{
  "submission_id": "3709414",
  "keywords": [
    {
      "keyword_id": "6339",
      "keyword_name": "balto",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "2036"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "802",
      "keyword_name": "cake",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "5313"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "68",
      "keyword_name": "incest",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "47647"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "7133",
      "keyword_name": "jenna",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "915"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "3298",
      "keyword_name": "kodi",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "253"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "165",
      "keyword_name": "male",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "1230610"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "12382",
      "keyword_name": "mpreg",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "4713"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "7",
      "keyword_name": "naked",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "120315"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "58",
      "keyword_name": "nude",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "216866"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "86",
      "keyword_name": "orgy",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "12762"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "406",
      "keyword_name": "pregnant",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "24340"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "76",
      "keyword_name": "sex",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "137303"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "4898",
      "keyword_name": "steele",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "498"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "93370",
      "keyword_name": "trans male",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "977"
    },
    {
      "keyword_id": "62940",
      "keyword_name": "weeding",
      "contributed": "f",
      "submissions_count": "6"
    }
  ],
  "hidden": "f",
  "scraps": "f",
  "favorite": "f",
  "favorites_count": "0",
  "create_datetime": "2025-09-18 11:19:14.564658+00",
  "create_datetime_usertime": "18 Sep 2025 13:19 CEST",
  "last_file_update_datetime": "2025-09-18 11:18:28.724263+00",
  "last_file_update_datetime_usertime": "18 Sep 2025 13:18 CEST",
  "username": "Iss369",
  "user_id": "629201",
  "user_icon_file_name": "448897_Iss369_profile_-_ono.png",
  "user_icon_url_large": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/usericons/large/448/448897_Iss369_profile_-_ono.png",
  "user_icon_url_medium": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/usericons/medium/448/448897_Iss369_profile_-_ono.png",
  "user_icon_url_small": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/usericons/small/448/448897_Iss369_profile_-_ono.png",
  "file_name": "5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
  "file_url_full": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/full/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
  "file_url_screen": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/screen/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
  "file_url_preview": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/preview/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
  "files": [
    {
      "file_id": "5722397",
      "file_name": "5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
      "file_url_full": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/full/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
      "file_url_screen": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/screen/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
      "file_url_preview": "https://nl1.ib.metapix.net/files/preview/5722/5722397_Iss369_kodi_balto_and_steele_a_story_of_an_unlikely_family.txt",
      "mimetype": "text/plain",
      "submission_id": "3709414",
      "user_id": "629201",
      "submission_file_order": "0",
      "full_size_x": null,
      "full_size_y": null,
      "screen_size_x": null,
      "screen_size_y": null,
      "preview_size_x": null,
      "preview_size_y": null,
      "initial_file_md5": "851decf81d14cf8a43ef590315b0a99f",
      "full_file_md5": "851decf81d14cf8a43ef590315b0a99f",
      "large_file_md5": "",
      "small_file_md5": "",
      "thumbnail_md5": "",
      "deleted": "f",
      "create_datetime": "2025-09-18 11:18:28.724263+00",
      "create_datetime_usertime": "18 Sep 2025 13:18 CEST"
    }
  ],
  "pools": [
    {
      "pool_id": "100312",
      "name": "Requests",
      "description": "",
      "count": "30",
      "submission_left_submission_id": "3698086",
      "submission_left_file_name": "5701485_Iss369_skylar_x_troyo_-_from_distrust_to_love.txt"
    }
  ],
  "description": "Request from https://inkbunny.net/pawliker",
  "description_bbcode_parsed": "<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'>Request from <a href=\"https://inkbunny.net/pawliker\" rel=\"nofollow\">https://inkbunny.net/pawliker</a></span>",
  "writing": "﻿The crystalline cold of Nome no longer felt like a friend to Balto; it was an echo of the chasm that had opened between him and Kodi. He’d tried everything. Leaving fresh meat by Kodi’s bedroll, as he had when Kodi was a pup. Making sure their harnesses were laid out side-by-side, a silent invitation to run together. He’d even tried to engage him in talk of old races, of the diphtheria run that had made Balto a legend. But Kodi’s replies were always flat, his eyes distant. It was a kind of pain Balto had never known, a deep-seated ache that was worse than any physical injury. He was a hero to the town, a monument of courage, but in his own home, he was a stranger to his own son.\nOne evening, as the northern lights began to dance across the sky in shimmering green and purple veils, Balto found Kodi sitting alone on the porch, his gaze fixed on the lights. He sat down beside him, the wood of the porch groaning under his weight.\n\"The spirits are restless tonight,\" Balto said, his voice a low rumble. \"My mother always said they were the ancestors, dancing for us.\"\nKodi didn't respond for a long moment. He just stared at the sky, his eyes reflecting the ghostly glow. \"Do you ever feel like you're not in the right place, Dad?\" he finally asked, his voice barely a whisper.\nThe question hit Balto with the force of a physical blow. \"What do you mean, son?\"\nKodi shook his head, a small, weary motion. \"I don't know. Just… feel like I'm supposed to be somewhere else. With someone else.\"\nThe words were a puzzle Balto couldn’t solve. He wanted to pry, to ask who “someone else” was, but he saw the tension in Kodi's shoulders, the way he was already pulling away. So Balto stayed silent, the cold of the porch seeping into his bones, and the silence between them became another layer of frost. He knew Kodi was hiding something, something he was ashamed of, but he couldn't imagine what it could be. His mind replayed every possible scenario. Was Kodi in trouble? Was he involved with a rival team? The possibilities were endless, and none of them made sense. He saw a shadow fall over his son and he could not reach out to help.\n________________\n\n\nFor Kodi, life had become a dizzying tapestry of lies. Every time he spoke to his father, he felt the sharp sting of deceit. He had always admired Balto, not just for his bravery, but for his unwavering sense of what was right. Balto was a moral compass, a true north, and Kodi felt like he was spiraling in the opposite direction, lost in a storm he had created himself.\nHis secret life with Steele was a stark contrast to the quiet despair of his days. Steele was a revelation. The arrogant sneer was replaced by a wry, knowing smile. The brutish swagger was a facade for a deep, almost crippling vulnerability. Kodi had stumbled upon it by accident. He had been running a late-night route, the moon a sliver in the sky, when he saw a figure huddled on a jagged rock outcropping. It was Steele, his head in his paws, his body shaking. Kodi had approached cautiously, ready for the usual insult, the usual posturing. But Steele hadn't looked up. He just let out a low, guttural sound, something between a sigh and a sob.\n\"Steele?\" Kodi had asked tentatively.\nSteele had flinched, his head snapping up, his eyes wide and panicked. For a moment, the old Steele was back, a flash of fury in his gaze. But it faded, replaced by something raw and unguarded. \"Go on, get out of here,\" he'd muttered, his voice hoarse. \"You don't want to see me like this.\"\nKodi hadn't gone. He had sat down, a respectful distance away, and waited. Eventually, the silence had become comfortable. Steele had told him of his past, of the weight of being a champion, of the constant pressure to be the best, the fear of losing it all. He spoke of the loneliness, the way his reputation had alienated him from everyone. Kodi listened, and for the first time, he saw Steele not as a rival or a bully, but as a wounded soul, a prisoner of his own legend.\nAnd then, one night, the talking had stopped. The air had crackled with a new kind of energy. Steele had shifted, his hip brushing against Kodi's. Kodi had held his breath, a nervous tremor running through him. Steele had looked at him, his dark eyes searching, and then, he had gently nuzzled Kodi's ear. It was a gesture of affection, a promise of something more. Kodi had instinctively leaned into the touch, a low whine escaping his throat. And in that moment, the shame and the fear had been eclipsed by a dizzying rush of something new. A kiss. A clumsy, desperate press of lips in the bitter cold. Kodi had been so startled, he had pulled back, his heart thundering in his chest. But Steele hadn't laughed. He had just looked at him with an expression of quiet understanding, and in that gaze, Kodi had found a depth of feeling he never knew existed.\n________________\n\n\nThe nights became a secret world for them. They would meet at the high ridge, a place of quiet solitude, a sanctuary from the prying eyes of Nome. They would talk for hours, or simply lie together, their bodies a warm haven against the cold. Kodi learned that Steele, the infamous bully, had a quiet love for poetry, that he secretly admired Balto, and that his arrogance was a shield against a profound sense of self-doubt. Steele learned of Kodi's struggle to live up to his father's legacy, of his fear of mediocrity, and of his deep, abiding loneliness.\nKodi found himself falling in love, not with the legend of Steele, but with the man beneath it. He loved the way Steele's eyes would crinkle when he laughed, the way he would gently lick a cut on Kodi's paw, the way he would share his deepest fears in the quiet of the night. But every time he was with Steele, he felt the heavy guilt of his deception. He was lying to his father, to his friends, to the entire town. He knew what they would say. They would call him a traitor, a fool. He was a hero's son, and he was in love with the villain of the story.\nThe guilt manifested itself in his daily life. He became a ghost, slipping in and out of the house, avoiding his father’s gaze. He couldn't bear to look into Balto's eyes, those warm, understanding eyes that saw so much and yet understood so little of what was happening. Balto, in turn, grew more desperate. He tried a new tactic, a last-ditch effort to reconnect. He decided to take Kodi on a long run, a full day and night trek to a distant trapper's cabin. He knew it was a place Kodi loved, a memory of a time when things were simple. He hoped the solitude, the shared labor of the trail, would break down the wall between them.\nKodi agreed, a flicker of something in his eyes. He knew he couldn't say no. It would be a cruel denial of his father’s love. But as they prepared for the journey, a knot of dread tightened in his stomach. He was leaving his secret world, his Steele, for twenty-four hours. He knew what a day of honest conversation with his father would do. It would make his lies feel even heavier, his betrayal even more profound.\nThey set off the next morning, the sled a blur behind them. The sun was a pale disk in the sky, casting long, blue shadows across the snow. Balto led the way, his gait sure and powerful, and Kodi followed, his mind a million miles away. They ran in silence for the first few hours, the only sound the rhythmic thud of their paws on the packed snow and the whisper of the wind.\nBalto finally spoke when they stopped for a brief rest by a frozen river. \"Remember this place, Kodi?\" he said, his voice soft. \"We came here when you were a pup. You tried to chase a fish under the ice. Got your nose stuck.\" He laughed, a low, easy sound.\nKodi gave a weak smile. \"I remember. You told me I was the silliest pup in Nome.\"\nBalto’s laughter faded. He looked at Kodi, a plea in his eyes. \"What's going on, son? Please. I'm worried about you. You're not the same. You're… a stranger.\"\nKodi’s heart hammered against his ribs. He wanted to tell him. He wanted to confess everything, to get rid of this heavy burden. But the words were stuck in his throat, a sharp, metallic taste of fear. He shook his head, looking away. \"I told you, Dad. I'm fine. Just… a lot on my mind.\"\nBalto sighed, a long, weary sound. He didn't press him. He just got up and started pulling the sled again. The silence returned, more charged than before. The rest of the day was a blur of motion, a physical exertion that did nothing to numb the pain in their hearts.\nThat night, they made camp in a small cave, the fire a warm, flickering island in the vast, cold darkness. Balto laid out their bedrolls, a silent invitation to talk. But Kodi, exhausted from the physical and emotional strain, curled up and pretended to sleep, his back to his father. He couldn’t face him. He felt like a coward.\nHe woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of Balto talking, his voice a low, mournful murmur. He wasn’t talking to Kodi. He was talking to himself. \"I don't understand,\" Balto said, his voice thick with emotion. \"Where did I go wrong? I tried to teach him everything. Courage. Honesty. What happened to my boy?\"\nKodi's stomach twisted into a painful knot. He wanted to cry out, to tell his father that he hadn't done anything wrong, that it was all on him. But he couldn't. He just lay there, the words a burning lump in his throat, the sound of his father's pain a knife in his heart. He felt like the worst son in the world. He was living a lie, and the cost was his relationship with the one person who had always loved him unconditionally.\nThe next day, they ran in an even heavier silence. The return trip was a blur of numb endurance. When they arrived back in Nome, Kodi barely said a word, just went straight to his bedroll, the weight of his guilt a physical burden. Balto watched him go, his heart heavy. He knew he was losing his son, and he didn’t know how to stop it. He felt utterly and completely defeated.