Hawthorn Ridge Drive sat two miles east of Glass House Lane, higher on the same line of wooded ridges where the city’s money looked out over everyone else’s lights.

The houses were not close together.

That was the point.

Long drives. Deep lots. Stone walls. Mature trees planted years before the homes existed so nothing looked new enough to admit it had been purchased all at once.

By the time Thane followed Crowe’s unmarked unit through the gate at 2240 Hawthorn Ridge, two patrol cars were already in the circular drive.

Their red and blue lights rolled across pale stone, dark windows, and a front lawn cut so evenly it looked less grown than installed.

Patel stood near the front entrance speaking with a woman in a long cardigan and bare feet.

Darnell was at the side of the house with a flashlight, keeping a man in dress slacks from walking toward the back.

The man did not like that.

His voice carried even through the Humvee’s windshield.

“This is my house.”

Darnell’s answer was calm.

“And it is our scene.”

Gabriel looked toward Thane.

“I like Darnell.”

Mark leaned forward from the backseat, scanning the property.

“Rear of house faces tree line. Fewer neighboring sightlines than the Redding residence.”

Thane parked behind the patrol units.

Crowe was out before he shut off the engine.

“Patel,” she called.

Patel turned.

“Lieutenant.”

“Status.”

Patel walked toward them, notebook in hand.

“Homeowners are Daniel and Priya Harlan. They returned from Tulsa at 20:55. Found rear mudroom door off the frame. Daniel checked the master closet safe before calling. I had him stop after that. Initial sweep clear. No one inside. No injuries.”

“Loss?”

“Jewelry, cash, watches, two pieces from a small private collection, and contents of a secondary safe in the study. They are still making the list.”

Mark’s ears tipped forward.

“Secondary safe located how?”

“Hidden behind built-in shelving.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Thane looked toward the rear of the house.

The same feeling from Glass House Lane had followed them.

Not a conclusion.

A pressure.

Crowe’s expression remained flat.

“Damage?”

Patel looked toward the side yard.

“You should see it.”

They did.

The rear mudroom door lay across the stone walkway outside, twisted in its frame like something had grabbed it and decided hinges were a suggestion.

The door was reinforced steel wrapped in decorative wood.

Its lock had not been picked.

Its glass had not been broken.

The hinges had torn free from the wall. The frame around them had split outward, and the deadbolt plate was bent but still engaged in what remained of the jamb.

Gabriel stopped beside the walkway.

“Same song.”

Mark crouched near the torn hinge side.

“Different verse.”

Darnell came over from the side yard.

“Homeowner says that door was new. Installed last year after a neighbor had a break-in.”

Mark examined the hinge plate.

“Who installed it?”

Darnell checked his notes.

“Harlan said Iron Gate Residential Security.”

Gabriel’s eyes moved to Mark.

Mark looked at Crowe.

“Same company as Redding?”

“No,” Crowe said. “Redding used Sterling Shield. But Iron Gate may have used contractors.”

Mark nodded.

“That is where the overlap may be.”

Thane stepped closer to the door.

He did not touch it.

He breathed.

Homeowner.

Patel.

Darnell.

Cleaning products.

Damp earth.

Mulch.

A trace of dog from somewhere on the property.

Then, near the hinge side, beneath the torn wood and exposed metal, the same cologne.

Clean rain.

Sharp.

Expensive.

Too controlled.

Under it, sweat.

Stone dust.

Metal dust.

Human male.

And the faint hot-earth note that did not belong.

Thane’s ears lowered slightly.

Gabriel saw it.

“Same?”

Thane kept his voice quiet.

“Close.”

Mark looked up.

“Close or same?”

“Same family of scent. I need more before I say same person.”

Crowe nodded once.

“Good answer.”

Darnell looked at the door.

“Still not a crew?”

Mark stood.

“Not at the entry. At least not obviously.”

“Doors like that do not come off alone.”

“No,” Thane said. “They do not.”

The mudroom inside was clean.

Too clean.

A line of shoes stood beside a bench. A row of hooks held jackets. A shelf had baskets labeled with names.

Nothing overturned.

Nothing disturbed.

The intruder had come through the back like a storm and then moved through the house like a list.

Primary closet.

