Gabriel began objecting to Summer Movie Night before they had even left the cabin.
“This was supposed to be relaxing.”
Thane stood in the kitchen, loading a cooler with bottled water, canned sparkling drinks, and a container of cut fruit that Mark had apparently decided was necessary for an outdoor movie.
“It is relaxing.”
“It is a public event.”
“People relax at public events.”
“People who enjoy being observed relax at public events.”
Mark came in from the hall carrying three oversized camp chairs folded beneath one arm and a rolled blanket beneath the other.
“They are not observing us in a hostile manner.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“That is a very Mark sentence.”
“It is accurate.”
“You keep saying that like accuracy protects you from being annoying.”
“It frequently does.”
Thane shut the cooler.
“Bring the chairs.”
Gabriel followed him toward the door.
“I just want it noted that I was promised a quiet Saturday night.”
“You were promised food trucks and a movie.”
“I was promised funnel cake.”
“You promised yourself funnel cake.”
“Which is the strongest kind of promise.”
Outside, the late-June evening had softened the heat just enough to be pleasant.
The cabin grounds were still warm beneath their pads, and the trees around the property carried the layered scent of sun-baked pine, damp earth near the creek, and the last bright green push of early summer. Somewhere behind the house, a bird made one final, insistent argument against nightfall.
The Humvee waited in the drive.
Thane got behind the wheel.
Gabriel took the passenger seat with the cooler between his feet. Mark climbed into the back with the chairs, blanket, a small first-aid pouch, his notebook, and a folded park map he had printed from the city event page.
Gabriel looked over his shoulder.
“You printed a map.”
“It shows the food-truck layout, accessible seating, restrooms, first-aid location, event-information tent, and designated family-reunification point.”
Thane started the engine.
“Family-reunification point?”
Mark looked up from the map.
“Large public gathering. Children. Darkness after the movie begins. It is sensible.”
Gabriel turned toward the windshield.
“You know what? I respect the preparedness.”
“Thank you.”
“I am still judging the printed map.”
“That is fine.”
The Humvee rolled down the long drive and turned toward town.
For the first few minutes, the three of them let the road carry the conversation.
Cross Timber passed in warm evening pieces: small brick homes with porch lights already on, kids chasing one another through sprinklers, a man grilling in a driveway while somebody else carried folding chairs toward the backyard, a dog standing with both front paws on a fence rail to supervise the street.
The city looked almost sleepy.
Not empty.
Just comfortable.
The kind of evening that made people want to sit outside until someone remembered it was a school night.
Gabriel watched the passing lights.
“You think we are going to get recognized?”
Thane kept his eyes on the road.
“Probably.”
“Are you prepared?”
“For what?”
Gabriel smiled.
“The Kaden Face.”
Thane’s ears tipped back.
“No.”
Mark looked at his map.
“It is statistically likely.”
Thane glanced in the rearview mirror.
“You are both awful.”
Gabriel folded his arms.
“People love you.”
“People like a stupid picture.”
“People like the stupid picture because they like you.”
Thane looked back at the road.
“That does not make it less stupid.”
“No,” Gabriel said. “It makes it sweet.”
Thane made a low sound in his throat.
Gabriel looked delighted.
“Do not growl at me. Save it for the fans.”
“Gabriel.”
“Sorry.”
He was not sorry.
Hearthstone Park had been turned into a small, cheerful city.
The main lawn stretched broad and green beneath string lights hung from temporary poles. A huge inflatable movie screen stood at the far end, still blank except for a city logo and a countdown timer ticking toward sunset. Families claimed spaces with blankets and folding chairs. Kids ran between adults carrying glow sticks, light-up wands, and cups of shaved ice bright enough to be seen from orbit.
Food trucks lined the paved loop beside the playground.
Tacos.
Barbecue.
Kettle corn.
Pizza.
A local coffee trailer serving iced drinks and lemonade.
And, near the end of the line, a funnel-cake stand with a banner large enough that Gabriel spotted it from the Humvee before Thane had found a parking place.
“There.”
Thane had not even finished turning into the lot.
“Gabriel.”
“There is a funnel-cake truck.”
“I see it.”
“You need to park closer.”
“I am parking where there is space.”
“Funnel cake waits for no wolf.”
Mark leaned forward from the back seat.
“Park closer to the family entrance. It will be easier to leave later.”
Gabriel looked back at him.
“Whose side are you on?”
“The side that does not make Thane circle the lot twice.”
Thane found a spot along the outer edge of the lot and shut down the engine.
The second the three of them stepped out, a little boy’s voice cut through the crowd.
“THANE!”
Thane stopped.
Gabriel’s entire face brightened.
“Oh no.”
Kaden came running across the grass with the reckless speed of a child who had been given permission to run but had not been given any practical limits on how fast.