\nMeanwhile, Kodi's secret world was fraying at the edges. Steele, who had been patient and understanding, was growing frustrated. \"You're pulling away, Kodi,\" he said one night, his voice laced with a hurt Kodi had never heard before. \"You come here, you tell me you love me, and then you act like you don't even know me when we're in town. I can't live like this, Kodi. I won't. I'm not a secret you can hide in the shadows.\"\nThe words were a brutal truth. Kodi knew he was hurting Steele, and the thought was unbearable. But he couldn't let go of the fear, the shame. \"It's not that simple, Steele,\" he said, his voice cracking. \"You don't understand.\"\nSteele's face hardened. \"Don't I? I understand that you're ashamed of me. That you're a coward. You can't be with me and be Balto's son, can you? You have to choose.\"\nThe words hung in the air, a cruel ultimatum. Kodi knew Steele was right. He couldn't have both. He couldn't be the good son and the secret lover. He was being torn in two, and the pressure was unbearable. He ran from Steele that night, a panicked, desperate flight back to his father's house. He spent the night trembling, a cold, empty feeling in his gut. He was alone. He had alienated his father with his lies and was now on the verge of losing the only person who understood him. He felt like he was falling into a dark, bottomless pit, and there was no one to catch him.\nHe knew he had to make a choice, and the choice would be a painful one. He couldn't keep living this double life. The lie was eating him alive, destroying the very people he loved. But which path to choose? The one of truth and acceptance, which would mean losing his family's respect, or the one of deceit, which would mean losing the love of his life?\nThe following day, Balto was preparing to run a supply route. He had asked a younger dog to run with him, a friendly, eager pup named Kip. Kodi saw them leaving and the sight was a new kind of pain. His father was moving on, finding a new partner, a new \"son.\" The thought was a searing brand on his heart. He knew he had to do something.\nHe ran to the high ridge, the wind whipping his fur. He found Steele sitting there, his gaze fixed on the horizon, his expression unreadable. Kodi's heart was in his throat. He had to be brave, for once. He had to tell the truth. To one of them, at least. He had to choose.\nHe walked up to Steele, his paws shaking. \"Steele,\" he said, his voice barely a whisper.\nSteele turned, his eyes cold. \"What do you want, Kodi?\"\n\"I… I'm sorry,\" Kodi said, the words a difficult, painful confession. \"I'm sorry I've been a coward. I'm sorry I hurt you.\" He took a deep breath, the cold air burning his lungs. \"I… I love you, Steele. I don't care what they say. I don't care what my father thinks. I want to be with you. I want to be honest about it.\"\nA slow, tentative smile spread across Steele's face, a genuine smile that transformed his harsh features. \"You mean it?\" he asked, his voice soft with disbelief.\nKodi nodded, tears freezing on his cheeks. \"I mean it.\"\nSteele wrapped his paws around Kodi, pulling him into a tight embrace. The contact was a relief, a warmth that chased away the cold and the fear. \"I love you too, Kodi,\" he said, his voice muffled in Kodi's fur. \"And I don't want you to lose your father. He's a good man. You're a good man. We'll figure this out. Together.\"\nThe words were a lifeline. Kodi felt a flicker of hope, a small spark of light in the vast darkness. He knew it wouldn't be easy. The town of Nome, his father, his friends, would never understand. But he also knew that he had chosen the right path. He had chosen love, and he had chosen truth. Now he just had to find the courage to face the consequences. He had to face his father, the man he had betrayed, and tell him the truth. And the thought of that conversation filled him with a fear so profound, it almost eclipsed the joy of being in Steele's arms. But he knew it was a conversation he could no longer avoid. The time for living in the shadows was over.\nBalto waited for his son to come home. The hours stretched into a tense, agonizing eternity. He sat on the porch, a silent sentinel against the bitter cold, his gaze fixed on the spot where the trail disappeared into the trees. He felt an emptiness inside him, a cold and hollow place that had once been filled with the easy warmth of a father's love. He had tried to be patient, to give Kodi space, but his son's silence, his constant avoidance, felt like a deliberate rejection. The thought of Kodi preferring the company of a young, inexperienced dog like Kip, or even worse, being off on his own, filled Balto with a deep, unsettling dread. He replayed every conversation, every interaction, searching for a clue, a sign of what had gone wrong. Had he pushed Kodi too hard? Had he expected him to be the hero's son, a reflection of his own legacy, instead of letting him find his own path? The questions swirled in his mind, a relentless, painful torment.\nJust as the sun began to dip below the horizon, painting the sky in a final, fiery burst of orange and purple, Balto saw two figures emerge from the treeline. His heart leaped, but then sank as he realized it wasn't Kodi alone. It was Kodi and Steele. The sight was a shock, a blow to the gut that left Balto breathless. Steele, his nemesis, the dog who had tormented him and his friends for years, was walking beside his son, their heads close together, their body language a startlingly intimate tableau. Balto felt a surge of rage, hot and fierce, a primal instinct to protect his son from this deceitful, malicious brute. He stood up, every muscle in his body taut, ready for a confrontation.\nKodi saw his father and a flicker of panic crossed his face, but he didn't waver. He took a deep breath and continued to walk forward, his paw brushing against Steele’s. Steele, for his part, met Balto’s gaze with a surprising lack of arrogance. There was no sneer, no swagger. Just a quiet resolve, a steely determination that Balto found utterly disarming. They stopped a few feet from the porch, and the silence was thick with unspoken accusations and a profound sense of foreboding.\n\"Dad,\" Kodi said, his voice quiet but firm. \"We need to talk.\"\nBalto's gaze was fixed on Steele. \"What is this, Kodi?\" he growled, the words a low, dangerous rumble. \"What are you doing with him?\"\n\"I'm with him, Dad,\" Kodi said, and the words, so simple and direct, hit Balto with the force of a tidal wave. \"We're together.\"\nThe world seemed to tilt on its axis. Balto’s mind reeled, trying to comprehend what he was hearing. Kodi and Steele? It was an impossible, grotesque pairing. It was like a hero falling in love with his own villain. It was a contradiction of everything Balto believed in, everything he had fought for. He felt a profound sense of betrayal, a cold, hard knot of anger and hurt forming in his chest.\n\"How could you?\" Balto whispered, the anger replaced by a deep, heartbreaking sorrow. \"After everything he's done? After what he did to me? To Jenna? To all of us?\"\nSteele flinched, but he didn't look away. He stood his ground, a silent pillar of support beside Kodi. Kodi took a step closer to his father, his eyes pleading. \"It's not what you think, Dad. He's not… he's not the dog you remember. He's different. I've gotten to know him, and he's… he's kind. He's lonely. He's not what everyone thinks he is.\"\nBalto laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. \"A bully is a bully, Kodi. A dog doesn't just change his spots. He's lying to you. He’s manipulating you. He's trying to get to me through you.\" He turned his full fury on Steele. \"Is that what this is? Another one of your games? Another way to get back at me?\"\nSteele finally spoke, his voice low and steady. \"No, Balto. This isn't a game. I know what I've done. I know the kind of dog I was. And I'm not asking for your forgiveness. But Kodi… he saw something in me that no one else has. He saw who I could be. He saw me for who I am. And I love him. I would never hurt him. Never.\"\nThe words hung in the air, a profound confession. Kodi moved to stand in front of Steele, shielding him from his father's angry gaze. \"He’s telling the truth, Dad. He's the one who's been there for me. He’s the one who understands me. You… you've been so busy being a hero, you haven't even seen me. You haven't seen that I'm not you. That I'm not a legend in the making. I'm just… me. And I've been so scared to tell you that. Scared to let you down. Scared to disappoint you.\"\nThe words were a direct hit. They broke through Balto's rage and landed in the vulnerable, aching core of his heart. He saw the truth in Kodi's eyes, the deep-seated fear and the profound sadness. He saw the pain he had caused by his own silent expectations. He had been so wrapped up in his own legacy, his own idea of what his son should be, that he had failed to see what he was. He had been so busy mourning the loss of the son he knew, that he hadn't even tried to understand the son he had.\n\"Kodi,\" Balto said, the anger gone from his voice, replaced by a quiet, devastating realization. \"I… I didn't know. I'm so sorry, son. I'm so, so sorry.\"\nThe apology was a balm, a first step toward healing. Kodi's tense shoulders relaxed, and a tear slipped down his cheek. \"It's okay, Dad,\" he said, his voice thick with emotion. \"But you have to try. You have to try to understand. You have to try to see him for who he is now, not who he used to be.\"\nBalto looked at Steele, really looked at him for the first time. He saw the vulnerability, the quiet strength. He saw the genuine love in his eyes as he looked at Kodi. He saw a dog who was willing to stand up to the most revered hero in Nome for the sake of the dog he loved. And in that moment, Balto felt something shift inside him. The hatred and the anger began to recede, replaced by a grudging respect and a profound sense of awe at his son's courage.\n\"I can't promise that I'll understand right away,\" Balto said, his voice still low, but no longer laced with anger. \"This is… a lot. But I can promise I’ll try. For you, Kodi. I'll try.\"\nThe words were a peace offering, a first step on a long and difficult path. Kodi moved to his father, and for the first time in months, they embraced. It was a clumsy, awkward hug, but it was a hug of love, of forgiveness, of a family beginning to heal. Steele stood back, giving them space, a silent witness to their reconciliation.\nThat night, Balto sat by the fire, a new kind of silence in the house. A silence of quiet reflection, of a profound and startling revelation. He had always thought of himself as a hero, a symbol of courage and truth. But in that one night, his son had shown him that true courage wasn't just about facing down a blizzard or a bully. It was about facing down your own prejudices, your own expectations, and your own fears. It was about loving someone unconditionally, even when they made choices you didn't understand. And he knew, with a certainty that was both terrifying and exhilarating, that his own journey as a hero, and as a father, was just beginning. He had a lot to learn, and he had a lot to make up for. And he knew, with a new and humbling clarity, that the bravest journey he had ever embarked on wasn’t across the frozen tundra, but into the unknown landscape of his own heart, and he knew, with a new and humbling clarity, that the bravest journey he had ever embarked on wasn’t across the frozen tundra, but into the unknown landscape of his own heart.\nThe following days were a tentative dance of healing. Balto reached out to Kodi, not with demands or questions, but with small, quiet gestures. He left his son's favorite type of smoked salmon by his bedroll, a silent apology. He waited for Kodi and Steele to come back from their runs, and though he still felt a knot of unease in his gut, he met them with a nod and a murmured \"Good run.\" The change was gradual, a slow thaw in the emotional permafrost that had built up between them. Kodi, in turn, began to open up, sharing stories of his day, of his life, a world that Balto was just beginning to understand. He spoke of Steele's quiet wit, of his surprising gentleness, and Balto, to his own astonishment, found himself listening, truly listening, for the first time. The road to acceptance was long and littered with a lifetime of prejudice, but for the love of his son, Balto was willing to walk it, one step at a time. The air in Nome still carried the biting cold, but for the first time in a long time, Balto felt the warmth of his family.\nThe first time it happened, Kodi was filled with a dizzying mix of panic and exhilaration. He had run home, his mind a jumble of contradictions. He felt a deep, profound guilt, a sense of betrayal towards his father, his friends, his very way of life. And yet, there was no denying the feeling that had blossomed in his chest, a feeling of being seen, truly seen, by someone he had always considered an enemy.\nTheir secret relationship had continued, a clandestine affair conducted in the shadows of the Alaskan night. Kodi would slip out after Balto was asleep, a ghost in the moonlit landscape, his heart pounding a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He was a moth drawn to a flame, a flame that was both exhilarating and terrifying.\nBut everything changed one morning. A wave of nausea had hit Kodi with a sudden, violent force, leaving him retching in the snow. It had been followed by others, each one more intense than the last. He had tried to hide it, to pretend it was nothing, a simple stomach bug, but the sickness had been relentless. It was accompanied by strange cravings, a sudden, inexplicable desire for things he had never wanted before, like frozen fish and the sharp, tangy taste of blueberries.\nThe realization had come slowly, a creeping dread that had turned his blood to ice. He was pregnant. He had no idea how it was possible, but the signs were unmistakable, etched in his body with the brutal clarity of a winter sun. Panic had seized him, a cold, suffocating grip that had stolen his breath. He had been so lost in his own internal world that he hadn’t noticed his body changing, the subtle thickening of his waist, the faint roundness of his belly. Now, it was all he could see, a horrifying testament to his secret life.\nThe news had to be shared. The thought of telling Steele filled him with a different kind of fear. How would he react? Would he run, would he dismiss him, would he laugh at the impossibility of it all? Kodi had to know. He had to face the man who was inextricably linked to this new, terrifying reality.