
"Good morning, Mama," Johnny chirped, burying his face in your thigh.
"Johnny’s being a menace, Mommy," Minnie reported instantly, crossing her tiny arms as you scooped her up onto your hip. "He gave the dog the meat. I told him the rules, but he has selective listening. Like Daddy Steve."
"Hey," Steve protested, finally swinging his long legs off the sofa. He walked over, his massive frame completely enveloping your space. He didn't care that Danny was watching from the kitchen island or that the kids were right there; he wrapped his arms around your waist, pulling your back against his chest and burying his face into the crook of your neck. He took a deep, dragging breath right over his mating mark, his Alpha purr instantly vibrating through your skin. "Don't listen to her. She’s profiling the kid before breakfast."
"She’s not wrong, Steven!" Danny shouted, walking into the room with a massive platter of pancakes, his reading glasses pushed up into his hair. He set the food on the table and immediately walked over to the huddle, his hand finding the small of your back, his thumb tracing a warm circle through your shirt. His cedar scent spiked—warm, proud, and intensely possessive. "The girl is five and she’s already figured out that the McGarrett genetic code consists entirely of running headfirst into walls and ignoring authority figures."
"It’s called tactical momentum, Danny," Steve grunted, but he leaned over your shoulder to press a quick, hard kiss to Danny’s jaw before kissing your temple.
You leaned back into them, letting Steve’s arms hold your weight while Danny reached up to adjust the collar of your shirt, his blue eyes softening into something so intensely loving it made your breath hitch.
The bullpen at Five-0 was still there, and the island still had its dark corners that required your mind and their steel. You still went to work, you still built the profiles that brought down monsters, but the world no longer had the power to tear you apart. The federal warrants were long dead. The ghosts of Quantico and Arthur Finch were nothing but ashes in a closed archive.
Grace, now a beautiful, independent teenager, came jogging down the stairs, her backpack slung over one shoulder as she headed out to a weekend beach clean-up with her friends. She stopped at the foot of the stairs, looking at the tangled knot of her parents and siblings.
"You guys are doing the pack-hug without me again," she teased, a warm, genuine smile on her face.
"Get over here, Gracie," Danny ordered, extending an arm.
She dove into the middle of it, laughing as Johnny tried to climb her leg and Steve’s massive arm wrapped around her shoulder, pulling her into the perimeter.
You stood in the center of the press, encased by the three Alphas who carried your heart and the two pups who represented the absolute victory of your survival. The fragile ties that had once broken you hadn't just been repaired—they had grown into an impenetrable, living fortress.
"Pancakes are getting cold," you whispered against Steve’s chest, your fingers looping through Danny’s belt.
"Let 'em get cold," Steve murmured, his lips pressing into your hair, his grip tightening just a fraction more. "We're right where we need to be."
"Always," Danny agreed, his voice rough with that deep, eternal certainty.
And as the Hawaiian sun broke fully over the horizon, flooding the beach house with light, the triad stood solid, unbreakable, and entirely home.
07.2016 Hamburg
Dinos aren't tinyyyyy
DINOS CAN BE TINY. ARE YOU A DINO? NO. SO SHUSH HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF MICROSERATUS( ITS IN THE NAME) OR MONONYKUS OR MICRORAPTOR OR EORAPTOR
yee
and I cannot stress this enough
HAW
Mencari kenalan perempuan yang kepala sama , ada ke 😅
aaj pure din mujhe minion bolke chidaya gya hai college me
lets be bathed in bisexual lighting with mama!
i meant to render this semirealistically because i LOVE grullo horses but i grabbed a blue marker by accident and decided it doesnt matter. lalala. (thats why mama horse's face is shaded so differently)