His father followed several steps behind, calling, “Kaden, slow down!”
Kaden did not slow down.
He reached Thane and stopped so abruptly his sandals skidded in the grass.
Thane looked down at Kaden’s feet.
“Those sandals are awesome,” he said. “Very wolf worthy.”
Kaden’s whole face lit up.
“They are Keens,” he said proudly. “Dad says I can climb rocks in them.”
Thane nodded solemnly.
“Good shoes for climbing rocks. Good shoes for running through grass. Definitely wolf worthy.”
Kaden looked down at them like they had just been officially promoted.
His father laughed behind him.
“Oh, you have no idea what you just did.”
Gabriel leaned toward Mark.
“He is going to wear those to bed.”
Mark watched Kaden admire his sandals.
“Statistically likely.”
“I knew you would come!”
Thane looked at him.
“How did you know?”
Kaden pointed broadly at the movie screen.
“Everybody said maybe.”
Gabriel crouched beside him.
“Everybody is a very unreliable source.”
Kaden looked at Gabriel.
“You are here too!”
“I am devastated to report that I am.”
Kaden looked at Mark.
“You brought your notebook?”
Mark held up the small black notebook.
“Yes.”
Kaden nodded, apparently satisfied.
Then he turned back to Thane.
“My dad said I could ask.”
Thane closed his eyes.
Kaden’s father reached them and looked embarrassed.
“You absolutely do not have to—”
“It is okay,” Thane said.
Kaden grinned.
“The Kaden Face!”
Gabriel made a sound that came dangerously close to a cheer.
Thane looked at him.
“Do not.”
“I said nothing.”
“You made a noise.”
“It was a supportive noise.”
Kaden’s father pulled out his phone.
“Only if you are sure.”
Thane looked at Kaden and at his wolf-worthy footwear.
The kid had already raised both hands into small claws.
He had practiced.
There was no question.
Thane sighed.
“Okay. One. Because your Keens rock!”
Kaden bounced on the balls of his feet.
Gabriel took the phone from Kaden’s father.
“Everybody knows the format. Kaden, claws up. Thane, down a little. The park lights are behind you, so we are going to use the trees as background.”
Mark looked toward the line of mature maples beyond the lawn.
“Two steps left would reduce glare.”
Gabriel stared at him.
“You are helping.”
“The lighting is poor from this angle.”
Thane moved two steps left.
Kaden positioned himself beside him, shoulders squared with the exaggerated seriousness of a child preparing for a duel.
“Ready?” Gabriel asked.
Kaden nodded.
Thane lowered himself beside him.
His expression shifted.
Shoulders forward.
Blue eyes narrowed.
Fangs bared just enough.
Then the low, controlled growl rolled through his chest.
Kaden gave the fiercest growl a ten-year-old could manage.
Gabriel took three photographs.
The first caught Kaden laughing.
The second caught Thane looking appropriately terrifying and Kaden looking like a tiny wolf prince beside him.
The third was perfect.
Kaden’s father looked at the screen and laughed.
“Oh, man.”
Kaden grabbed the phone with both hands.
“Dad. Dad, look!”
“I am looking.”
“It is so good!”
“It is extremely good.”
Kaden looked at Thane.
“Can I show everybody?”
Thane hesitated for half a second.
Then nodded.
“Sure.”
Kaden took off toward the lawn, carefully this time because his father caught the back of his shirt before he could reach full speed.
Gabriel watched him go.
“You just fed it.”
“I took one picture.”
“You fed it.”
Mark checked the event map.
“Technically, Kaden began it.”
Thane looked at both of them.
“You are impossible.”
From nearby, a familiar voice said, “That is not a denial.”
Walt stood beside the kettle-corn truck with two small granddaughters and a paper bag of popcorn large enough to feed a baseball team.
He wore a Cross Timber Fire Department shirt, jeans, and the pleased expression of a man who had just watched something he intended to bring up for the rest of the evening.
Thane stared at him.
“Walt.”
Walt lifted both hands.
“I am not asking.”
“Good.”
“My granddaughters are.”
The two girls stood side by side, both smiling shyly.
The older one, maybe nine, had the same steady eyes as Walt.
The younger one held a light-up wand and looked like she was considering whether Thane’s claws were real enough to touch.
Gabriel leaned down toward them.
“Would you like a picture with the scary wolf?”
The younger girl nodded quickly.
The older one gave a more measured nod.
Walt looked at Thane.
“They have been asking since I showed them mine.”
Thane sighed.
Gabriel looked at Walt.
“Your photograph has caused a public disturbance.”
Walt’s smile widened.
“Worth it.”
Thane crouched again.
“Two pictures.”
The girls stepped beside him.
The younger one raised tiny claws immediately.
The older one tried to look serious.
Gabriel got the first picture.
Then the younger girl looked up at Thane.
