Tour van, 2:13 AM, somewhere on the highway

The wheels hummed steady beneath them, cutting through the Texas night. Inside the tour van, dim blue LED strip lights cast a quiet glow over empty pizza boxes, half-drained soda cans, and the slowly circulating cloud of airborne glitter that refused to die.

Thane sat in the front seat, laptop open on his lap, trying to update the rigging log. Trying. But every keystroke brought a faint shimmer off the pads of his claws, and the cursor had glitter under it.

Mark was reclined on the opposite bench seat, headphones in, arms crossed, eyes closed. The glitter in his fur sparkled gently every time the cabin lights dimmed. Someone—probably Gabriel—had drawn a smiley face in it on his shoulder. Mark hadn’t noticed yet. Or maybe he had, and was just accepting his fate.

Gabriel, sprawled on the floor in front of the mini fridge, was still laughing every few minutes at absolutely nothing. His tail twitched under the kitchenette table, and he had a glitter mustache that wasn’t coming off until at least Tuesday.

“You’re gonna wake up in like three weeks and find it in your teeth,” Thane muttered, rubbing his face.

Gabriel rolled onto his back and pointed lazily at the ceiling. “I regret nothing.”

Mark opened one eye, slowly. “You should. I sneezed earlier and sparkled like a My Little Pony death scene.”

Gabriel grinned wider. “See? That means it worked.”

Thane sighed, closing the laptop. “At this point, we don’t even need fog machines. We are the fog machines.”

The van hit a bump, and a faint tinkle sounded as a Rocket Gator charm dislodged from the air vent and clinked onto the floor.

Mark didn’t even flinch.

“I’m never trusting either of you again,” he said, voice flat. “Next time we pass a souvenir shop, I’m buying a flamethrower.”

Thane chuckled. “You say that every time.”

“And one day,” Mark whispered darkly, “it’ll be true.”

Gabriel reached for a soda, popped it open, and took a long sip. “Hey Thane?”

“Yeah?”

“Next tour… you think they’d let us shoot glitter into the crowd?”

Thane blinked slowly. “Gabriel.”

“…Yes?”

“You’re sleeping outside.”

Mark raised a hand. “Seconded.”

Gabriel just laughed, rolled onto his side, and curled his tail like a smug cat. “Worth it.”

And so the van rumbled on—three wolves, a metric ton of glitter, and one unforgettable night in the books. Somewhere out there, a stagehand was still coughing up sparkles, and a lighting console would never quite be clean again.

But on the open road, beneath the stars, they were content. Sleepy. Sparkly.

And ready to do it all again.