Study.

Gallery alcove.

No kitchen drawers opened.

No televisions missing.

No laptops taken from the family room.

No random electronics.

No petty searching.

The master closet safe was built into a wall behind a sliding panel in a cabinet that looked like ordinary shoe storage.

The panel had been opened correctly.

The safe had not.

Its front was bowed outward at the seam, the locking bolts bent inside the frame. One hinge had snapped free. The handle was crushed flat against the door.

Mark stood in front of it for several seconds without speaking.

That alone made Gabriel glance at him.

“What?”

Mark said, “This should not be possible with hands.”

Darnell muttered, “There are a lot of things tonight that should not be possible with hands.”

Mark pointed to the door seam.

“There are no pry insertion marks at the initial separation point. No cuts. No spreader marks. Deformation suggests force applied directly to the door after the cabinet panel was opened.”

Gabriel leaned carefully without crossing too far into the closet.

“So he found the hidden panel, opened it like a person who knew how, then wrecked the safe like a person who did not need tools.”

“Yes,” Mark said.

Thane looked at the safe.

The same scent was strongest at the handle.

No gloves smell here.

Not leather.

Not on the metal.

He frowned.

Gabriel noticed.

“No gloves?”

“Not on the safe.”

Mark’s head lifted.

“Elise said the possible Silas wore gloves at the reception.”

“He may not have worn them here.”

“Or he used something else.”

Thane leaned closer.

The safe handle smelled of metal deformation, skin oil, and the intruder’s scent.

No obvious cloth.

No latex.

No nitrile.

Skin.

“Bare hand,” Thane said.

Crowe, standing in the closet doorway, looked at him.

“Say that carefully in the report.”

“I will.”

In the study, the concealed safe behind the built-ins had been found the same way.

A shelf had been removed without damage.

Placed gently on the floor.

The safe behind it had been ripped open.

Inside, the Harlans said, had been cash, family jewelry, two passports kept in a travel envelope, and a small case of old coins inherited from Priya’s father.

The passports were on the desk.

Untaken.

So were several documents.

Gabriel looked at them.

“He is not taking identity documents.”

Mark nodded.

“At Redding, there were documents missing according to Arthur, but Elise was uncertain whether he had moved them previously. Here, passports were exposed and left.”

Thane looked at the desk.

“So he is not trying to build identity packages.”

“Likely not,” Mark said. “Property, currency, portable valuables, art.”

“Specific,” Gabriel said.

“Yes.”

They moved to the gallery alcove.

Smaller than Redding’s, but still enough to hold four sculptures, six paintings, and a lighting system more elaborate than most restaurants.

Two pieces were gone.

A bronze bird.

A small abstract painting in a thick black frame.

Priya Harlan stood at the doorway with Patel beside her. She had changed into shoes but still wore the cardigan over what looked like travel clothes. Her face was pale, but her voice was steady.

“The bird was my father’s,” she said. “It is not the most expensive piece.”

Gabriel looked at her.

“Why would someone take it?”

“I do not know.”

“Who knew it mattered?”

Priya looked down.

“My sister. Daniel. The appraiser. The installer. Maybe our insurance broker.”

Daniel Harlan, standing behind her, said, “It was still valuable.”

Priya did not look at him.

“Yes. But that is not why I want it back.”

Gabriel nodded.

“Understood.”

Mark looked at the empty plinth.

“Was it attached?”

“Yes,” Daniel said. “Museum gel and a concealed bracket. Earthquake-safe.”

Gabriel glanced at him.

“In Oklahoma?”

Daniel flushed.

“It came with the mounting system.”

Mark examined the plinth.

“The bracket was removed correctly.”

Thane looked at him.

“Not broken?”

“No. Released.”

“That requires knowledge?”

“Yes.”

Priya said quietly, “The installer knew. The appraiser watched him do it.”

Daniel looked toward the study.

“The security consultant may have too.”

Crowe turned her head.

“Security consultant?”

Daniel rubbed one hand across his forehead.

“We had an assessment after the neighbor’s break-in last year. Iron Gate sent a man. He looked at doors, windows, cameras, the safe locations.”

“What was his name?” Mark asked.

Daniel hesitated.

“I do not remember.”