“Can you do it quieter?”
Everyone paused.
Her grandfather looked down at her.
“Honey?”
She looked at Thane.
“I like the face. I do not like loud growls.”
Thane’s expression softened.
“Yeah. I can do quiet.”
The girl nodded.
“Okay.”
Gabriel lowered the phone slightly.
“Quiet Kaden Face,” he announced.
“It does not have a second name,” Thane said.
“It does now.”
Mark stepped closer.
“Do not make it louder than she requested.”
Thane looked at the little girl.
Then lowered himself beside both of them again.
This time he gave the expression—the narrowed eyes, the fangs, the lowered shoulders—but no sound at all.
Just a silent, dramatic snarl.
The younger girl laughed.
The older one raised her claws.
Gabriel took the photograph.
When he showed them, both girls leaned close to the phone.
“That one is better,” the younger girl declared.
Walt looked at Thane.
“Quiet version is a hit.”
Thane stood.
“There is no quiet version.”
Gabriel’s smile turned wicked.
“Forest Boss Monster: Whisper Mode.”
Thane stared at him.
Walt laughed so hard he nearly dropped the kettle corn.
They had not made it ten feet toward the food trucks before the first adult asked.
It was a woman in her early forties carrying two lemonades and wearing a shirt from the local hospital. She approached with the careful, hopeful expression of someone who knew she was about to ask something ridiculous and had decided to ask anyway.
“Excuse me?”
Thane stopped.
Gabriel immediately turned toward her.
“Yes?”
The woman laughed nervously.
“This is going to sound stupid.”
“No,” Gabriel said. “It is not.”
Thane looked at him.
Gabriel ignored him.
The woman glanced at Thane.
“My niece sent me the picture of you and Kaden. She said I had to get one with you if I saw you.”
Thane looked around.
“Where is your niece?”
The woman smiled.
“She is in Wichita.”
Gabriel folded his arms.
“So this is really for you.”
The woman pointed at him.
“Do not make it weird.”
“I am not making it weird. I am clarifying the audience.”
Thane sighed.
“One.”
The woman’s face lit up.
“Really?”
“One.”
“Thank you.”
Gabriel took her phone.
“Hands up. Commitment. You are not escaping this with half-hearted claws.”
The woman lifted both hands and immediately burst into laughter.
“I feel ridiculous.”
“Good,” Gabriel said. “That means you are doing it right.”
Thane lowered himself beside her.
She tried to be serious.
She failed.
The photograph caught her laughing so hard her eyes were nearly closed while Thane gave the full, theatrical Kaden Face beside her.
When she saw it, she covered her mouth.
“Oh my God. My niece is going to scream.”
Thane stood.
“Good.”
The woman looked at him.
“You really do this for anybody?”
“No,” Thane said immediately.
Gabriel looked at the line beginning to form five feet away.
Thane looked past her.
Then groaned.
There were six people.
A couple with a teenage daughter.
A man in a Hawaiian shirt holding a shaved ice.
A woman with two boys.
And, somehow, a pair of college students who looked as though they had wandered over simply because they had heard the words Kaden Face and wanted to know what that meant.
Gabriel turned toward the line.
“Oh, this is bad.”
Mark looked at the growing group.
“Operationally, we should create order.”
Thane stared at him.
“Mark.”
“What? They are blocking the main walkway.”
“You are not organizing a line.”
“I am preventing congestion.”
Gabriel pointed at him.
“You have become the event coordinator for Thane’s face.”
“That is not what is happening.”
The man in the Hawaiian shirt raised his hand.
“Can I get one for my grandkids?”
Gabriel looked around him.
“Where are they?”
“Florida.”
“Sir.”
“They will love it.”
Thane looked at the man.
Then at the small line.
Then at Kaden, who had returned from the lawn and was now watching the whole thing with the delighted expression of someone who had accidentally invented a cultural phenomenon.
Thane rubbed a hand over his muzzle.
“Five minutes.”
Gabriel’s ears perked.
“Five minutes?”
“Five minutes.”
Mark checked the time.
“Six minutes will be more practical.”
Thane pointed at him.
“Do not.”
Mark closed his mouth.
Gabriel turned toward the loose crowd.
“Okay. Quick pictures. No pushing. Kids first. Adults, you have to make the claws. That is non-negotiable.”
Thane looked at him.
“Gabriel.”
“The people deserve standards.”
They did five minutes.
Then eight.
Then twelve.
Kaden helped direct traffic for approximately three minutes before his father gently moved him out of the way of the funnel-cake line.
Walt’s granddaughters held up glow sticks behind Gabriel like tiny stage assistants.
Mark, despite his protestations, became the official photographer because he was objectively the best at framing the shots.
“Two steps to the left.”
“Do not stand directly beneath the overhead light.”