\nHe found Steele at their usual meeting place, a snow-covered cave on a bluff overlooking the town. The air was thick with the scent of pine and ice. Steele was sitting, his head bowed, a look of profound weariness on his face. When he saw Kodi, a flash of his old swagger returned. \"Well, look who it is,\" he said, his voice a low drawl. \"I was beginning to think you'd forgotten about me.\"\nKodi didn't respond with his usual lighthearted banter. He just stood there, his body trembling, his eyes filled with a raw, unadulterated terror. Steele's smile faded. \"What's wrong, Kodi? You look like you've seen a ghost.\"\nKodi took a deep breath, the words catching in his throat like shards of ice. \"Steele,\" he whispered, his voice barely audible. \"I... I'm pregnant.\"\nFor a moment, there was a profound, suffocating silence. Steele’s face was a mask of unreadable emotions, his eyes wide with disbelief. Then, a sharp, bitter laugh escaped his lips. \"You're what?\" he said, the sound echoing strangely in the quiet cave. \"That's not possible, Kodi. You're a male. This is some kind of joke, right?\"\n\"I wish it was,\" Kodi said, his voice breaking. He felt a hot, humiliating tear slide down his cheek. \"I don't know how it happened, but it did. I've been sick. I've been… changing.\" He gestured vaguely to his body, a silent plea for understanding.\nSteele's laughter died. He stood up and took a hesitant step towards Kodi, his eyes fixed on the gentle curve of his stomach. A flicker of something, fear? wonder? ran across his face. He reached out a hesitant paw, as if to touch Kodi, but stopped himself just short. \"Kodi, I… I don't know what to say,\" he said, his voice low and strained. \"This is… this is crazy. It's impossible.\"\n\"I know,\" Kodi said, the tears now flowing freely. \"I know it is. But it's happening. And I'm scared, Steele. So scared.\"\nSteele didn't offer comfort. He just stood there, a study in conflict. Kodi felt his heart sink. He had been right. Steele was going to abandon him. He was going to turn his back on this terrifying, impossible reality.\n\"I have to go,\" Kodi said, turning to leave. He couldn't bear to look at the cold indifference in Steele's eyes.\n\"Wait,\" Steele said, his voice a hoarse whisper. Kodi stopped, his back to him. \"Kodi, I… I'm not going anywhere. Just… give me a minute. I need to think.\"\nThose words, though not a ringing endorsement of support, were enough to give Kodi a sliver of hope. He nodded and left the cave, the cold air a welcome balm on his tear-streaked face. He had to go back to his life, to his father, to the life he was pretending was still normal.\nBalto, meanwhile, was at his wit's end. Kodi's strange behavior had reached a new level of concern. He had found him hunched over in the snow, his body wracked with a strange, silent retching. He had tried to get close, to offer help, but Kodi had pulled away, a flash of fear in his eyes Balto had never seen before.\nThat night, as the moon rose high in the sky, Balto watched as Kodi slipped out of the house. He didn't question it this time. He just decided. He had to know. He had to understand what was happening to his son. With a heavy heart, he followed Kodi’s tracks, a phantom in the snow, his instincts, the same ones that had led him through the blizzard to save Nome, now leading him towards a truth he wasn't sure he wanted to find.\nThe tracks led him to the bluff overlooking the town. Balto's heart pounded in his chest as he saw the familiar form of his son disappear into a snow-covered cave. But it wasn't just Kodi’s tracks. There were others, large and heavy, leading into the cave with him. Balto’s blood ran cold. He knew those tracks. They belonged to Steele.\nA cold, fiery rage surged through Balto. Steele. He had been poisoning his son's mind, filling his head with his poisonous ideas. Balto wanted to charge in, to tear Steele limb from limb, but something stopped him. A quiet voice in his head told him to wait, to listen. So he crept closer, his movements silent and careful, his ears trained on the conversation within the cave.\nThe voices were low, strained, but Balto could make out the words. He heard Kodi’s soft, broken whisper, the one he had tried to ignore. \"I'm scared, Steele. So scared.\" Then he heard Steele's reply, his voice uncharacteristically soft and full of a profound sadness. \"I know, Kodi. I know.\"\nBalto was filled with a chilling, nauseous dread. This was more than a rivalry. This was something deep, something serious. He couldn't hear every word, but he heard enough. Words like \"scared,\" \"impossible,\" and \"you're not alone.\" His heart was in his throat. What was happening to his son?\nHe was about to burst in, to demand answers, when he heard a new word, a word that froze him in place. He heard Kodi's voice, small and trembling, say, \"It's not just me, Steele. It's… the baby.\"\nBalto’s world stopped. The cold, the snow, the wind, the very earth beneath his feet, all of it faded into a muffled, distant hum. He couldn’t have heard that right. It was impossible. A mistake. But then he heard Steele's response, the heavy, burdened sigh of a man facing an impossible reality. \"I know,\" Steele said. \"I know.\"\nThat was enough. Balto could not stand another second of it. His rage, his fear, his love for his son, all of it coalesced into a single, overpowering wave of emotion. He burst into the cave, a thunderous roar tearing from his throat.\n\"WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?!\" he bellowed, his voice echoing off the walls of the cave. Kodi and Steele both started, their heads snapping towards him, their eyes wide with shock and fear.\n\"Dad!\" Kodi gasped, his voice a terrified squeak.\nSteele, ever the showman, recovered first, a smug sneer spreading across his face. \"Well, well, well,\" he drawled, his voice dripping with condescension. \"Looks like we have a visitor. Come to check up on your son, Balto?\"\nBalto ignored him. His eyes were fixed on Kodi, his son, the boy he had raised, the boy he had taught to run, to be a leader, to be himself. The boy who was now standing in a cave in the middle of the night with the dog he had hated for years, a boy who was... pregnant.\n\"Kodi,\" Balto said, his voice low and dangerous. \"What is he talking about?\"\nKodi couldn't speak. He just stood there, his body trembling, his eyes filled with an unspoken plea for understanding.\nSteele, enjoying the drama, stepped forward. \"Oh, he's talking about a little secret of ours, Balto,\" he said, a malicious glint in his eyes. \"Seems your boy isn't as pure as you thought he was.\"\nBalto’s fury erupted. He lunged at Steele, a flash of teeth and claws. But Kodi, with a surprising burst of strength, threw himself between them.\n\"NO!\" he screamed, his voice raw with desperation. \"Stop it! Both of you! This is my fault! All of it!\"\nBalto froze, his body rigid with fury, his eyes still locked on Steele's sneering face. But Kodi’s tear-streaked face, his trembling body, it all broke through the haze of Balto's anger.\n\"Kodi,\" Balto said, his voice a low, pained whisper. \"Tell me. What is going on?\"\nThe words tumbled out of Kodi in a breathless torrent, a confession of shame and fear and love. He told his father about the secret meetings with Steele, about the strange connection they had formed, about the terrifying discovery of his pregnancy. He told him everything, his head bowed, unable to meet his father's gaze.\nWhen he was finished, the silence in the cave was absolute. Kodi waited for the fury, the disappointment, the judgment. He waited for his father to turn his back on him, to disown him, to tell him what a terrible mistake he had made. But Balto said nothing. He just stood there, his body still, his face a canvas of unreadable emotions.\nThen, Balto did the last thing Kodi expected. He turned and walked out of the cave, disappearing into the night.\nKodi felt his heart shatter. It was over. His father had left him. Steele, meanwhile, was silent, his own face a mask of shock. The smugness had vanished, replaced by a profound unease.\nBalto walked. He didn't know where he was going, or why. The cold didn't bother him. He felt nothing. The world was a strange, numb blur of white and black. His son. Pregnant. With Steele. The words swirled in his mind, a nonsensical, impossible jumble of pain and confusion. It was like he was looking at a painting, a beautiful painting of his life, and someone had come and splattered black paint all over it.\nBut then, a different thought, a different feeling, began to seep through the numbness. He remembered Kodi's face, a face filled with raw, unadulterated terror. He remembered the trembling body, the desperate plea in his eyes. He remembered the boy he had raised, the boy who had always been so full of life, so full of spirit. That boy was scared. And Balto had left him.\nHe turned around and ran back to the cave, his heart pounding a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He found Kodi huddled against the cold stone, his body shaking with silent sobs. Steele was standing a few feet away, his back to Kodi, a silent, brooding presence.\nBalto ignored Steele. He went straight to Kodi and wrapped his paws around him, pulling him into a tight embrace. Kodi stiffened at first, and then, with a choked sob, he melted into his father's arms.\n\"I'm sorry, Dad,\" he whispered, his voice muffled against Balto’s chest. \"I am so, so sorry.\"\n\"Shhh,\" Balto whispered back, stroking Kodi’s fur with a gentle paw. \"It's okay, son. It's okay.\"\nThey stood there for a long time, the only sounds the soft, muffled sobs of a boy and the gentle, comforting rumble of a father. Balto knew, in that moment, that nothing had changed. Kodi was still his son. And he would love him, no matter what.\nHe looked up at Steele, who was still standing with his back to them, a sentinel in the darkness. \"Steele,\" Balto said, his voice firm and steady. \"What happens now?\"\nSteele turned around, his face etched with a mix of shock and confusion. He had expected anger. He had expected a fight. He had expected Balto to leave. But he had not expected this. \"I... I don't know,\" Steele said, the words a strange, unfamiliar sound in his mouth.\n\"I am going to support my son,\" Balto said, his voice a low rumble. \"I will be with him every step of the way. The question is… are you?\"\nSteele looked at Kodi, at the small, fragile bundle in Balto’s arms. The bravado, the arrogance, all of it seemed to fall away, leaving behind a profound and uncharacteristic vulnerability. He took a hesitant step forward, his eyes fixed on Kodi's face. \"Kodi,\" he said, his voice soft, almost a whisper. \"I… I want to be.\"\nAnd just like that, an unlikely family was born.\nThe days that followed were a surreal, dizzying blur. Balto, true to his word, had become Kodi’s constant companion. He helped him with the morning sickness, which, to Balto's unending horror, was a very real and very painful thing. He helped him with the strange cravings, chasing down frozen fish and finding the last of the season's blueberries in the frozen tundra. He helped him with the growing discomfort, the difficulty of moving, the constant exhaustion. He was a rock, a steady, unwavering presence in the maelstrom of Kodi’s life.\nSteele, too, had changed. The cruel, arrogant dog of the past was gone, replaced by a quiet, brooding presence. He was still a dog of few words, but his actions spoke volumes. He would bring Kodi a warm caribou hide to lie on, a fresh-killed hare for his lunch, a gentle nuzzle to reassure him that he was there. He would still, on occasion, offer a sarcastic remark, a flash of his old self, but the edge was gone, replaced by a strange, gruff kind of affection.\nThe community of Nome, meanwhile, was filled with whispers. Balto's friends, Jenna, Muk and Luk, and even the doctor, were confused by Kodi’s sudden illness and his strange friendship with Steele. They tried to ask Balto what was going on, but Balto, ever protective, just shook his head and said, \"He's just not feeling well. He'll be okay.\"\nBut secrets in a small town were like fire. They spread, and they burned. Soon, the whispers were no longer about Kodi's illness, but about his changing body, the strange curve of his belly, the way his father and even Steele seemed to be protecting him.\nOne day, Boris, the grumpy but kind-hearted goose, found Balto and Kodi sitting by the river. He waddled up to them, his head held high. \"Balto,\" he said, his voice a low honk. \"The people are talking. They say your son is… is sick.\"\nBalto sighed, a tired, weary sound. \"He is,\" he said, his voice flat. \"But he'll be okay.\"\nBoris looked at Kodi, at the gentle roundness of his stomach, at the weariness in his eyes. He said nothing more, but the next day, he brought Kodi a bowl of fresh, wild berries, and a quiet nod of understanding.\nThe first person to truly confront Balto was Jenna. She had been his shadow since the beginning of Kodi’s strange illness, her eyes filled with a worry that mirrored his own. One night, as Kodi was sleeping, she came to him, her face a mask of concern.\n\"Balto,\" she said, her voice soft. \"You have to tell me. What's wrong with Kodi? Is it a disease? Is he dying?\"\nBalto looked at his oldest and dearest friend, the mother of his children, and he knew he couldn’t lie to her. He had to tell her the truth.\nHe told her everything. He told her about Kodi and Steele, about the secret meetings, about the impossible reality of the pregnancy. He told her about the fear, the shame, the love, and the confusion. He didn’t leave anything out.\nJenna listened in silence, her face a blank canvas. When he was done, she didn’t say anything for a long time. Balto waited for the judgment, the anger, the rejection. But instead, she just came and nuzzled him, her body a warm comfort against his.\n\"Balto,\" she said, her voice thick with emotion. \"You are the bravest dog I know. And Kodi… Kodi is so much like you. He is filled with love, and he is trying to do the right thing. And as for Steele… well, maybe he is filled with more love than we ever gave him credit for.\"\nJenna’s acceptance, her quiet, unwavering support, was a balm to Balto's weary soul. She began to help, too, bringing Kodi warm bone broth and helping Balto find herbs to soothe his nausea. The quiet support of his friends helped, but the outside world was still a terrifying place.\nThe whispers grew louder, turning into taunts and sneers. The other sled dogs, the ones who had always admired Kodi for his spirit and his strength, now looked at him with a mix of pity and disgust. \"Look at him,\" they would whisper. \"He's a freak.\" \"That's not natural.\"\nSteele, surprisingly, was the one who stood up to them. He would place himself between Kodi and the sneering dogs, his body a solid, unmoving wall of menace. \"You have a problem with him, you have a problem with me,\" he would snarl, his voice a low growl. \"And believe me, you don't want a problem with me.