Priya closed her eyes.

“Silas.”

The name tightened the room.

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark looked at Crowe.

Crowe’s face did not change.

“Last name?”

Priya opened her eyes.

“Creed. Silas Creed.”


At 00:18, they had the Harlans seated in the front room, the major scene areas taped off, crime scene requested, and a second property list started.

Crowe stood in the foyer with Thane, Gabriel, Mark, Patel, and Darnell.

The house around them was too quiet.

Expensive houses did that after police arrived.

They absorbed sound.

“They both had contact with Silas Creed,” Gabriel said.

Mark looked at his tablet.

“Redding through the donor reception and security logs. Harlan through Iron Gate assessment and possibly the art installation. Need confirmation from company records.”

Patel said, “One contractor working for two different security companies?”

“Possible,” Mark said. “High-end residential consultants often subcontract. Security, art protection, vault planning, event assessment. The overlap may be through him, not through a single firm.”

Darnell looked toward the back of the house.

“And he has access to hidden safe information.”

Gabriel added, “Or he learns it fast.”

Crowe looked at Thane.

“Scent?”

“Same profile. I will say consistent with the first scene, not identical yet.”

“Good.”

Mark scrolled through the Harlans’ exterior camera records.

“System outage here at 22:48 Tuesday. Restored 23:09.”

Gabriel frowned.

“Redding was 23:14 to 23:42 Tuesday.”

“Same night,” Mark said.

Darnell folded his arms.

“He hit both the same night?”

“Possibly,” Mark said. “Or the outage was staged one night and entry happened later. Need internal logs, alarm status, and neighborhood cameras.”

Thane looked toward the rear windows.

“He could do both.”

Everyone looked at him.

Thane did not elaborate.

He did not need to.

Redding to Harlan was two miles by road.

Less by ridge and drainage easement.

A person strong enough to carry stolen property over an eight-foot wall might not need roads.

Crowe’s eyes narrowed.

“Do not build a theory around what he could do. Build it around what he did.”

“Yes,” Thane said.

But Crowe looked at the map on Mark’s tablet.

Then at the house.

Then at the rear wall.

She understood the problem.

Gabriel’s phone buzzed.

He checked it.

“Voss.”

Crowe nodded.

“Put her on.”

Gabriel answered and switched to speaker.

“Tell me this is not a second impossible door,” Voss said.

Gabriel looked at the twisted mudroom door visible through the hall.

“I would love to.”

Rusk’s voice came faintly in the background.

“That means yes.”

Crowe said, “We have a second burglary. Same general victim profile. Similar entry damage. Hidden safe found. Silas Creed named again by homeowner.”

Voss was quiet for one beat.

“Creed is real?”

“Very,” Mark said. “Contractor credential touched Redding’s security system before outage. Harlan names him as security consultant. Need warrants for Sterling Shield, Iron Gate, Creed devices, employment records, work orders, and account access logs.”

Rusk said, “We will start with day shift.”

Crowe looked at the time.

“Do that. I am calling ADA Tran now for preservation and emergency warrant language.”

Voss said, “We are on our way in.”

“You are day shift,” Crowe said.

“Not today.”

Rusk muttered, “I was afraid she would say that.”

Voss continued, “Keep the scenes clean. Do not let the homeowners talk to each other. Do not let private security clean up logs before we lock them.”

“Already in motion,” Crowe said.

The call ended.

Gabriel put his phone away.

Darnell looked toward the rear of the house.

“This is going to get loud.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”


By 02:07, the case had become a room full of boards, maps, printouts, coffee, and people who had not planned to be awake.

Crowe moved the active coordination to the Cross Timber PD conference room because two burglary scenes, two victim families, two security firms, and one emerging suspect required more wall space than the Night Shift office could offer.

Voss and Rusk arrived at 01:12.

Voss had her hair pulled back and a jacket thrown over a plain shirt. Rusk looked like a man who had dressed in the dark and resented the concept of clothing.

Neither wasted time.

The board went up.