“Keep the screen behind you, not the portable restroom.”
“No, sir, the claw hands should be visible.”
The college students requested what they called “the serious detective version.”
Thane looked at them.
“There is no serious detective version.”
Gabriel leaned around him.
“There is only the Kaden Face.”
The teenage daughter of the couple in line asked whether Mark and Gabriel could do it too.
Thane turned immediately.
“Yes.”
Gabriel blinked.
“What?”
“You heard her.”
Mark looked at the girl.
“Do you mean all three of us?”
“Yes.”
Thane stepped aside.
Gabriel looked deeply offended.
“You are abandoning your post?”
“I am expanding the format.”
Mark sighed.
“This will not look dignified.”
Gabriel stared at him.
“We are three seven-foot wolves standing in a city park making claw hands for a picture. Dignity left ten minutes ago.”
The girl’s mother laughed.
“Please.”
So the three of them stood together.
Thane in the center, big and dramatic, fangs bared.
Gabriel beside him with one hand lifted like a claw and the other pointing toward the camera as if he had just been caught in a crime he did not regret.
Mark on the other side, claws raised properly but with a completely neutral expression that made him look less like a forest monster and more like someone calmly evaluating whether the forest monster’s paperwork was in order.
The teenager looked at the photo and nearly dropped her phone laughing.
“This is perfect.”
Gabriel leaned close.
“Send it to everyone you know.”
Thane turned toward him.
“No.”
Gabriel smiled.
“Send it only to responsible parties.”
The line finally broke when the movie-night announcer tested the sound system.
A burst of music rolled across the lawn, followed by a cheerful voice asking everyone to find their seats because the movie would begin in fifteen minutes.
Thane stepped away from the impromptu photo area and pointed at the funnel-cake truck.
“Food.”
Gabriel looked delighted.
“Yes.”
Mark folded the event map and put it in his pocket.
“The line is shorter now.”
“Because we were the line,” Gabriel said.
Thane began walking.
“Funnel cake. Now.”
The funnel-cake truck was called Sugar Drift, and Gabriel loved it immediately.
“I respect a business that knows exactly what it is.”
The vendor was a young woman with purple hair pulled into a high bun and powdered sugar dusting the front of her black apron.
She looked at the three wolves, then at the line of people still occasionally glancing their direction.
“You are the face guys.”
Thane shut his eyes.
Gabriel put a hand on the service counter.
“We prefer community-engagement ambassadors.”
“You do not,” Thane said.
The vendor smiled.
“My little brother showed me the video.”
“Video?” Thane asked.
Mark looked at Gabriel.
Gabriel looked innocent.
“I did not take a video.”
Kaden’s father, passing nearby with Kaden and a paper tray of curly fries, lifted his phone in apology.
“Sorry! I only posted the quiet one.”
Thane looked at the screen.
The video showed the silent Kaden Face with Walt’s youngest granddaughter.
No growl.
Just Thane lowering himself beside the girl, raising his claws, giving the expression, and then holding perfectly still while she made the same face beside him.
It was maybe twelve seconds long.
The caption read:
Quiet version for kids who want the picture but not the noise.
The comments had started immediately.
This is adorable.
He listened to her.
Cross Timber’s gentlest scary wolf.
I am going to cry in the kettle-corn line.
Thane stared at the phone.
Kaden’s father looked worried.
“I can take it down.”
Thane looked at the video again.
At the little girl laughing after the picture.
Then shook his head.
“No. It is okay.”
Kaden’s father relaxed.
“Thanks.”
Gabriel’s expression softened.
Then he leaned toward Thane.
“Gentlest scary wolf.”
Thane pointed at the menu.
“Order.”
Gabriel grinned.
“Yes, sir.”
They ordered one funnel cake with powdered sugar and strawberries, one with cinnamon sugar and caramel, a basket of fries because Gabriel claimed “sweet needs salty balance,” and three lemonades.
Mark looked at the two huge paper trays when the vendor set them down.
“This is excessive.”
Gabriel took the caramel one.
“It is a community event. We are supporting local business.”
Thane picked up the strawberry funnel cake.
“You said you wanted this.”
“I do.”
“Then eat it.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“You know, your tone makes it sound like I have been ordered to consume fried sugar.”
“You have.”
Mark accepted a lemonade.
“Operationally, it appears he has.”
Gabriel looked between them.
“You are both monsters.”
The vendor laughed.
Then, cautiously, she held up her own phone.
“Can I get one later?”
Thane stared at her.
She smiled.
“After you eat.”
Thane considered it.
Then nodded.
“After.”
Gabriel looked triumphant.
“You see? Even food-service professionals recognize the value of the Kaden Face.”
“She gave us food.”
“She understands leverage.”
They found a space near the middle of the lawn, far enough from the screen that the sound would not be overwhelming and close enough that they could see it without straining.
