Tyler Meeks is running on coffee, bad timing, and the kind of optimism that only survives through sarcasm. When his last couch gives out and his luck runs thinner than the soles of his sneakers, he answers a roommate ad that feels more like a gamble than a plan.
Chris Daniston is the opposite of chaos. He lives by calendars, coasters, and the quiet safety of rules that keep life from cracking open. Letting someone new into his apartment-and his routine-was supposed to be practical. Nothing more.
What neither expects is how quickly the walls of that apartment start to feel less like boundaries and more like a chance. Pasta shared over a too-tidy kitchen table, laughter during trash TV that runs later than it should, a plant named Bitter Herb standing guard over the window-each moment pulls them closer, in ways both terrifying and electric.
But when Tyler's past comes knocking and Chris's perfectly ordered life collides with emotions he's spent years keeping shelved, the two men have to decide: are they just surviving under the same roof, or are they ready to risk building something that looks suspiciously like home?
Tender, funny, and achingly real, Two Keys, Two Hearts is a romance about second chances, chosen family, and what happens when the rules finally make space for love.