\"\nThe other dogs would shrink back, their courage failing in the face of Steele's fury. Kodi, for all his fear, was filled with a strange, dizzying kind of pride. This was the same dog who had tormented him for years. This was the same dog who had betrayed his friends. And now, he was protecting him, fiercely, and without question.\nThe days passed slowly, filled with a strange mix of fear and hope. Kodi’s body changed more and more, and his exhaustion grew, but he was no longer alone. He had his father, his friends, and, to his endless surprise, Steele.\nOne cold, clear night, Balto found Kodi and Steele sitting on the bluff overlooking the town. Kodi was curled up against Steele's side, and Steele had a protective paw draped over his back. They were in silence, but it was a comfortable, familiar silence, the same one they had shared in the beginning.\n\"You know,\" Kodi said, his voice a soft murmur. \"I used to be so scared of you, Steele.\"\nSteele grunted, a low, amused sound. \"I used to be scared of you, too, Kodi.\"\nKodi looked at him, surprised. \"Scared? Why?\"\n\"Because you were so full of light,\" Steele said, his voice a low, gravelly whisper. \"You were so full of hope. And I… I was so full of darkness. I was scared your light would expose my darkness.\"\nKodi nuzzled his head against Steele’s shoulder. \"Well, your darkness didn't scare me away,\" he said.\n\"No,\" Steele said, his voice filled with a strange kind of wonder. \"It didn't.\"\nBalto watched them from a distance, a soft, gentle warmth spreading through his chest. He had seen the best and worst of Kodi. He had seen the depths of his fear and the strength of his love. And he had seen the impossible change in Steele. He was no longer just the villain. He was a father, too. A complicated, wounded, but ultimately loving father.\nThe day came, as it always did. A sharp, piercing pain had woken Kodi in the middle of the night. It had been followed by another, and another, each one more intense than the last. Balto, ever alert, had woken up immediately, his eyes filled with a familiar mixture of fear and determination.\n\"It's time,\" Balto said, his voice steady. \"Come on, son. Let's go.\"\nBalto led Kodi to the warm, snow-covered den he had prepared for him, a hidden nest in the woods, far from the prying eyes of the town. Steele was there, too, a silent, nervous shadow, his eyes wide with a fear Balto had never seen in him before.\nThe labor was long and brutal. Kodi was in agony, his body wracked with a pain he had never known. Balto and Steele were his rocks, his anchors in the storm. Balto was there, his voice a low, reassuring rumble, his paw a gentle, comforting pressure. Steele was there, too, his body a warm presence, his silent support a source of strength.\nHours passed, and as the sun began to rise, a new sound, a new life, filled the den. A soft, tiny cry.\nKodi, exhausted and weak, looked down, and saw him. A small, frail creature, his body a mixture of Kodi’s brown fur and Steele’s dark, sleek coat. He was beautiful. He was perfect.\nSteele, too, came forward, his body trembling, his eyes filled with a profound and uncharacteristic emotion. He looked down at the tiny creature, and then, he looked at Kodi, a silent, unspoken question in his eyes.\n\"He's ours, Steele,\" Kodi said, his voice a soft, exhausted whisper. \"He's ours.\"\nSteele bent down and licked the tiny creature, a gentle, reverent gesture. Kodi felt a tear slide down his cheek. It wasn't a tear of shame or fear, but a tear of love, of hope, of an overwhelming sense of completeness.\nBalto, meanwhile, was a study in pure, unadulterated joy. He looked at his son, at his grandson, at the family that had been born out of so much pain and so much confusion. He had always been a leader, a hero, a savior. But this… this was his greatest victory. He had not only saved a life, he had helped to create a new one, a new family.\nThe den was filled with a quiet, peaceful warmth. The sun was streaming in through the opening, the world outside a clean, bright canvas of white. The three of them, Balto, Kodi, and Steele, were a strange, unlikely family, but they were a family nonetheless. They were a testament to the fact that love could be found in the most unexpected places, in the darkest of hearts, in the most impossible of circumstances.\nThe tiny pup, a boy, grew strong and healthy under the watchful eyes of his three parents. They named him Jace, after the old Norse word for \"healer.\" And he was, indeed, a healer. He healed the rift between Balto and Kodi. He healed the wound in Steele’s heart. He healed the prejudice and the judgment of the world.\nBalto, the brave and kind father, was the rock. He taught Jace to be brave, to be strong, to be kind. Kodi, the gentle and loving mother, was the light. He taught Jace to be compassionate, to be hopeful, to be himself. And Steele, the gruff and protective father, was the shield. He taught Jace to be resilient, to be fearless, to be proud.\nThe three of them, with the new, tiny life between them, were a force to be reckoned with. They were no longer just Kodi, Balto, and Steele. They were a family. A family born out of pain and fear, but a family nonetheless. And as they watched their son grow, they knew that the love they shared, the love that had been born out of a secret and an impossible reality, was the truest, most powerful love of all.\nOne day, they were all sitting on the bluff overlooking Nome, Jace playing at their feet, his laughter a sweet, pure sound in the cold, crisp air. Balto looked at Kodi, at the gentle smile on his face, at the way he was looking at Jace, filled with a love so pure it was almost palpable. He looked at Steele, at the soft, tender look in his eyes as he watched his son play.\nAnd he knew, in that moment, that everything was going to be okay. It wasn't the life he had expected. It was messy, and complicated, and a little bit strange. But it was his life. It was their life. And it was beautiful.\nThe Sunday of the next week was a day the family had been looking forward to - Balto, Steele, and Kodi's wedding. Held at the park, with nearly everyone in town invited, the ceremony started like normal - Balto was stood at the makeshift altar, naked and erect, waiting, while Kodi and Steele, also nude and erect, walked down the aisle to him, holding a hand on the other's butt and another on their erect dicks. However, everyone knew, from the invitations, that this wedding wouldn't stay as traditional as this.\n\n\nOnce all three were up at the altar, the wedding commenced. Kodi immediately went on his hands and knees, with his tail up. Steele was on him in less than a second after, thrusting his large cock inside his ass, before raising his own tail. Balto thrust in his brother's ass, and the three started to fuck, with everyone watching, nearly all the males nursing erections or full on masturbating.\n\n\nWhen they had fucked for five minutes, they started to say their vows.\n\n\n\"To my dear brother and son,\" Balto said, grunting, \"I promise to always be there for you. To love and hold you dear. To keep you safe from misery and harm. Even when I perform my duties to my wife, I will be with you as your husband, father, and sibling.\"\n\n\nNext it was Steele's turn.\n\n\n\"Balto, Kodi,\" he grunted as he thrust in Kodi and had Balto thrust in him, \"I hadn't ever known what love was until I met you. You showed me what true love is, and how I have needed this. I can't ever remember finding anyone else I have ever loved as much as you two. So it is with my own heart that I say I will never harm either of you. Even if it were to save my own life, I would gladly welcome death if it kept you safe.\"\n\n\nFinally, Kodi's turn to say his vows happened.\n\n\n\"Dad, Uncle, you were my firsts,\" he said in between grunts and moans, \"my first time, and my first realisation. I may be married already to a beautiful woman, but my love is not just for her. I love the two of you, and I can't think of what my life would be without you. You made me into the man I am today. There is no amount of words I can say that will express my gratitude and love for you two. My promise here today is to keep you loved and safe from harm. I just hope that I can achieve that in the years we spend together.\"\n\n\nWith that, Balto and Steele thrust their knots in their bitches, and the three groaned as their balls pulsed and they sprayed their thick white cum. Having calmed down so that their squirts slowed, Balto, Steele, and Kodi went on to the rings. Still locked together and cumming, their balls visibly pulsing, Balto and Kodi placed a wedding ring on Steele's hand, Steele and Balto on Kodi's, and both Kodi and Steele on Balto's.\n\n\nThe three were now, officially, husbands.\n\n\nThe reception afterwards went by as smoothly as one would expect. After some coaxing from the guests, the three newlyweds fucked each other hard and fast, spraying thick cum everywhere, and swelling up bellies. The wedding guests had cheered once they finished, before, at Balto's insistence, while slapping his own ass as he continued to lightly hump Steele, they started to fuck one another as well.\n\n\nWhen it came to the cake, everyone was amazed. Instead of a typical wedding cake, Jenna and a few of her friends had made a cake that was designed to look like the three newlyweds, naked and fucking. It had Kodi as the base of the cake, on all fours with his tail raised from his rump, while Steele was on top of him, his dick in the husky's ass and his own tail raised, and Balto mounted on him, with his tail raised too to show off his own luscious butt. Balto, Kodi, and Steele had all felt weird but aroused as they cut the cake, their cocks erect and spurting copious amounts of pre-cum as they did so.\n\n\nA few months later, after Jenna, Aleu, and Dusty had given birth to their litters (Jenna had seven rather well-hung boys, Aleu had four girls and three boys, and Dusty had three girls and four boys, with Jenna's sons being Balto's, Dusty's sons and daughters being Kodi's, and Aleu's sons being Balto's, while three of her daughters were Kodi's, and the last girl was Steele's), and Paige had given birth to Stephen's pups (two boys and two girls), and the family had returned to Nome after going on a trip around several places in the world to see the extent of the retraction of clothing and sex laws (Balto did enjoy having his ass ploughed and pummelling his husbands' asses in public view, and Steele loved seeing people admiring his naked body and huge erect cock as he strutted around areas in full view), Jenna had gone into heat again.\n\n\n\"Ready to breed your mother?\" Balto asked, as he and Kodi went to where Jenna was in the living-room.\n\n\n\"I guess,\" Kodi said. His massive cock was erect and throbbing at his excitement.\n\n\n\"Then go and do it,\" Balto said, slapping his husband's ass as he went to his mother.\n\n\nJenna smiled up at Kodi as he leaned over her, pointing his tip at her puffed up cunt.\n\n\n\"Come on, Kodi. Give me your puppies. It's time to make Mama pregnant with your sexy pups,\" Jenna said. Kodi grinned, before he plunged his dick in, letting his knot slap at Jenna's pussy. She groaned, bright lights flashing in her mind as she was penetrated by her eldest, feeling the budding erection pushed deep, his anatomy slotting in as his heavy testes slapped into her teased pussy with a squelch, as his tip pushed into her fertile womb easily - not as deep as his father, but deeper than any other male.\n\n\nThose primal instincts took the reins begging the dog to rut, promising that sweet sweet tie for his efforts. He almost forgot she was his mother, his subconscious revelling in the thought of cumming inside her, the ultimate pleasure of impregnating her as he enjoyed the feel of his mother's body hugging tight around his fat cock.\nSo, a couple weeks after, once Jenna started showing, as did Aleu and Dusty (all three of the girls had only Kodi's pups, since Balto and Steele both decided that their husband should fill them with pups on his own), the previous batch of puppies had started to develop quickly (six months old and already running about without needing diapers, and being sexually active, with the boys letting their big dicks and sizeable balls flap about in the open, and both genders enjoying sex with each other and the older family members) and Stephen started to fuck Paige almost constantly, not even stopping while at school (luckily, when the two sat their exams later on, they both passed with flying colours, and got into a good collage that allowed the two to have sex or masturbate whenever they wanted, so long as they paid attention and did the required work, which they did, even while fucking) and just gave anyone watching a good show of him filling Paige's womb (not that anyone minded, some going as far as to cheer Stephen on as they watched and masturbated, or even slapped Stephen's ass to spur him on), Kodi had both Steele and Balto shove their massive dicks up his ass at the same time. While Steele was lying on his back with Kodi on his stomach, Balto had mounted. Both of the dominant males grinned at each other as they thrust in and out, making Kodi moan as his hole was stretched to its maximum by both his husbands' knots, before the two were locked inside.\n\n\n\"Since I didn't get to breed any of the girls this time, I've got to fuck someone to let my balls release. So I guess it's a good thing I've got a sexy son for a husband, huh?\" Balto asked.\n\n\n\"You always loved breeding me, Dad, and you and Steele got to fuck me hard when I was filling Mom, Aleu, and Dusty; and I don't think you minded getting to spread my ass apart til I was just a cum faucet. Now shut up and fucking fill me up,\" Kodi said.\n\n\nBalto looked at Steele.\n\n\n\"Shall we?\" he asked.\n\n\n\"Oh, yeah. Let's fill this whore up until he's as swollen as Jenna was,\" Steele said.\n\n\nKodi looked at the two in surprise, before he moaned when the two thrust again, and let their balls pulse, filling him with thick cum, and swelling his stomach until he looked pregnant with a litter of six. And all the while, Balto and Steele kept slapping at Kodi's ass, as well as their own furry rump cheeks, making Kodi moan in ecstasy, and Balto and Steele groan in lust.\n\n\nThe three kept mating for the rest of the day, with the end result being Kodi, Steele, and Balto having swollen stomachs full of their husbands' cum, and piss, Kodi's belly the biggest, easily reaching and resting on the floor even when he was standing up straight, and Balto's the smallest, merely looking like he had swallowed a basketball, and with their butts spanked hard, with Kodi's ass redder than cherries, while Steele and Balto's luscious butts were as red as Kodi's fur. Once the time reached eight at night, the three fucked and smacked each other one last time, with Balto on top, and Kodi the bottom, before they fell asleep where they were, tied and cumming, resting on Kodi's giant, cum-filled belly.\n\n\nNothing could separate this family.\n\n\nThe story of Kodi, Balto, and Steele was not a story of tragedy, or of betrayal, but a story of love, of family, and of a new kind of bravery. It was a story of a hero who had to face the hardest challenge of all: not a blizzard, or a rival, but the impossible reality of his own heart, and the hearts of the people he loved.\nAnd in the end, he had triumphed. Not by fighting, but by loving. Not by running, but by staying. Not by giving up, but by embracing a new, beautiful reality.",