Redding — 1908 Glass House Lane

Tuesday outage: 23:14–23:42
Rear door removed
Vault panel destroyed
Fortress & Hale door forced
Interior safe opened
High-value art, watches, cash, rare coins
Silas Creed credential token authenticated 23:12
Reception ten days earlier — possible guest-of-guest / private acquisitions

Harlan — 2240 Hawthorn Ridge

Tuesday outage: 22:48–23:09
Rear mudroom door removed
Closet safe forced
Study safe forced
Art and jewelry stolen
Passports left
Silas Creed named as security consultant
Installed bracket released correctly

Mark added a third column.

Contradictions to Crew Theory

He wrote carefully.

One dominant scent profile at major force points.
Selective movement through homes.
No broad search pattern.
Hidden storage located efficiently.
Security access timed.
No tool marks consistent with heavy equipment.
Carrying/exfiltration inconsistent but not impossible for one unusually strong person.
No camera evidence of multiple actors yet.

Gabriel stood beside the board.

“That column is going to make people unhappy.”

Mark capped the marker.

“The facts are already doing that.”

Voss studied it.

“Do not overstate the scent.”

“I did not.”

“No. You did not.”

Rusk leaned against the table.

“If this is one person, we are dealing with someone who knows high-end security, knows valuables, knows hidden storage, moves fast, and can apply enough force to defeat reinforced doors and safes without tools.”

Gabriel nodded.

“Other than that, normal burglary.”

Rusk gave him a look.

“Thank you.”

“You sounded bleak. I added perspective.”

Crowe entered with a fresh set of notes.

“ADA Tran is reviewing warrant drafts. Preservation letters are going out to Sterling Shield and Iron Gate. We are requesting Creed contractor records, access logs, work orders, client lists, GPS if company devices exist, credential history, and any internal communication about Redding or Harlan.”

Voss looked at the board.

“What do we have on Creed personally?”

Mark pulled up a preliminary search on the conference room screen.

“Silas Creed. Forty-two. Private security consultant. Formerly licensed as a contractor under Creed Strategic Residential. No local criminal history. Prior addresses in Colorado, Texas, Kansas. Current listed address is a leased townhome in northwest Cross Timber. Vehicle registered: black GMC Yukon. Business filings inactive, but he appears to operate as an independent consultant under several firms.”

Gabriel frowned.

“No criminal history?”

“No local,” Mark said. “National check pending.”

Rusk looked at the screen.

“Social media?”

“Minimal. Professional profile. Security, asset protection, estate risk assessments, private acquisitions logistics.”

Voss looked at Gabriel.

“Private acquisitions.”

“That phrase again.”

Mark opened Creed’s professional photo.

A man appeared on the screen in a gray suit against a neutral background.

Dark hair.

Clean-shaven.

Handsome in a controlled, forgettable way.

A face built to be trusted by rich people because it showed just enough confidence to suggest competence and not enough emotion to suggest appetite.

Thane stared at the image.

Something in his chest tightened.

Not recognition.

Response.

Gabriel noticed.

“What?”

Thane looked at the eyes in the photograph.

“Nothing.”

Voss heard the lie.

“Thane.”

He looked at her.

“The cologne fits the man.”

Rusk tilted his head.

“You can smell a picture now?”

“No,” Thane said. “He looks like someone who would buy that cologne.”

Gabriel stared at him.

Mark stared at him.

Rusk slowly smiled.

“That is terrible evidence.”

“I know.”

Voss looked down at her notes.

“It is also probably true.”

Crowe pointed at the screen.

“Find him.”


They found his townhome at 03:18.

Not him.

The townhome.

The black Yukon was gone.

A patrol unit sat two blocks away without lighting the street. Another covered the rear access road.

No one approached the front door.

No knock.

No conversation.

Not yet.

Mark worked from the conference room, moving through databases with the grim precision of someone building a bridge one bolt at a time.

“Yukon passed an eastbound license-plate reader on Memorial at 22:31 Tuesday,” he said. “Then northbound on Ridgecut at 22:39.”

“Toward Harlan,” Voss said.

“Yes.”

“After Harlan outage began,” Gabriel said.

Mark nodded.

“Then no plate hits until 00:12, westbound on County Line near the drainage easement access road below Cedar Crown.”

Rusk stood straighter.

“After Redding outage.”

“Yes.”

Crowe looked at the map.

“That puts him between both scenes during the right window.”

“Not at the scenes,” Voss said.

