Fraternal begins with a single, reckless decision—and the kind of connection that was never meant to be tested.
Asher and Ezra Hale have always moved through the world in sync. As twins, they share more than just a resemblance; they share instincts, rhythms, and an unspoken understanding that lets them slip into each other’s place without anyone noticing. At Surge—a neon-lit nightclub pulsing with heat, music, and possibility—that connection turns into something far more dangerous.
When they both notice Elliot Rhodes, standing just outside the chaos of the dance floor, the moment feels simple. Familiar. The kind of silent recognition they’ve had their entire lives.
Then Asher turns it into a game.
A bet. First one to win Elliot over takes him home.
What starts as competition quickly evolves into something more calculated—and more intimate. Using a shared identity—Hyde—the brothers begin to take turns, stepping into the same role, presenting themselves as one person instead of two. It’s a trick they’ve used before. A boundary they’ve crossed without consequence.
Until now.
Because Elliot isn’t just another night. He’s perceptive. Grounded. Drawn to something real—even if he doesn’t yet realize it’s coming from two different people.
The prologue drops us into the aftermath—raw, immediate, and charged—before pulling back into Chapter One, where the night begins at Surge. The music, the crowd, the bet. The first move. The first lie.
And underneath it all, something deeper begins to take shape.
Not just between Elliot and the brothers—but between Asher and Ezra themselves.
Because this isn’t just about who gets Elliot.
It’s about what happens when the line between them starts to blur—and neither of them is willing to step back.