  "writing_bbcode_parsed": "<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'>﻿The crystalline cold of Nome no longer felt like a friend to Balto; it was an echo of the chasm that had opened between him and Kodi. He&rsquo;d tried everything. Leaving fresh meat by Kodi&rsquo;s bedroll, as he had when Kodi was a pup. Making sure their harnesses were laid out side-by-side, a silent invitation to run together. He&rsquo;d even tried to engage him in talk of old races, of the diphtheria run that had made Balto a legend. But Kodi&rsquo;s replies were always flat, his eyes distant. It was a kind of pain Balto had never known, a deep-seated ache that was worse than any physical injury. He was a hero to the town, a monument of courage, but in his own home, he was a stranger to his own son.<br />One evening, as the northern lights began to dance across the sky in shimmering green and purple veils, Balto found Kodi sitting alone on the porch, his gaze fixed on the lights. He sat down beside him, the wood of the porch groaning under his weight.<br />&quot;The spirits are restless tonight,&quot; Balto said, his voice a low rumble. &quot;My mother always said they were the ancestors, dancing for us.&quot;<br />Kodi didn&#039;t respond for a long moment. He just stared at the sky, his eyes reflecting the ghostly glow. &quot;Do you ever feel like you&#039;re not in the right place, Dad?&quot; he finally asked, his voice barely a whisper.<br />The question hit Balto with the force of a physical blow. &quot;What do you mean, son?&quot;<br />Kodi shook his head, a small, weary motion. &quot;I don&#039;t know. Just&hellip; feel like I&#039;m supposed to be somewhere else. With someone else.&quot;<br />The words were a puzzle Balto couldn&rsquo;t solve. He wanted to pry, to ask who &ldquo;someone else&rdquo; was, but he saw the tension in Kodi&#039;s shoulders, the way he was already pulling away. So Balto stayed silent, the cold of the porch seeping into his bones, and the silence between them became another layer of frost. He knew Kodi was hiding something, something he was ashamed of, but he couldn&#039;t imagine what it could be. His mind replayed every possible scenario. Was Kodi in trouble? Was he involved with a rival team? The possibilities were endless, and none of them made sense. He saw a shadow fall over his son and he could not reach out to help.<br />________________<br /><br /><br />For Kodi, life had become a dizzying tapestry of lies. Every time he spoke to his father, he felt the sharp sting of deceit. He had always admired Balto, not just for his bravery, but for his unwavering sense of what was right. Balto was a moral compass, a true north, and Kodi felt like he was spiraling in the opposite direction, lost in a storm he had created himself.<br />His secret life with Steele was a stark contrast to the quiet despair of his days. Steele was a revelation. The arrogant sneer was replaced by a wry, knowing smile. The brutish swagger was a facade for a deep, almost crippling vulnerability. Kodi had stumbled upon it by accident. He had been running a late-night route, the moon a sliver in the sky, when he saw a figure huddled on a jagged rock outcropping. It was Steele, his head in his paws, his body shaking. Kodi had approached cautiously, ready for the usual insult, the usual posturing. But Steele hadn&#039;t looked up. He just let out a low, guttural sound, something between a sigh and a sob.<br />&quot;Steele?&quot; Kodi had asked tentatively.<br />Steele had flinched, his head snapping up, his eyes wide and panicked. For a moment, the old Steele was back, a flash of fury in his gaze. But it faded, replaced by something raw and unguarded. &quot;Go on, get out of here,&quot; he&#039;d muttered, his voice hoarse. &quot;You don&#039;t want to see me like this.&quot;<br />Kodi hadn&#039;t gone. He had sat down, a respectful distance away, and waited. Eventually, the silence had become comfortable. Steele had told him of his past, of the weight of being a champion, of the constant pressure to be the best, the fear of losing it all. He spoke of the loneliness, the way his reputation had alienated him from everyone. Kodi listened, and for the first time, he saw Steele not as a rival or a bully, but as a wounded soul, a prisoner of his own legend.<br />And then, one night, the talking had stopped. The air had crackled with a new kind of energy. Steele had shifted, his hip brushing against Kodi&#039;s. Kodi had held his breath, a nervous tremor running through him. Steele had looked at him, his dark eyes searching, and then, he had gently nuzzled Kodi&#039;s ear. It was a gesture of affection, a promise of something more. Kodi had instinctively leaned into the touch, a low whine escaping his throat. And in that moment, the shame and the fear had been eclipsed by a dizzying rush of something new. A kiss. A clumsy, desperate press of lips in the bitter cold. Kodi had been so startled, he had pulled back, his heart thundering in his chest. But Steele hadn&#039;t laughed. He had just looked at him with an expression of quiet understanding, and in that gaze, Kodi had found a depth of feeling he never knew existed.<br />________________<br /><br /><br />The nights became a secret world for them. They would meet at the high ridge, a place of quiet solitude, a sanctuary from the prying eyes of Nome. They would talk for hours, or simply lie together, their bodies a warm haven against the cold. Kodi learned that Steele, the infamous bully, had a quiet love for poetry, that he secretly admired Balto, and that his arrogance was a shield against a profound sense of self-doubt. Steele learned of Kodi&#039;s struggle to live up to his father&#039;s legacy, of his fear of mediocrity, and of his deep, abiding loneliness.<br />Kodi found himself falling in love, not with the legend of Steele, but with the man beneath it. He loved the way Steele&#039;s eyes would crinkle when he laughed, the way he would gently lick a cut on Kodi&#039;s paw, the way he would share his deepest fears in the quiet of the night. But every time he was with Steele, he felt the heavy guilt of his deception. He was lying to his father, to his friends, to the entire town. He knew what they would say. They would call him a traitor, a fool. He was a hero&#039;s son, and he was in love with the villain of the story.<br />The guilt manifested itself in his daily life. He became a ghost, slipping in and out of the house, avoiding his father&rsquo;s gaze. He couldn&#039;t bear to look into Balto&#039;s eyes, those warm, understanding eyes that saw so much and yet understood so little of what was happening. Balto, in turn, grew more desperate. He tried a new tactic, a last-ditch effort to reconnect. He decided to take Kodi on a long run, a full day and night trek to a distant trapper&#039;s cabin. He knew it was a place Kodi loved, a memory of a time when things were simple. He hoped the solitude, the shared labor of the trail, would break down the wall between them.<br />Kodi agreed, a flicker of something in his eyes. He knew he couldn&#039;t say no. It would be a cruel denial of his father&rsquo;s love. But as they prepared for the journey, a knot of dread tightened in his stomach. He was leaving his secret world, his Steele, for twenty-four hours. He knew what a day of honest conversation with his father would do. It would make his lies feel even heavier, his betrayal even more profound.<br />They set off the next morning, the sled a blur behind them. The sun was a pale disk in the sky, casting long, blue shadows across the snow. Balto led the way, his gait sure and powerful, and Kodi followed, his mind a million miles away. They ran in silence for the first few hours, the only sound the rhythmic thud of their paws on the packed snow and the whisper of the wind.<br />Balto finally spoke when they stopped for a brief rest by a frozen river. &quot;Remember this place, Kodi?&quot; he said, his voice soft. &quot;We came here when you were a pup. You tried to chase a fish under the ice. Got your nose stuck.&quot; He laughed, a low, easy sound.<br />Kodi gave a weak smile. &quot;I remember. You told me I was the silliest pup in Nome.&quot;<br />Balto&rsquo;s laughter faded. He looked at Kodi, a plea in his eyes. &quot;What&#039;s going on, son? Please. I&#039;m worried about you. You&#039;re not the same. You&#039;re&hellip; a stranger.&quot;<br />Kodi&rsquo;s heart hammered against his ribs. He wanted to tell him. He wanted to confess everything, to get rid of this heavy burden. But the words were stuck in his throat, a sharp, metallic taste of fear. He shook his head, looking away. &quot;I told you, Dad. I&#039;m fine. Just&hellip; a lot on my mind.&quot;<br />Balto sighed, a long, weary sound. He didn&#039;t press him. He just got up and started pulling the sled again. The silence returned, more charged than before. The rest of the day was a blur of motion, a physical exertion that did nothing to numb the pain in their hearts.<br />That night, they made camp in a small cave, the fire a warm, flickering island in the vast, cold darkness. Balto laid out their bedrolls, a silent invitation to talk. But Kodi, exhausted from the physical and emotional strain, curled up and pretended to sleep, his back to his father. He couldn&rsquo;t face him. He felt like a coward.<br />He woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of Balto talking, his voice a low, mournful murmur. He wasn&rsquo;t talking to Kodi. He was talking to himself. &quot;I don&#039;t understand,&quot; Balto said, his voice thick with emotion. &quot;Where did I go wrong? I tried to teach him everything. Courage. Honesty. What happened to my boy?&quot;<br />Kodi&#039;s stomach twisted into a painful knot. He wanted to cry out, to tell his father that he hadn&#039;t done anything wrong, that it was all on him. But he couldn&#039;t. He just lay there, the words a burning lump in his throat, the sound of his father&#039;s pain a knife in his heart. He felt like the worst son in the world. He was living a lie, and the cost was his relationship with the one person who had always loved him unconditionally.<br />The next day, they ran in an even heavier silence. The return trip was a blur of numb endurance. When they arrived back in Nome, Kodi barely said a word, just went straight to his bedroll, the weight of his guilt a physical burden. Balto watched him go, his heart heavy. He knew he was losing his son, and he didn&rsquo;t know how to stop it. He felt utterly and completely defeated.<br />Meanwhile, Kodi&#039;s secret world was fraying at the edges. Steele, who had been patient and understanding, was growing frustrated. &quot;You&#039;re pulling away, Kodi,&quot; he said one night, his voice laced with a hurt Kodi had never heard before. &quot;You come here, you tell me you love me, and then you act like you don&#039;t even know me when we&#039;re in town. I can&#039;t live like this, Kodi. I won&#039;t. I&#039;m not a secret you can hide in the shadows.&quot;<br />The words were a brutal truth. Kodi knew he was hurting Steele, and the thought was unbearable. But he couldn&#039;t let go of the fear, the shame. &quot;It&#039;s not that simple, Steele,&quot; he said, his voice cracking. &quot;You don&#039;t understand.&quot;<br />Steele&#039;s face hardened. &quot;Don&#039;t I? I understand that you&#039;re ashamed of me. That you&#039;re a coward. You can&#039;t be with me and be Balto&#039;s son, can you? You have to choose.&quot;<br />The words hung in the air, a cruel ultimatum. Kodi knew Steele was right. He couldn&#039;t have both. He couldn&#039;t be the good son and the secret lover. He was being torn in two, and the pressure was unbearable. He ran from Steele that night, a panicked, desperate flight back to his father&#039;s house. He spent the night trembling, a cold, empty feeling in his gut. He was alone. He had alienated his father with his lies and was now on the verge of losing the only person who understood him. He felt like he was falling into a dark, bottomless pit, and there was no one to catch him.<br />He knew he had to make a choice, and the choice would be a painful one. He couldn&#039;t keep living this double life. The lie was eating him alive, destroying the very people he loved. But which path to choose? The one of truth and acceptance, which would mean losing his family&#039;s respect, or the one of deceit, which would mean losing the love of his life?<br />The following day, Balto was preparing to run a supply route. He had asked a younger dog to run with him, a friendly, eager pup named Kip. Kodi saw them leaving and the sight was a new kind of pain. His father was moving on, finding a new partner, a new &quot;son.&quot; The thought was a searing brand on his heart. He knew he had to do something.<br />He ran to the high ridge, the wind whipping his fur. He found Steele sitting there, his gaze fixed on the horizon, his expression unreadable. Kodi&#039;s heart was in his throat. He had to be brave, for once. He had to tell the truth. To one of them, at least. He had to choose.<br />He walked up to Steele, his paws shaking. &quot;Steele,&quot; he said, his voice barely a whisper.<br />Steele turned, his eyes cold. &quot;What do you want, Kodi?&quot;<br />&quot;I&hellip; I&#039;m sorry,&quot; Kodi said, the words a difficult, painful confession. &quot;I&#039;m sorry I&#039;ve been a coward. I&#039;m sorry I hurt you.&quot; He took a deep breath, the cold air burning his lungs. &quot;I&hellip; I love you, Steele. I don&#039;t care what they say. I don&#039;t care what my father thinks. I want to be with you. I want to be honest about it.&quot;<br />A slow, tentative smile spread across Steele&#039;s face, a genuine smile that transformed his harsh features. &quot;You mean it?&quot; he asked, his voice soft with disbelief.<br />Kodi nodded, tears freezing on his cheeks. &quot;I mean it.&quot;<br />Steele wrapped his paws around Kodi, pulling him into a tight embrace. The contact was a relief, a warmth that chased away the cold and the fear. &quot;I love you too, Kodi,&quot; he said, his voice muffled in Kodi&#039;s fur. &quot;And I don&#039;t want you to lose your father. He&#039;s a good man. You&#039;re a good man. We&#039;ll figure this out. Together.&quot;<br />The words were a lifeline. Kodi felt a flicker of hope, a small spark of light in the vast darkness. He knew it wouldn&#039;t be easy. The town of Nome, his father, his friends, would never understand. But he also knew that he had chosen the right path. He had chosen love, and he had chosen truth. Now he just had to find the courage to face the consequences. He had to face his father, the man he had betrayed, and tell him the truth. And the thought of that conversation filled him with a fear so profound, it almost eclipsed the joy of being in Steele&#039;s arms. But he knew it was a conversation he could no longer avoid. The time for living in the shadows was over.