Mark approved the location after a careful visual check.
“Good sightline. Accessible route behind us. No foot traffic immediately in front.”
Gabriel set down the cooler.
“You could review an eclipse.”
“I would identify the safe viewing location.”
“That is not an answer.”
Thane unfolded one of the oversized chairs and lowered himself into it.
The chair creaked but held.
Gabriel settled onto the blanket with the funnel cake between them.
Mark sat in his chair with the lemonade in one hand and a small bag of kettle corn in the other.
Thane looked at him.
“You bought kettle corn?”
Mark looked down at the bag.
“Yes.”
Gabriel stared.
“You bought kettle corn.”
“It was available.”
“You said it was nutritionally indefensible.”
“It is still food.”
Gabriel leaned closer to Thane.
“Mark is letting joy happen in public.”
Mark did not look up.
“I am eating popcorn.”
“It is a gateway.”
The movie began with a bright burst of music.
The crowd cheered.
The film was an old family adventure called The Lantern Fox, about three siblings who discovered a hidden valley full of strange creatures and spent two hours trying to return a glowing fox to the stars before an extremely dramatic local mayor could capture it for tourism.
Gabriel lasted seven minutes before whispering, “That mayor is absolutely going to betray them.”
Mark looked at the screen.
“He has been introduced beside a wall of taxidermy. The narrative signals are clear.”
Thane took a bite of funnel cake.
“Can we watch the movie?”
Gabriel pointed at the screen.
“The fox knows something.”
“It is a fox.”
“Exactly.”
The movie continued.
Kids whispered and laughed around them. Somewhere behind their blanket, a toddler announced at full volume that she had to use the bathroom. Parents shifted lawn chairs. Someone opened a bag of chips with the determined stealth of a person who believed plastic could be quiet if handled carefully enough.
Thane found himself relaxing despite the noise.
The estate-theft case had ended only days ago.
Not finished, not entirely.
The inventory would take time. The digital evidence would take time. Prosecutors would have questions. Other victims would need to be found, contacted, given back what could be returned.
But the crew was stopped.
Tonight, nobody was asking him to look at a photograph of an empty garage floor.
Nobody was explaining why they had thought they should have known better.
Tonight, a ridiculous glowing fox was trying to escape a man in a mayoral sash.
Gabriel reached for another piece of the strawberry funnel cake.
Thane moved the tray away.
“That is mine.”
“You have the caramel one.”
“I have both now.”
“That is greed.”
“That is boundaries.”
Mark, without looking away from the screen, reached into the kettle-corn bag.
“You are both behaving as though food scarcity is imminent.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“You brought one bag of kettle corn to three wolves.”
“It was a large bag.”
“It was a medium bag.”
“Then you should have purchased more.”
Gabriel looked toward the food trucks.
“Do you want me to go?”
“No,” Thane and Mark said together.
Gabriel smiled.
“See? You love me.”
The crowd laughed at something on screen.
Then the sound changed.
Not the movie.
Not the music.
A child crying.
It came from behind them.
Not loud at first.
Not dramatic.
Just the thin, scared sound of a child trying not to cry in a crowd and failing.
Thane’s ears tipped back.
Gabriel heard it too.
Mark set down his kettle corn.
The crying came again.
A little closer.
Thane looked over his shoulder.
A boy stood near the edge of the paved walkway behind their seating area.
He was maybe six.
Small for his age, dark curls, green T-shirt with a dinosaur on the front. He held a paper cup of lemonade in one hand, though most of it had sloshed down the side and darkened the front of his shirt.
He was looking around wildly.
His lower lip trembled.
No adult stood immediately beside him.
Gabriel was already rising.
“Hey, buddy.”
The boy looked at him.
His eyes widened.
Not because Gabriel was a wolf.
Because a big black wolf had spoken directly to him while he was already scared.
Gabriel stopped a few feet away and lowered himself slowly to a crouch.
“You are okay,” he said. “You are not in trouble.”
The boy’s face folded.
“I cannot find my mom.”
Thane stood, but stayed back.
Mark looked toward the family-reunification tent on the other side of the lawn.
A small white canopy with a blue sign beside the first-aid station.
“There,” he said quietly.
Gabriel kept his attention on the child.
“What is your name?”
“Leo.”
“Hi, Leo. I am Gabriel.”
Leo sniffed hard.
“I was with Mom and Eli.”
“Okay. Who is Eli?”
“My brother.”
“How old is he?”
“Ten.”
“Okay.” Gabriel’s voice remained calm. “Did you leave them, or did they leave you?”
Leo looked down at his spilled lemonade.
“I had to go potty.”
“That happens.”
“I went with Eli. Then he said he saw Kaden.”
Gabriel glanced at Thane.
Thane’s ears tilted back.
Of course he did.
Leo continued.