“No,” Mark agreed. “Between.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Thane studied the map.

Harlan.

Redding.

Drainage easement.

Roads.

Ridgelines.

Places where cameras watched cars.

Places where cameras did not watch someone moving through dark tree lines with stolen property.

He did not say it yet.

Mark changed the display.

“Yukon also appears near a storage facility on South Larkspur at 00:41. Plate reader at entrance. Need facility records and cameras.”

Crowe grabbed the warrant draft packet.

“Add storage facility.”

Voss looked at Mark.

“Any known clients that match future targets?”

Mark pulled the contractor files from Sterling Shield and Iron Gate as preservation responses began arriving.

He created a list of wealthy residential clients where Creed’s name appeared in any consultant, assessment, installation, event-security, or art-protection role.

Redding.

Harlan.

Eight others in Cross Timber.

Four in nearby Edmond.

Two in Arcadia.

One in Nichols Hills.

One name made him stop.

“Albrecht residence.”

Gabriel looked over.

“Who?”

“Magnus and Caroline Albrecht. 3110 Briar Court. High-value residence west ridge. Private collection. Hidden safe room noted in insurance assessment. Creed performed a security review through Sterling Shield eleven months ago.”

Voss looked at the map.

“Any travel?”

Rusk was already searching.

“Caroline Albrecht posted publicly yesterday from Santa Fe.”

Gabriel closed his eyes.

“People keep doing that.”

Mark added, “Magnus Albrecht is tagged in the same post. ‘Back next week.’”

Crowe’s face went still.

“Vacant house.”

“Likely,” Mark said.

“Security system?”

Mark opened the preliminary Sterling Shield account data.

“Active. No outage reported.”

Rusk looked at the clock.

“It is 03:31.”

Gabriel looked at the map.

“If Creed works nights, he has time.”

Thane stood.

“He may already be there.”

Crowe pointed at him.

“Not yet.”

Thane stopped.

Crowe continued.

“We do not race to a rich house because a suspect had prior access and the owners posted vacation photos. We need articulable facts.”

Mark said, “There is more.”

Everyone looked at him.

He tapped the screen.

“Sterling Shield account logs show an administrative maintenance window scheduled for Albrecht at 03:45.”

Voss leaned forward.

“Scheduled by whom?”

Mark read the line.

“Contractor token. Silas Creed.”

The room changed.

Crowe was already moving.

“Now we have articulable facts.”

Voss grabbed her jacket.

“Patrol perimeter. Quiet approach. No sirens. No lights until needed.”

Crowe looked at Thane.

“You do not go running into that house because your instincts are loud.”

Thane met her eyes.

“I know.”

“Report before motion.”

“Name it first. Move second.”

“Good. Move.”


Briar Court was a private road off the west ridge, narrower than Glass House Lane and darker than Hawthorn Ridge.

The Albrecht residence sat behind a wrought-iron gate and a row of tall cypress trees that had no business thriving in Oklahoma but seemed to have survived through money and stubbornness.

Patrol units staged two streets out.

Crowe took command from her unmarked car.

Voss and Rusk arrived in a second unmarked.

Darnell, Grant, and Patel covered approaches.

No one approached the front gate until Mark confirmed the security maintenance window had begun.

At 03:45, the system status changed.

Camera heartbeat interrupted.

Remote maintenance active.

Thane stood beside the Humvee, looking toward the dark line of the property.

Gabriel was beside him.

Mark had the tablet braced against the hood.

Crowe looked at him.

“Status.”

“Account shows maintenance mode. External cameras suppressed. Internal alarm armed but reporting service bypass.”

“Can the homeowners confirm they did not authorize that?”

“Reached by phone,” Rusk said from Crowe’s car. “Magnus Albrecht says no maintenance scheduled, no one authorized on property, they are in Santa Fe.”

Crowe nodded.

“Probable cause for attempted burglary and unauthorized system access. We secure the perimeter and intercept if he is present. No entry without exigency or warrant unless we confirm active burglary.”

Gabriel looked toward the gate.

“What if we hear it?”

Crowe looked at him.

“Then you report what you hear.”

Thane’s ears lifted.

The night beyond the cypress trees seemed still at first.