<br />Balto waited for his son to come home. The hours stretched into a tense, agonizing eternity. He sat on the porch, a silent sentinel against the bitter cold, his gaze fixed on the spot where the trail disappeared into the trees. He felt an emptiness inside him, a cold and hollow place that had once been filled with the easy warmth of a father&#039;s love. He had tried to be patient, to give Kodi space, but his son&#039;s silence, his constant avoidance, felt like a deliberate rejection. The thought of Kodi preferring the company of a young, inexperienced dog like Kip, or even worse, being off on his own, filled Balto with a deep, unsettling dread. He replayed every conversation, every interaction, searching for a clue, a sign of what had gone wrong. Had he pushed Kodi too hard? Had he expected him to be the hero&#039;s son, a reflection of his own legacy, instead of letting him find his own path? The questions swirled in his mind, a relentless, painful torment.<br />Just as the sun began to dip below the horizon, painting the sky in a final, fiery burst of orange and purple, Balto saw two figures emerge from the treeline. His heart leaped, but then sank as he realized it wasn&#039;t Kodi alone. It was Kodi and Steele. The sight was a shock, a blow to the gut that left Balto breathless. Steele, his nemesis, the dog who had tormented him and his friends for years, was walking beside his son, their heads close together, their body language a startlingly intimate tableau. Balto felt a surge of rage, hot and fierce, a primal instinct to protect his son from this deceitful, malicious brute. He stood up, every muscle in his body taut, ready for a confrontation.<br />Kodi saw his father and a flicker of panic crossed his face, but he didn&#039;t waver. He took a deep breath and continued to walk forward, his paw brushing against Steele&rsquo;s. Steele, for his part, met Balto&rsquo;s gaze with a surprising lack of arrogance. There was no sneer, no swagger. Just a quiet resolve, a steely determination that Balto found utterly disarming. They stopped a few feet from the porch, and the silence was thick with unspoken accusations and a profound sense of foreboding.<br />&quot;Dad,&quot; Kodi said, his voice quiet but firm. &quot;We need to talk.&quot;<br />Balto&#039;s gaze was fixed on Steele. &quot;What is this, Kodi?&quot; he growled, the words a low, dangerous rumble. &quot;What are you doing with him?&quot;<br />&quot;I&#039;m with him, Dad,&quot; Kodi said, and the words, so simple and direct, hit Balto with the force of a tidal wave. &quot;We&#039;re together.&quot;<br />The world seemed to tilt on its axis. Balto&rsquo;s mind reeled, trying to comprehend what he was hearing. Kodi and Steele? It was an impossible, grotesque pairing. It was like a hero falling in love with his own villain. It was a contradiction of everything Balto believed in, everything he had fought for. He felt a profound sense of betrayal, a cold, hard knot of anger and hurt forming in his chest.<br />&quot;How could you?&quot; Balto whispered, the anger replaced by a deep, heartbreaking sorrow. &quot;After everything he&#039;s done? After what he did to me? To Jenna? To all of us?&quot;<br />Steele flinched, but he didn&#039;t look away. He stood his ground, a silent pillar of support beside Kodi. Kodi took a step closer to his father, his eyes pleading. &quot;It&#039;s not what you think, Dad. He&#039;s not&hellip; he&#039;s not the dog you remember. He&#039;s different. I&#039;ve gotten to know him, and he&#039;s&hellip; he&#039;s kind. He&#039;s lonely. He&#039;s not what everyone thinks he is.&quot;<br />Balto laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. &quot;A bully is a bully, Kodi. A dog doesn&#039;t just change his spots. He&#039;s lying to you. He&rsquo;s manipulating you. He&#039;s trying to get to me through you.&quot; He turned his full fury on Steele. &quot;Is that what this is? Another one of your games? Another way to get back at me?&quot;<br />Steele finally spoke, his voice low and steady. &quot;No, Balto. This isn&#039;t a game. I know what I&#039;ve done. I know the kind of dog I was. And I&#039;m not asking for your forgiveness. But Kodi&hellip; he saw something in me that no one else has. He saw who I could be. He saw me for who I am. And I love him. I would never hurt him. Never.&quot;<br />The words hung in the air, a profound confession. Kodi moved to stand in front of Steele, shielding him from his father&#039;s angry gaze. &quot;He&rsquo;s telling the truth, Dad. He&#039;s the one who&#039;s been there for me. He&rsquo;s the one who understands me. You&hellip; you&#039;ve been so busy being a hero, you haven&#039;t even seen me. You haven&#039;t seen that I&#039;m not you. That I&#039;m not a legend in the making. I&#039;m just&hellip; me. And I&#039;ve been so scared to tell you that. Scared to let you down. Scared to disappoint you.&quot;<br />The words were a direct hit. They broke through Balto&#039;s rage and landed in the vulnerable, aching core of his heart. He saw the truth in Kodi&#039;s eyes, the deep-seated fear and the profound sadness. He saw the pain he had caused by his own silent expectations. He had been so wrapped up in his own legacy, his own idea of what his son should be, that he had failed to see what he was. He had been so busy mourning the loss of the son he knew, that he hadn&#039;t even tried to understand the son he had.<br />&quot;Kodi,&quot; Balto said, the anger gone from his voice, replaced by a quiet, devastating realization. &quot;I&hellip; I didn&#039;t know. I&#039;m so sorry, son. I&#039;m so, so sorry.&quot;<br />The apology was a balm, a first step toward healing. Kodi&#039;s tense shoulders relaxed, and a tear slipped down his cheek. &quot;It&#039;s okay, Dad,&quot; he said, his voice thick with emotion. &quot;But you have to try. You have to try to understand. You have to try to see him for who he is now, not who he used to be.&quot;<br />Balto looked at Steele, really looked at him for the first time. He saw the vulnerability, the quiet strength. He saw the genuine love in his eyes as he looked at Kodi. He saw a dog who was willing to stand up to the most revered hero in Nome for the sake of the dog he loved. And in that moment, Balto felt something shift inside him. The hatred and the anger began to recede, replaced by a grudging respect and a profound sense of awe at his son&#039;s courage.<br />&quot;I can&#039;t promise that I&#039;ll understand right away,&quot; Balto said, his voice still low, but no longer laced with anger. &quot;This is&hellip; a lot. But I can promise I&rsquo;ll try. For you, Kodi. I&#039;ll try.&quot;<br />The words were a peace offering, a first step on a long and difficult path. Kodi moved to his father, and for the first time in months, they embraced. It was a clumsy, awkward hug, but it was a hug of love, of forgiveness, of a family beginning to heal. Steele stood back, giving them space, a silent witness to their reconciliation.<br />That night, Balto sat by the fire, a new kind of silence in the house. A silence of quiet reflection, of a profound and startling revelation. He had always thought of himself as a hero, a symbol of courage and truth. But in that one night, his son had shown him that true courage wasn&#039;t just about facing down a blizzard or a bully. It was about facing down your own prejudices, your own expectations, and your own fears. It was about loving someone unconditionally, even when they made choices you didn&#039;t understand. And he knew, with a certainty that was both terrifying and exhilarating, that his own journey as a hero, and as a father, was just beginning. He had a lot to learn, and he had a lot to make up for. And he knew, with a new and humbling clarity, that the bravest journey he had ever embarked on wasn&rsquo;t across the frozen tundra, but into the unknown landscape of his own heart, and he knew, with a new and humbling clarity, that the bravest journey he had ever embarked on wasn&rsquo;t across the frozen tundra, but into the unknown landscape of his own heart.<br />The following days were a tentative dance of healing. Balto reached out to Kodi, not with demands or questions, but with small, quiet gestures. He left his son&#039;s favorite type of smoked salmon by his bedroll, a silent apology. He waited for Kodi and Steele to come back from their runs, and though he still felt a knot of unease in his gut, he met them with a nod and a murmured &quot;Good run.&quot; The change was gradual, a slow thaw in the emotional permafrost that had built up between them. Kodi, in turn, began to open up, sharing stories of his day, of his life, a world that Balto was just beginning to understand. He spoke of Steele&#039;s quiet wit, of his surprising gentleness, and Balto, to his own astonishment, found himself listening, truly listening, for the first time. The road to acceptance was long and littered with a lifetime of prejudice, but for the love of his son, Balto was willing to walk it, one step at a time. The air in Nome still carried the biting cold, but for the first time in a long time, Balto felt the warmth of his family.<br />The first time it happened, Kodi was filled with a dizzying mix of panic and exhilaration. He had run home, his mind a jumble of contradictions. He felt a deep, profound guilt, a sense of betrayal towards his father, his friends, his very way of life. And yet, there was no denying the feeling that had blossomed in his chest, a feeling of being seen, truly seen, by someone he had always considered an enemy.<br />Their secret relationship had continued, a clandestine affair conducted in the shadows of the Alaskan night. Kodi would slip out after Balto was asleep, a ghost in the moonlit landscape, his heart pounding a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He was a moth drawn to a flame, a flame that was both exhilarating and terrifying.<br />But everything changed one morning. A wave of nausea had hit Kodi with a sudden, violent force, leaving him retching in the snow. It had been followed by others, each one more intense than the last. He had tried to hide it, to pretend it was nothing, a simple stomach bug, but the sickness had been relentless. It was accompanied by strange cravings, a sudden, inexplicable desire for things he had never wanted before, like frozen fish and the sharp, tangy taste of blueberries.<br />The realization had come slowly, a creeping dread that had turned his blood to ice. He was pregnant. He had no idea how it was possible, but the signs were unmistakable, etched in his body with the brutal clarity of a winter sun. Panic had seized him, a cold, suffocating grip that had stolen his breath. He had been so lost in his own internal world that he hadn&rsquo;t noticed his body changing, the subtle thickening of his waist, the faint roundness of his belly. Now, it was all he could see, a horrifying testament to his secret life.<br />The news had to be shared. The thought of telling Steele filled him with a different kind of fear. How would he react? Would he run, would he dismiss him, would he laugh at the impossibility of it all? Kodi had to know. He had to face the man who was inextricably linked to this new, terrifying reality.<br />He found Steele at their usual meeting place, a snow-covered cave on a bluff overlooking the town. The air was thick with the scent of pine and ice. Steele was sitting, his head bowed, a look of profound weariness on his face. When he saw Kodi, a flash of his old swagger returned. &quot;Well, look who it is,&quot; he said, his voice a low drawl. &quot;I was beginning to think you&#039;d forgotten about me.&quot;<br />Kodi didn&#039;t respond with his usual lighthearted banter. He just stood there, his body trembling, his eyes filled with a raw, unadulterated terror. Steele&#039;s smile faded. &quot;What&#039;s wrong, Kodi? You look like you&#039;ve seen a ghost.&quot;<br />Kodi took a deep breath, the words catching in his throat like shards of ice. &quot;Steele,&quot; he whispered, his voice barely audible. &quot;I... I&#039;m pregnant.&quot;<br />For a moment, there was a profound, suffocating silence. Steele&rsquo;s face was a mask of unreadable emotions, his eyes wide with disbelief. Then, a sharp, bitter laugh escaped his lips. &quot;You&#039;re what?&quot; he said, the sound echoing strangely in the quiet cave. &quot;That&#039;s not possible, Kodi. You&#039;re a male. This is some kind of joke, right?&quot;<br />&quot;I wish it was,&quot; Kodi said, his voice breaking. He felt a hot, humiliating tear slide down his cheek. &quot;I don&#039;t know how it happened, but it did. I&#039;ve been sick. I&#039;ve been&hellip; changing.&quot; He gestured vaguely to his body, a silent plea for understanding.<br />Steele&#039;s laughter died. He stood up and took a hesitant step towards Kodi, his eyes fixed on the gentle curve of his stomach. A flicker of something, fear? wonder? ran across his face. He reached out a hesitant paw, as if to touch Kodi, but stopped himself just short. &quot;Kodi, I&hellip; I don&#039;t know what to say,&quot; he said, his voice low and strained. &quot;This is&hellip; this is crazy. It&#039;s impossible.&quot;<br />&quot;I know,&quot; Kodi said, the tears now flowing freely. &quot;I know it is. But it&#039;s happening. And I&#039;m scared, Steele. So scared.&quot;<br />Steele didn&#039;t offer comfort. He just stood there, a study in conflict. Kodi felt his heart sink. He had been right. Steele was going to abandon him. He was going to turn his back on this terrifying, impossible reality.<br />&quot;I have to go,&quot; Kodi said, turning to leave. He couldn&#039;t bear to look at the cold indifference in Steele&#039;s eyes.<br />&quot;Wait,&quot; Steele said, his voice a hoarse whisper. Kodi stopped, his back to him. &quot;Kodi, I&hellip; I&#039;m not going anywhere. Just&hellip; give me a minute. I need to think.&quot;<br />Those words, though not a ringing endorsement of support, were enough to give Kodi a sliver of hope. He nodded and left the cave, the cold air a welcome balm on his tear-streaked face. He had to go back to his life, to his father, to the life he was pretending was still normal.<br />Balto, meanwhile, was at his wit&#039;s end. Kodi&#039;s strange behavior had reached a new level of concern. He had found him hunched over in the snow, his body wracked with a strange, silent retching. He had tried to get close, to offer help, but Kodi had pulled away, a flash of fear in his eyes Balto had never seen before.