“And then I looked at the light toys and then I could not see Eli anymore.”
“Okay,” Gabriel said. “You did the right thing stopping where people could see you. We are going to help you find them.”
Leo looked at Thane.
“You are the scary wolf.”
Thane crouched a few feet away.
“Sometimes.”
Leo blinked.
“Are you doing the face?”
“Not right now.”
Leo nodded as if that made perfect sense.
Mark had already moved toward the event-information tent.
A volunteer in a bright orange vest noticed him approaching and stepped out to meet him.
Mark showed his badge and identified the situation without raising his voice.
“Off duty. We have a separated child near the central lawn. Name is Leo, approximately six, green dinosaur shirt, dark curly hair. He was last with his mother and older brother near the restroom and the light-toy stand. We need your family-reunification process.”
The volunteer, a college-aged woman with a radio clipped to her vest, nodded immediately.
“I am Maya. We have a lost-child protocol. I will call the event lead and send staff to the restrooms and vendor lane.”
“Do not announce his name over the loudspeaker,” Mark said.
Maya nodded.
“We do not. We announce that an adult should report to the family tent and verify details privately.”
“Good.”
She spoke quietly into her radio.
Mark looked toward the paved walkway.
“Leo is with Gabriel. We will bring him to the tent.”
Maya’s eyes moved to Thane and Gabriel.
Then back to Mark.
“Okay.”
Gabriel had not moved from his crouch.
Leo’s crying had softened, but he still held the lemonade cup so tightly it was beginning to collapse.
Gabriel held out one hand.
“Do you want to walk with me to the family tent? It is right there.”
Leo looked toward the white canopy.
Then back at Gabriel.
“Will you stay?”
“Yep.”
“Will he stay?” Leo asked, pointing at Thane.
Thane nodded.
“Yeah.”
“Will the gray one stay?”
Mark came back toward them.
“I will.”
Leo considered the three of them.
Then held out his free hand.
Gabriel took it gently.
The boy’s hand disappeared inside his.
They walked toward the family tent.
The movie continued behind them.
On screen, the glowing fox was now apparently trapped in a cave beneath an old clock tower.
The crowd laughed at a joke.
The ordinary life of the park went on.
But the small space around Leo had narrowed to three wolves, one orange-vested volunteer, and the simple work of getting him back to his family.
At the tent, Maya offered Leo a chair, a fresh cup of water, and a stack of crayons.
Leo did not want the crayons.
He wanted to watch the lawn.
Gabriel stayed crouched beside him.
“Can you tell us what your mom is wearing?”
Leo wiped his face with the back of his wrist.
“Yellow.”
“Yellow shirt?”
“No. Yellow thing.”
“Like a jacket?”
Leo nodded.
“She has a yellow jacket.”
“Okay. What about Eli?”
“Blue shirt. It says Thunder.”
Mark typed the description into the event form.
Maya relayed it over the radio.
No names.
No details anyone could misuse.
Just a request for a woman in a yellow jacket and a boy in a blue Thunder shirt to check in at the family-reunification tent.
Thane stood near the edge of the canopy, watching the crowd move.
Not searching by scent.
Not pretending he could magically pull one family from hundreds of people.
He looked.
He listened.
He watched for the shape of panic.
A woman near the light-toy stand had begun moving too quickly through the crowd. Her eyes swept from one child to another. A boy in a blue basketball shirt followed beside her, crying openly now.
The woman wore a yellow cardigan tied around her waist.
Thane turned to Maya.
“Possible match. Near the toy stand.”
Maya followed his gaze.
Her radio was already in her hand.
“I see her.”
The woman saw the tent at almost the same time.
She started toward it.
Then broke into a run.
The boy beside her kept pace.
“Leo!” she cried.
Leo jolted upright.
“Mom!”
Gabriel stood but did not let Leo sprint forward until Maya had stepped into the space between them.
The woman reached the tent breathless, eyes wide, one hand still clamped around the older boy’s wrist.
“I am Rachel Boone,” she said. “My son is Leo. He is six. He has a green dinosaur shirt and a scar on his knee from falling off a scooter last summer.”
Maya nodded once.
“Leo?”
The boy’s face crumpled.
“Mom!”
Maya stepped aside.
Rachel dropped to her knees and gathered him against her.
Leo buried his face in her shoulder.
“I am sorry,” he sobbed.
“No,” Rachel said immediately. “No, baby. You are okay. You are okay.”
The older brother, Eli, stood beside them with tears streaking down his face.
“I only looked at the toys for one second.”
Rachel reached for him too, pulling him in with her free arm.
“Nobody is in trouble. We found him. That is what matters.”
Gabriel stepped back.
Thane looked away for a moment, giving them the privacy of not having three enormous wolves standing over the reunion.
Mark closed the event form.