Crickets.

Distant traffic.

A sprinkler ticking somewhere two properties over.

Then a faint sound.

Metal under stress.

Not loud.

Not dramatic.

A groan from the rear side of the Albrecht property.

Thane looked at Crowe.

“Rear structure. Metal strain. Possible door force.”

Gabriel’s head turned.

“I hear it too.”

Mark closed the tablet.

“Maintenance mode active. Homeowner confirmed no authorization. Rear sound consistent with forced entry.”

Crowe keyed her radio.

“All units, we have probable active entry. Move to containment. No lights until positions reached. Darnell, Grant, cover east approach. Patel, north service road. Voss and Rusk with me at front. Night Shift, rear with me. Report before motion.”

They moved.

Not running.

Not yet.

Fast and controlled through the side access easement where the landscaping thinned near a drainage swale.

Thane could smell the house before he saw the rear door.

Stone.

Water.

Fresh mulch.

Security-system plastic warmed by electronics.

And him.

The same cologne.

The same sweat.

The same hot-earth undercurrent.

Stronger now.

Fresh.

Very fresh.

Thane held up one paw.

Crowe stopped behind him.

Gabriel and Mark stopped too.

“What?” Crowe whispered.

“Same scent. Fresh. Rear side.”

A second sound came.

Wood cracking.

Then a thud inside the house.

Crowe keyed the radio.

“Active forced entry confirmed. We are making contact.”

They rounded the rear corner.

The back of the Albrecht house rose ahead, dark and angular, with a pool reflecting no lights because the system was still in maintenance suppression.

A service door near the rear kitchen hung half-open.

Not fully removed.

Bent outward at the frame.

A black vehicle sat beyond the pool house in the shadow of the service drive.

Large.

SUV.

No lights.

Gabriel whispered, “Yukon.”

Mark’s eyes flicked to the rear door.

“Entry ongoing.”

Crowe spoke into the radio.

“Black Yukon on rear service drive. Need plate confirmation. Maintain perimeter.”

Then she looked at Thane.

“Contact.”

Thane raised his voice, clear and controlled.

“Cross Timber Police. Whoever is inside, stop where you are and come out with your hands visible.”

For one second, nothing happened.

Then something moved inside the dark house.

Fast.

Not toward them.

Away.

Gabriel’s ears snapped toward the sound.

“Interior movement. West hall.”

Mark said, “Toward garage side.”

Crowe keyed the radio.

“Possible suspect moving west interior. All units hold containment. Do not enter alone.”

Thane smelled adrenaline spike.

Not panic.

Anger.

The rear door opened wider.

A man stepped into view.

Human.

Dark hair.

Black clothes.

No mask.

No gloves.

Silas Creed stood in the doorway with one hand on the bent frame and one hand holding a canvas-wrapped rectangle under his arm.

He looked at Thane.

Then Gabriel.

Then Mark.

Then Crowe.

His face did not show surprise.

It showed irritation.

Like they had arrived early.

Thane’s body went still.

Creed’s scent hit him fully now.

Human on top.

Something else under it.

Buried.

Controlled.

Wrong in the way a covered flame was wrong.

Crowe raised her weapon.

“Silas Creed. Put the item down and show me your hands.”

Creed looked at the wrapped painting under his arm.

Then back at her.

“That is unfortunate.”

“Now.”

Creed smiled slightly.

It was a small expression.

Polite.

Cold.

Then he dropped the painting.

Not gently.

It hit the stone patio with a flat, expensive sound.

Gabriel’s eyes flicked to it.

Mark’s did not.

Thane watched Creed’s hands.

Creed lifted them slowly.

Palms out.

Human hands.

No claws.

No visible weapon.

Crowe kept her stance.

“Step out and turn around.”

Creed looked at Thane again.

“You are a long way from traffic duty.”

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

Crowe said, “Turn around.”

Creed complied.

Slowly.

Darnell’s voice came over the radio.

“Rear vehicle confirmed. Black GMC Yukon. Plate matches Creed.”

Patel: “North service road covered.”

Grant: “East approach covered.”

Crowe moved in.

“Hands behind your back.”

Creed placed his hands behind him.

Mark stepped forward with cuffs.

Thane stayed close.