<br />That night, as the moon rose high in the sky, Balto watched as Kodi slipped out of the house. He didn&#039;t question it this time. He just decided. He had to know. He had to understand what was happening to his son. With a heavy heart, he followed Kodi&rsquo;s tracks, a phantom in the snow, his instincts, the same ones that had led him through the blizzard to save Nome, now leading him towards a truth he wasn&#039;t sure he wanted to find.<br />The tracks led him to the bluff overlooking the town. Balto&#039;s heart pounded in his chest as he saw the familiar form of his son disappear into a snow-covered cave. But it wasn&#039;t just Kodi&rsquo;s tracks. There were others, large and heavy, leading into the cave with him. Balto&rsquo;s blood ran cold. He knew those tracks. They belonged to Steele.<br />A cold, fiery rage surged through Balto. Steele. He had been poisoning his son&#039;s mind, filling his head with his poisonous ideas. Balto wanted to charge in, to tear Steele limb from limb, but something stopped him. A quiet voice in his head told him to wait, to listen. So he crept closer, his movements silent and careful, his ears trained on the conversation within the cave.<br />The voices were low, strained, but Balto could make out the words. He heard Kodi&rsquo;s soft, broken whisper, the one he had tried to ignore. &quot;I&#039;m scared, Steele. So scared.&quot; Then he heard Steele&#039;s reply, his voice uncharacteristically soft and full of a profound sadness. &quot;I know, Kodi. I know.&quot;<br />Balto was filled with a chilling, nauseous dread. This was more than a rivalry. This was something deep, something serious. He couldn&#039;t hear every word, but he heard enough. Words like &quot;scared,&quot; &quot;impossible,&quot; and &quot;you&#039;re not alone.&quot; His heart was in his throat. What was happening to his son?<br />He was about to burst in, to demand answers, when he heard a new word, a word that froze him in place. He heard Kodi&#039;s voice, small and trembling, say, &quot;It&#039;s not just me, Steele. It&#039;s&hellip; the baby.&quot;<br />Balto&rsquo;s world stopped. The cold, the snow, the wind, the very earth beneath his feet, all of it faded into a muffled, distant hum. He couldn&rsquo;t have heard that right. It was impossible. A mistake. But then he heard Steele&#039;s response, the heavy, burdened sigh of a man facing an impossible reality. &quot;I know,&quot; Steele said. &quot;I know.&quot;<br />That was enough. Balto could not stand another second of it. His rage, his fear, his love for his son, all of it coalesced into a single, overpowering wave of emotion. He burst into the cave, a thunderous roar tearing from his throat.<br />&quot;WHAT&#039;S GOING ON HERE?!&quot; he bellowed, his voice echoing off the walls of the cave. Kodi and Steele both started, their heads snapping towards him, their eyes wide with shock and fear.<br />&quot;Dad!&quot; Kodi gasped, his voice a terrified squeak.<br />Steele, ever the showman, recovered first, a smug sneer spreading across his face. &quot;Well, well, well,&quot; he drawled, his voice dripping with condescension. &quot;Looks like we have a visitor. Come to check up on your son, Balto?&quot;<br />Balto ignored him. His eyes were fixed on Kodi, his son, the boy he had raised, the boy he had taught to run, to be a leader, to be himself. The boy who was now standing in a cave in the middle of the night with the dog he had hated for years, a boy who was... pregnant.<br />&quot;Kodi,&quot; Balto said, his voice low and dangerous. &quot;What is he talking about?&quot;<br />Kodi couldn&#039;t speak. He just stood there, his body trembling, his eyes filled with an unspoken plea for understanding.<br />Steele, enjoying the drama, stepped forward. &quot;Oh, he&#039;s talking about a little secret of ours, Balto,&quot; he said, a malicious glint in his eyes. &quot;Seems your boy isn&#039;t as pure as you thought he was.&quot;<br />Balto&rsquo;s fury erupted. He lunged at Steele, a flash of teeth and claws. But Kodi, with a surprising burst of strength, threw himself between them.<br />&quot;NO!&quot; he screamed, his voice raw with desperation. &quot;Stop it! Both of you! This is my fault! All of it!&quot;<br />Balto froze, his body rigid with fury, his eyes still locked on Steele&#039;s sneering face. But Kodi&rsquo;s tear-streaked face, his trembling body, it all broke through the haze of Balto&#039;s anger.<br />&quot;Kodi,&quot; Balto said, his voice a low, pained whisper. &quot;Tell me. What is going on?&quot;<br />The words tumbled out of Kodi in a breathless torrent, a confession of shame and fear and love. He told his father about the secret meetings with Steele, about the strange connection they had formed, about the terrifying discovery of his pregnancy. He told him everything, his head bowed, unable to meet his father&#039;s gaze.<br />When he was finished, the silence in the cave was absolute. Kodi waited for the fury, the disappointment, the judgment. He waited for his father to turn his back on him, to disown him, to tell him what a terrible mistake he had made. But Balto said nothing. He just stood there, his body still, his face a canvas of unreadable emotions.<br />Then, Balto did the last thing Kodi expected. He turned and walked out of the cave, disappearing into the night.<br />Kodi felt his heart shatter. It was over. His father had left him. Steele, meanwhile, was silent, his own face a mask of shock. The smugness had vanished, replaced by a profound unease.<br />Balto walked. He didn&#039;t know where he was going, or why. The cold didn&#039;t bother him. He felt nothing. The world was a strange, numb blur of white and black. His son. Pregnant. With Steele. The words swirled in his mind, a nonsensical, impossible jumble of pain and confusion. It was like he was looking at a painting, a beautiful painting of his life, and someone had come and splattered black paint all over it.<br />But then, a different thought, a different feeling, began to seep through the numbness. He remembered Kodi&#039;s face, a face filled with raw, unadulterated terror. He remembered the trembling body, the desperate plea in his eyes. He remembered the boy he had raised, the boy who had always been so full of life, so full of spirit. That boy was scared. And Balto had left him.<br />He turned around and ran back to the cave, his heart pounding a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He found Kodi huddled against the cold stone, his body shaking with silent sobs. Steele was standing a few feet away, his back to Kodi, a silent, brooding presence.<br />Balto ignored Steele. He went straight to Kodi and wrapped his paws around him, pulling him into a tight embrace. Kodi stiffened at first, and then, with a choked sob, he melted into his father&#039;s arms.<br />&quot;I&#039;m sorry, Dad,&quot; he whispered, his voice muffled against Balto&rsquo;s chest. &quot;I am so, so sorry.&quot;<br />&quot;Shhh,&quot; Balto whispered back, stroking Kodi&rsquo;s fur with a gentle paw. &quot;It&#039;s okay, son. It&#039;s okay.&quot;<br />They stood there for a long time, the only sounds the soft, muffled sobs of a boy and the gentle, comforting rumble of a father. Balto knew, in that moment, that nothing had changed. Kodi was still his son. And he would love him, no matter what.<br />He looked up at Steele, who was still standing with his back to them, a sentinel in the darkness. &quot;Steele,&quot; Balto said, his voice firm and steady. &quot;What happens now?&quot;<br />Steele turned around, his face etched with a mix of shock and confusion. He had expected anger. He had expected a fight. He had expected Balto to leave. But he had not expected this. &quot;I... I don&#039;t know,&quot; Steele said, the words a strange, unfamiliar sound in his mouth.<br />&quot;I am going to support my son,&quot; Balto said, his voice a low rumble. &quot;I will be with him every step of the way. The question is&hellip; are you?&quot;<br />Steele looked at Kodi, at the small, fragile bundle in Balto&rsquo;s arms. The bravado, the arrogance, all of it seemed to fall away, leaving behind a profound and uncharacteristic vulnerability. He took a hesitant step forward, his eyes fixed on Kodi&#039;s face. &quot;Kodi,&quot; he said, his voice soft, almost a whisper. &quot;I&hellip; I want to be.&quot;<br />And just like that, an unlikely family was born.<br />The days that followed were a surreal, dizzying blur. Balto, true to his word, had become Kodi&rsquo;s constant companion. He helped him with the morning sickness, which, to Balto&#039;s unending horror, was a very real and very painful thing. He helped him with the strange cravings, chasing down frozen fish and finding the last of the season&#039;s blueberries in the frozen tundra. He helped him with the growing discomfort, the difficulty of moving, the constant exhaustion. He was a rock, a steady, unwavering presence in the maelstrom of Kodi&rsquo;s life.<br />Steele, too, had changed. The cruel, arrogant dog of the past was gone, replaced by a quiet, brooding presence. He was still a dog of few words, but his actions spoke volumes. He would bring Kodi a warm caribou hide to lie on, a fresh-killed hare for his lunch, a gentle nuzzle to reassure him that he was there. He would still, on occasion, offer a sarcastic remark, a flash of his old self, but the edge was gone, replaced by a strange, gruff kind of affection.<br />The community of Nome, meanwhile, was filled with whispers. Balto&#039;s friends, Jenna, Muk and Luk, and even the doctor, were confused by Kodi&rsquo;s sudden illness and his strange friendship with Steele. They tried to ask Balto what was going on, but Balto, ever protective, just shook his head and said, &quot;He&#039;s just not feeling well. He&#039;ll be okay.&quot;<br />But secrets in a small town were like fire. They spread, and they burned. Soon, the whispers were no longer about Kodi&#039;s illness, but about his changing body, the strange curve of his belly, the way his father and even Steele seemed to be protecting him.<br />One day, Boris, the grumpy but kind-hearted goose, found Balto and Kodi sitting by the river. He waddled up to them, his head held high. &quot;Balto,&quot; he said, his voice a low honk. &quot;The people are talking. They say your son is&hellip; is sick.&quot;<br />Balto sighed, a tired, weary sound. &quot;He is,&quot; he said, his voice flat. &quot;But he&#039;ll be okay.&quot;<br />Boris looked at Kodi, at the gentle roundness of his stomach, at the weariness in his eyes. He said nothing more, but the next day, he brought Kodi a bowl of fresh, wild berries, and a quiet nod of understanding.<br />The first person to truly confront Balto was Jenna. She had been his shadow since the beginning of Kodi&rsquo;s strange illness, her eyes filled with a worry that mirrored his own. One night, as Kodi was sleeping, she came to him, her face a mask of concern.<br />&quot;Balto,&quot; she said, her voice soft. &quot;You have to tell me. What&#039;s wrong with Kodi? Is it a disease? Is he dying?&quot;<br />Balto looked at his oldest and dearest friend, the mother of his children, and he knew he couldn&rsquo;t lie to her. He had to tell her the truth.<br />He told her everything. He told her about Kodi and Steele, about the secret meetings, about the impossible reality of the pregnancy. He told her about the fear, the shame, the love, and the confusion. He didn&rsquo;t leave anything out.<br />Jenna listened in silence, her face a blank canvas. When he was done, she didn&rsquo;t say anything for a long time. Balto waited for the judgment, the anger, the rejection. But instead, she just came and nuzzled him, her body a warm comfort against his.<br />&quot;Balto,&quot; she said, her voice thick with emotion. &quot;You are the bravest dog I know. And Kodi&hellip; Kodi is so much like you. He is filled with love, and he is trying to do the right thing. And as for Steele&hellip; well, maybe he is filled with more love than we ever gave him credit for.&quot;<br />Jenna&rsquo;s acceptance, her quiet, unwavering support, was a balm to Balto&#039;s weary soul. She began to help, too, bringing Kodi warm bone broth and helping Balto find herbs to soothe his nausea. The quiet support of his friends helped, but the outside world was still a terrifying place.<br />The whispers grew louder, turning into taunts and sneers. The other sled dogs, the ones who had always admired Kodi for his spirit and his strength, now looked at him with a mix of pity and disgust. &quot;Look at him,&quot; they would whisper. &quot;He&#039;s a freak.&quot; &quot;That&#039;s not natural.&quot;<br />Steele, surprisingly, was the one who stood up to them. He would place himself between Kodi and the sneering dogs, his body a solid, unmoving wall of menace. &quot;You have a problem with him, you have a problem with me,&quot; he would snarl, his voice a low growl. &quot;And believe me, you don&#039;t want a problem with me.&quot;<br />The other dogs would shrink back, their courage failing in the face of Steele&#039;s fury. Kodi, for all his fear, was filled with a strange, dizzying kind of pride. This was the same dog who had tormented him for years. This was the same dog who had betrayed his friends. And now, he was protecting him, fiercely, and without question.<br />The days passed slowly, filled with a strange mix of fear and hope. Kodi&rsquo;s body changed more and more, and his exhaustion grew, but he was no longer alone. He had his father, his friends, and, to his endless surprise, Steele.<br />One cold, clear night, Balto found Kodi and Steele sitting on the bluff overlooking the town. Kodi was curled up against Steele&#039;s side, and Steele had a protective paw draped over his back. They were in silence, but it was a comfortable, familiar silence, the same one they had shared in the beginning.<br />&quot;You know,&quot; Kodi said, his voice a soft murmur. &quot;I used to be so scared of you, Steele.&quot;<br />Steele grunted, a low, amused sound. &quot;I used to be scared of you, too, Kodi.&quot;<br />Kodi looked at him, surprised. &quot;Scared? Why?&quot;<br />&quot;Because you were so full of light,&quot; Steele said, his voice a low, gravelly whisper. &quot;You were so full of hope. And I&hellip; I was so full of darkness. I was scared your light would expose my darkness.&quot;<br />Kodi nuzzled his head against Steele&rsquo;s shoulder. &quot;Well, your darkness didn&#039;t scare me away,&quot; he said.<br />&quot;No,&quot; Steele said, his voice filled with a strange kind of wonder. &quot;It didn&#039;t.&quot;<br />Balto watched them from a distance, a soft, gentle warmth spreading through his chest. He had seen the best and worst of Kodi. He had seen the depths of his fear and the strength of his love. And he had seen the impossible change in Steele. He was no longer just the villain. He was a father, too. A complicated, wounded, but ultimately loving father.<br />The day came, as it always did. A sharp, piercing pain had woken Kodi in the middle of the night. It had been followed by another, and another, each one more intense than the last. Balto, ever alert, had woken up immediately, his eyes filled with a familiar mixture of fear and determination.