Maya spoke quietly into her radio to clear the alert.
The boy held his mother so tightly the yellow cardigan slipped from her waist and fell to the grass.
Rachel picked it up with one hand.
Then looked at Gabriel.
At Mark.
At Thane.
Her face was wet with tears.
“Thank you.”
Gabriel shook his head gently.
“You got to him. We just helped keep him safe until you did.”
Rachel looked at Leo.
Then back at them.
“I turned around and he was gone.”
“It happens fast in a crowd,” Mark said. “The important thing is that you came straight to event staff.”
Eli looked at Thane.
“I saw Kaden.”
Thane’s ears tipped back.
“Did he show you the picture?”
Eli nodded miserably.
“I wanted to see if you were really here.”
Leo looked up from his mother’s shoulder.
“Are you really scary?”
Thane crouched a little.
“No.”
Leo thought about that.
“You have scary teeth.”
“Sometimes I make a scary face.”
“Are you going to do it?”
Rachel made a small, exhausted laugh through the tears.
“Leo.”
Thane looked at the boy.
Then at the yellow cardigan, the blue Thunder shirt, the fresh water cup, the event tent, the mother who was still shaking from fear.
“Not tonight,” he said gently. “Tonight you stay with your mom.”
Leo nodded.
That seemed right to him.
Rachel pressed one hand over her mouth.
“Thank you,” she said again.
Gabriel smiled.
“You are welcome.”
She led both boys away slowly.
Eli kept one hand locked around Leo’s.
Leo looked back once at Thane.
Then lifted a small claw hand.
Thane lifted his own in return.
No growl.
No picture.
Just a wave shaped like a claw.
The three wolves stood quietly beneath the tent for a few seconds after the family disappeared into the crowd.
Maya looked at them.
“You handled that really well.”
Gabriel looked toward the lawn.
“So did you.”
Maya shook her head.
“I mostly called people.”
“You called the right people,” Mark said. “And you did not put Leo’s name on the loudspeaker.”
Maya’s face softened.
“We train for it.”
“Good training,” Mark said.
She looked down at the now-closed family-reunification form.
Then at Thane.
“Do you want to put anything in the report?”
Thane glanced at Gabriel and Mark.
They were off duty.
No police action had been necessary.
No formal report was required from them.
But the event staff had their own record.
“Just make sure you note he was reunited with his mother,” Thane said. “And that the family went home together.”
Maya nodded.
“I will.”
Gabriel looked across the lawn toward their blanket.
The movie was still playing.
On screen, the glowing fox had apparently escaped the cave and was now running through some kind of moonlit orchard.
“Our funnel cake is cold,” he said.
Thane looked at him.
“Leo is okay.”
“I know.” Gabriel’s voice softened. “I am glad he is okay.”
Then he looked at the movie.
“And our funnel cake is cold.”
Mark checked the time.
“Leo was separated for approximately nine minutes.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“Nine minutes?”
“From first contact to reunification.”
“That is impressive.”
“It is adequate,” Mark said.
Thane started walking back toward their blanket.
“It is good.”
Mark looked at him.
“Good.”
Gabriel fell into step between them.
“You know what the best part is?”
Thane glanced at him.
“What?”
“Leo did not ask for the Kaden Face.”
Thane made a low, tired sound.
Gabriel smiled.
“I am just saying. The kid has priorities.”
Their blanket was exactly where they had left it.
The chairs were untouched.
The cooler was still cold.
The movie had progressed to its final act.
The mayor had captured the lantern fox in a glass contraption made of brass gears and entirely too much dramatic blue light.
Gabriel sat down beside the funnel-cake trays.
He picked up the strawberry one.
Then froze.
Thane looked at him.
“What?”
Gabriel held up a piece of funnel cake.
“It is soggy.”
“Eat it.”
“I cannot believe you said that to me.”
“Eat it.”
Mark sat in his chair and picked up the kettle-corn bag.
“It remains structurally edible.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“Mark, you are a menace in a completely different way than Thane.”
“I am aware.”
Thane reached for the caramel funnel cake.
Gabriel slapped one hand over the tray.
“That is mine.”
“You said mine was soggy.”
“It is still mine.”
“You cannot have both.”
“I can emotionally have both.”
“That is not how food works.”
Gabriel looked at Mark.
“Back me up.”
Mark considered the two paper trays.
“Thane purchased both.”
Gabriel’s jaw dropped.
“Betrayal.”
“Objectively.”
Gabriel leaned back onto the blanket.
“You know, I was almost killed by a glass fox machine tonight.”
Thane looked at the screen.
“That is not what happened.”
“It almost happened.”
“You are not in the movie.”
“Spiritually, I am.”
The crowd around them cheered as the three children on screen broke the glass contraption and released the glowing fox into a sky full of impossible stars.
For a few minutes, the three wolves watched without talking.