<br />&quot;It&#039;s time,&quot; Balto said, his voice steady. &quot;Come on, son. Let&#039;s go.&quot;<br />Balto led Kodi to the warm, snow-covered den he had prepared for him, a hidden nest in the woods, far from the prying eyes of the town. Steele was there, too, a silent, nervous shadow, his eyes wide with a fear Balto had never seen in him before.<br />The labor was long and brutal. Kodi was in agony, his body wracked with a pain he had never known. Balto and Steele were his rocks, his anchors in the storm. Balto was there, his voice a low, reassuring rumble, his paw a gentle, comforting pressure. Steele was there, too, his body a warm presence, his silent support a source of strength.<br />Hours passed, and as the sun began to rise, a new sound, a new life, filled the den. A soft, tiny cry.<br />Kodi, exhausted and weak, looked down, and saw him. A small, frail creature, his body a mixture of Kodi&rsquo;s brown fur and Steele&rsquo;s dark, sleek coat. He was beautiful. He was perfect.<br />Steele, too, came forward, his body trembling, his eyes filled with a profound and uncharacteristic emotion. He looked down at the tiny creature, and then, he looked at Kodi, a silent, unspoken question in his eyes.<br />&quot;He&#039;s ours, Steele,&quot; Kodi said, his voice a soft, exhausted whisper. &quot;He&#039;s ours.&quot;<br />Steele bent down and licked the tiny creature, a gentle, reverent gesture. Kodi felt a tear slide down his cheek. It wasn&#039;t a tear of shame or fear, but a tear of love, of hope, of an overwhelming sense of completeness.<br />Balto, meanwhile, was a study in pure, unadulterated joy. He looked at his son, at his grandson, at the family that had been born out of so much pain and so much confusion. He had always been a leader, a hero, a savior. But this&hellip; this was his greatest victory. He had not only saved a life, he had helped to create a new one, a new family.<br />The den was filled with a quiet, peaceful warmth. The sun was streaming in through the opening, the world outside a clean, bright canvas of white. The three of them, Balto, Kodi, and Steele, were a strange, unlikely family, but they were a family nonetheless. They were a testament to the fact that love could be found in the most unexpected places, in the darkest of hearts, in the most impossible of circumstances.<br />The tiny pup, a boy, grew strong and healthy under the watchful eyes of his three parents. They named him Jace, after the old Norse word for &quot;healer.&quot; And he was, indeed, a healer. He healed the rift between Balto and Kodi. He healed the wound in Steele&rsquo;s heart. He healed the prejudice and the judgment of the world.<br />Balto, the brave and kind father, was the rock. He taught Jace to be brave, to be strong, to be kind. Kodi, the gentle and loving mother, was the light. He taught Jace to be compassionate, to be hopeful, to be himself. And Steele, the gruff and protective father, was the shield. He taught Jace to be resilient, to be fearless, to be proud.<br />The three of them, with the new, tiny life between them, were a force to be reckoned with. They were no longer just Kodi, Balto, and Steele. They were a family. A family born out of pain and fear, but a family nonetheless. And as they watched their son grow, they knew that the love they shared, the love that had been born out of a secret and an impossible reality, was the truest, most powerful love of all.<br />One day, they were all sitting on the bluff overlooking Nome, Jace playing at their feet, his laughter a sweet, pure sound in the cold, crisp air. Balto looked at Kodi, at the gentle smile on his face, at the way he was looking at Jace, filled with a love so pure it was almost palpable. He looked at Steele, at the soft, tender look in his eyes as he watched his son play.<br />And he knew, in that moment, that everything was going to be okay. It wasn&#039;t the life he had expected. It was messy, and complicated, and a little bit strange. But it was his life. It was their life. And it was beautiful.<br />The Sunday of the next week was a day the family had been looking forward to - Balto, Steele, and Kodi&#039;s wedding. Held at the park, with nearly everyone in town invited, the ceremony started like normal - Balto was stood at the makeshift altar, naked and erect, waiting, while Kodi and Steele, also nude and erect, walked down the aisle to him, holding a hand on the other&#039;s butt and another on their erect dicks. However, everyone knew, from the invitations, that this wedding wouldn&#039;t stay as traditional as this.<br /><br /><br />Once all three were up at the altar, the wedding commenced. Kodi immediately went on his hands and knees, with his tail up. Steele was on him in less than a second after, thrusting his large cock inside his ass, before raising his own tail. Balto thrust in his brother&#039;s ass, and the three started to fuck, with everyone watching, nearly all the males nursing erections or full on masturbating.<br /><br /><br />When they had fucked for five minutes, they started to say their vows.<br /><br /><br />&quot;To my dear brother and son,&quot; Balto said, grunting, &quot;I promise to always be there for you. To love and hold you dear. To keep you safe from misery and harm. Even when I perform my duties to my wife, I will be with you as your husband, father, and sibling.&quot;<br /><br /><br />Next it was Steele&#039;s turn.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Balto, Kodi,&quot; he grunted as he thrust in Kodi and had Balto thrust in him, &quot;I hadn&#039;t ever known what love was until I met you. You showed me what true love is, and how I have needed this. I can&#039;t ever remember finding anyone else I have ever loved as much as you two. So it is with my own heart that I say I will never harm either of you. Even if it were to save my own life, I would gladly welcome death if it kept you safe.&quot;<br /><br /><br />Finally, Kodi&#039;s turn to say his vows happened.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Dad, Uncle, you were my firsts,&quot; he said in between grunts and moans, &quot;my first time, and my first realisation. I may be married already to a beautiful woman, but my love is not just for her. I love the two of you, and I can&#039;t think of what my life would be without you. You made me into the man I am today. There is no amount of words I can say that will express my gratitude and love for you two. My promise here today is to keep you loved and safe from harm. I just hope that I can achieve that in the years we spend together.&quot;<br /><br /><br />With that, Balto and Steele thrust their knots in their bitches, and the three groaned as their balls pulsed and they sprayed their thick white cum. Having calmed down so that their squirts slowed, Balto, Steele, and Kodi went on to the rings. Still locked together and cumming, their balls visibly pulsing, Balto and Kodi placed a wedding ring on Steele&#039;s hand, Steele and Balto on Kodi&#039;s, and both Kodi and Steele on Balto&#039;s.<br /><br /><br />The three were now, officially, husbands.<br /><br /><br />The reception afterwards went by as smoothly as one would expect. After some coaxing from the guests, the three newlyweds fucked each other hard and fast, spraying thick cum everywhere, and swelling up bellies. The wedding guests had cheered once they finished, before, at Balto&#039;s insistence, while slapping his own ass as he continued to lightly hump Steele, they started to fuck one another as well.<br /><br /><br />When it came to the cake, everyone was amazed. Instead of a typical wedding cake, Jenna and a few of her friends had made a cake that was designed to look like the three newlyweds, naked and fucking. It had Kodi as the base of the cake, on all fours with his tail raised from his rump, while Steele was on top of him, his dick in the husky&#039;s ass and his own tail raised, and Balto mounted on him, with his tail raised too to show off his own luscious butt. Balto, Kodi, and Steele had all felt weird but aroused as they cut the cake, their cocks erect and spurting copious amounts of pre-cum as they did so.<br /><br /><br />A few months later, after Jenna, Aleu, and Dusty had given birth to their litters (Jenna had seven rather well-hung boys, Aleu had four girls and three boys, and Dusty had three girls and four boys, with Jenna&#039;s sons being Balto&#039;s, Dusty&#039;s sons and daughters being Kodi&#039;s, and Aleu&#039;s sons being Balto&#039;s, while three of her daughters were Kodi&#039;s, and the last girl was Steele&#039;s), and Paige had given birth to Stephen&#039;s pups (two boys and two girls), and the family had returned to Nome after going on a trip around several places in the world to see the extent of the retraction of clothing and sex laws (Balto did enjoy having his ass ploughed and pummelling his husbands&#039; asses in public view, and Steele loved seeing people admiring his naked body and huge erect cock as he strutted around areas in full view), Jenna had gone into heat again.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Ready to breed your mother?&quot; Balto asked, as he and Kodi went to where Jenna was in the living-room.<br /><br /><br />&quot;I guess,&quot; Kodi said. His massive cock was erect and throbbing at his excitement.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Then go and do it,&quot; Balto said, slapping his husband&#039;s ass as he went to his mother.<br /><br /><br />Jenna smiled up at Kodi as he leaned over her, pointing his tip at her puffed up cunt.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Come on, Kodi. Give me your puppies. It&#039;s time to make Mama pregnant with your sexy pups,&quot; Jenna said. Kodi grinned, before he plunged his dick in, letting his knot slap at Jenna&#039;s pussy. She groaned, bright lights flashing in her mind as she was penetrated by her eldest, feeling the budding erection pushed deep, his anatomy slotting in as his heavy testes slapped into her teased pussy with a squelch, as his tip pushed into her fertile womb easily - not as deep as his father, but deeper than any other male.<br /><br /><br />Those primal instincts took the reins begging the dog to rut, promising that sweet sweet tie for his efforts. He almost forgot she was his mother, his subconscious revelling in the thought of cumming inside her, the ultimate pleasure of impregnating her as he enjoyed the feel of his mother&#039;s body hugging tight around his fat cock.<br />So, a couple weeks after, once Jenna started showing, as did Aleu and Dusty (all three of the girls had only Kodi&#039;s pups, since Balto and Steele both decided that their husband should fill them with pups on his own), the previous batch of puppies had started to develop quickly (six months old and already running about without needing diapers, and being sexually active, with the boys letting their big dicks and sizeable balls flap about in the open, and both genders enjoying sex with each other and the older family members) and Stephen started to fuck Paige almost constantly, not even stopping while at school (luckily, when the two sat their exams later on, they both passed with flying colours, and got into a good collage that allowed the two to have sex or masturbate whenever they wanted, so long as they paid attention and did the required work, which they did, even while fucking) and just gave anyone watching a good show of him filling Paige&#039;s womb (not that anyone minded, some going as far as to cheer Stephen on as they watched and masturbated, or even slapped Stephen&#039;s ass to spur him on), Kodi had both Steele and Balto shove their massive dicks up his ass at the same time. While Steele was lying on his back with Kodi on his stomach, Balto had mounted. Both of the dominant males grinned at each other as they thrust in and out, making Kodi moan as his hole was stretched to its maximum by both his husbands&#039; knots, before the two were locked inside.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Since I didn&#039;t get to breed any of the girls this time, I&#039;ve got to fuck someone to let my balls release. So I guess it&#039;s a good thing I&#039;ve got a sexy son for a husband, huh?&quot; Balto asked.<br /><br /><br />&quot;You always loved breeding me, Dad, and you and Steele got to fuck me hard when I was filling Mom, Aleu, and Dusty; and I don&#039;t think you minded getting to spread my ass apart til I was just a cum faucet. Now shut up and fucking fill me up,&quot; Kodi said.<br /><br /><br />Balto looked at Steele.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Shall we?&quot; he asked.<br /><br /><br />&quot;Oh, yeah. Let&#039;s fill this whore up until he&#039;s as swollen as Jenna was,&quot; Steele said.<br /><br /><br />Kodi looked at the two in surprise, before he moaned when the two thrust again, and let their balls pulse, filling him with thick cum, and swelling his stomach until he looked pregnant with a litter of six. And all the while, Balto and Steele kept slapping at Kodi&#039;s ass, as well as their own furry rump cheeks, making Kodi moan in ecstasy, and Balto and Steele groan in lust.<br /><br /><br />The three kept mating for the rest of the day, with the end result being Kodi, Steele, and Balto having swollen stomachs full of their husbands&#039; cum, and piss, Kodi&#039;s belly the biggest, easily reaching and resting on the floor even when he was standing up straight, and Balto&#039;s the smallest, merely looking like he had swallowed a basketball, and with their butts spanked hard, with Kodi&#039;s ass redder than cherries, while Steele and Balto&#039;s luscious butts were as red as Kodi&#039;s fur. Once the time reached eight at night, the three fucked and smacked each other one last time, with Balto on top, and Kodi the bottom, before they fell asleep where they were, tied and cumming, resting on Kodi&#039;s giant, cum-filled belly.<br /><br /><br />Nothing could separate this family.<br /><br /><br />The story of Kodi, Balto, and Steele was not a story of tragedy, or of betrayal, but a story of love, of family, and of a new kind of bravery. It was a story of a hero who had to face the hardest challenge of all: not a blizzard, or a rival, but the impossible reality of his own heart, and the hearts of the people he loved.<br />And in the end, he had triumphed. Not by fighting, but by loving. Not by running, but by staying. Not by giving up, but by embracing a new, beautiful reality.</span>",
  "pools_count": 1,
  "title": "Kodi, Balto, and Steele_ A Story of an Unlikely Family",
  "deleted": "f",
  "public": "t",
  "mimetype": "text/plain",
  "pagecount": "1",
  "rating_id": "2",
  "rating_name": "Adult",
  "ratings": [
    {
      "content_tag_id": "4",
      "name": "Sexual Themes",
      "description": "Erotic imagery, sexual activity or arousal",
      "rating_id": "2"
    }
  ],
  "submission_type_id": "12",
  "type_name": "Writing - Document",
  "guest_block": "f",
  "friends_only": "f",
  "comments_count": "0",
  "views": "7"
}