The fox rose over the park on the giant inflatable screen.
The music swelled.
Kids pointed upward.
Parents pulled blankets higher around tired shoulders.
Thane took another bite of funnel cake.
It was cold.
It was still good.
The final scene ended with the fox disappearing into the night sky, leaving a trail of gold light over the valley.
The screen went dark.
Then the park erupted in applause.
The credits began.
People started gathering their chairs and blankets, calling children back from the playground and trying to collect all the glow sticks that had somehow become essential property in the last two hours.
Gabriel stood and stretched.
“Okay. I liked that more than I expected.”
Thane looked at him.
“You spent half the movie talking.”
“I can do both.”
Mark began folding the chairs.
“The mayor’s redemption was not narratively earned.”
Gabriel stared at him.
“He gave up the fox.”
“After attempting to monetize it.”
“Growth.”
“Minimal growth.”
Thane picked up the cooler.
“Come on.”
They had made it halfway toward the exit when the woman from Sugar Drift stepped out from beside the funnel-cake truck.
She had finished closing one side of the service window and held her phone in one hand.
Thane saw her.
Stopped.
Gabriel looked at him.
“Oh.”
The vendor smiled apologetically.
“You said after.”
Thane looked toward the darkened lawn.
The event was ending.
The picture line had dispersed.
The food trucks were packing down.
The air smelled like sugar, grass, warm plastic from the inflatable screen, and the faint smoke of somebody’s barbecue trailer cooling off after a long night.
He looked at the woman.
Then at her phone.
“Quick.”
Her smile widened.
“Thank you.”
Gabriel took the phone.
“Okay. Last one of the night. The closing ceremony.”
The vendor stepped beside Thane.
She raised both hands.
“Like this?”
“More claws,” Gabriel said.
“I am holding the funnel-cake tongs all night. My claw muscles are tired.”
“Excuses.”
Mark looked at the light from the truck’s service window.
“Stand one step right. The sign will frame you better.”
The vendor looked at him.
“Are you all this intense?”
Gabriel pointed at Mark.
“Mostly him.”
Thane crouched.
The woman raised her hands.
Gabriel counted down.
“Three. Two. One.”
Thane gave the Kaden Face.
The vendor gave it back with surprising commitment.
Gabriel took the picture.
Then handed the phone over.
The woman looked at it and burst out laughing.
“That is going on the truck’s employee board.”
Thane stood.
“Please do not.”
She smiled.
“No promises.”
Gabriel leaned toward Thane as they started walking again.
“You are absolutely going to be on a mural.”
“I am not.”
“Food truck employee board is basically a mural.”
“It is not.”
Mark carried two folded chairs beneath one arm.
“It is a limited, mobile display surface.”
Thane looked over his shoulder.
“Mark.”
“What?”
“Stop helping.”
“I am trying.”
“You are not.”
The Humvee waited at the edge of the lot beneath a row of parking-lot lights.
Around them, the park slowly emptied.
Families went home carrying tired children and folding chairs.
Volunteers picked up cups and glow-stick wrappers from the grass.
The inflatable screen began to deflate with a long, soft sigh.
Somewhere behind them, a kid yelled, “Bye, scary wolf!”
Thane turned.
A small hand waved from the backseat of a departing SUV.
He lifted one claw in return.
Gabriel climbed into the passenger seat.
“Gentlest scary wolf.”
Thane started the engine.
“Do not.”
Mark settled into the back with the chairs.
“The public response was largely positive.”
Gabriel looked back at him.
“Largely?”
“One toddler appeared uncertain.”
“He was two.”
“He was evaluating risk.”
Thane pulled out of the lot.
The road home was darker now.
The city quieting around them.
Gabriel held the last piece of caramel funnel cake in one hand.
Thane glanced at it.
“You took that.”
Gabriel looked down.
“I did.”
“That was mine.”
“It is cold.”
“It is still mine.”
Gabriel took a bite.
Then smiled around the powdered sugar.
“Report before motion.”
Thane looked at him.
“That rule does not apply to funnel cake.”
“It absolutely applies to funnel cake.”
Mark looked out the window.
“It should.”
Gabriel leaned back in his seat.
“You both know you love me.”
Thane drove through the warm summer night toward the cabin.
Behind them, the movie screen would come down.
The food trucks would leave.
The park would be empty by midnight.
Leo would be asleep somewhere safe beside his brother.
Kaden would probably show someone the new picture first thing in the morning.
And somewhere in Cross Timber, at least one grown adult was already texting a friend that the city’s wolf detectives had been at Movie Night and yes, the big brown one had done the face.
Thane groaned quietly behind the wheel.
Gabriel heard him.
“Save it,” he said. “You are off duty.”
Thane kept his eyes on the road.
“I am.”
And for once, nobody asked him to growl.