Not touching.

Not crowding.

But close.

Creed glanced over his shoulder at him.

“Careful, Detective.”

Thane said nothing.

Mark cuffed him.

Double-locked.

Checked fit.

Creed watched the process with faint amusement.

“You know those are not very impressive.”

Mark looked at him.

“They are sufficient for humans.”

Creed’s smile did not change.

Crowe’s eyes sharpened.

“Silas Creed, you are under arrest for burglary, attempted burglary, unauthorized access to a protected computer system, theft, and related offenses pending further investigation.”

Creed looked toward the dark house.

Then at Thane.

“Related offenses,” he repeated.

Gabriel stepped to the side and collected the wrapped painting with care.

“Suspected stolen property secured.”

Crowe nodded.

“Search incident, then transport.”

Creed’s gaze moved across the three wolves.

For the first time, his expression shifted.

Not fear.

Calculation.

“You have no idea what you are doing,” he said.

Thane met his eyes.

“We are learning.”

Creed laughed once.

Softly.

“Clearly.”

Mark began the search.

No weapons.

No tools.

No lock picks.

No pry bars.

No drill.

No hydraulic spreader.

A phone.

A key fob.

A slim wallet.

A small remote device with no markings.

A folded list.

Mark held the list open under his flashlight.

Names.

Addresses.

Dates.

Redding.

Harlan.

Albrecht.

Others.

Gabriel looked over his shoulder.

“That is not good.”

Crowe took one look and keyed the radio.

“Evidence located indicating additional planned targets. Notify station. We are transporting Creed. Preserve Albrecht scene and get crime scene en route.”

Creed’s smile faded.

Just a little.

Thane noticed.

The list mattered to him.

Good.


Silas Creed did not speak during the ride to the station.

He sat in the rear of Patel’s patrol unit because Unit Twelve was available and because no one was putting him in the Humvee.

Patel drove.

Darnell followed.

Night Shift followed behind them with Crowe.

The Albrecht house stayed secured behind Grant, crime scene, and Voss, who remained on-site to control the warrant transition.

Rusk went back to the station ahead of them to prepare the interview room and evidence intake.

Gabriel sat in the passenger seat of the Humvee with one paw against his knee.

“You smelled it.”

Thane kept his eyes on the patrol unit ahead.

“Yes.”

Mark leaned forward from the back.

“What did you smell?”

Thane took a breath.

“Human.”

Gabriel waited.

“And something under it.”

Mark’s ears tipped forward.

“Animal?”

“No.”

“Wolf?”

Thane did not answer immediately.

The patrol unit’s taillights turned red at the next intersection.

Creed sat behind the cage, head angled toward the side window.

Human profile.

Human hands cuffed behind him.

Human mouth curved in the faintest possible smile.

Thane’s paws tightened around the steering wheel.

“I do not know,” he said.

Gabriel did not challenge him.

Mark did not either.

Crowe’s voice came over the phone in the cup holder, still connected from command coordination.

“We are not naming what we do not know.”

Thane glanced at it.

“I know.”

“Good.”

A pause.

Then Crowe added, “But we plan for what the scene already told us.”

Mark said, “Regular restraints may be insufficient.”

Gabriel looked back.

“You are saying that now?”

“I said sufficient for humans.”

“Mark.”

“It was accurate.”

Thane looked at the patrol unit ahead.

“We keep him controlled. We keep the room clear. We do not underestimate him.”

Gabriel’s voice went quieter.

“No.”

The station came into view.

Lights on.

Garage open.

Rusk waiting near the secured entrance with two officers and an evidence cart.

Creed was removed from the patrol unit without incident.

He looked around the garage as if assessing construction.

Walls.

Doors.

Officers.

Routes.

Thane saw him do it.

So did Mark.

So did Gabriel.

Crowe stepped close enough that Creed could not pretend she was not speaking to him.

“You are going to an interview room. You are going to be searched again. You are going to sit down. You are going to speak only if you choose to speak after advisement. If you attempt to flee, you will be stopped.”

Creed looked at her.

Then at Thane.

“You think so?”

Thane’s voice stayed calm.

“Yes.”

Creed’s smile returned.

The secured door opened.

They walked him inside.

And for the first time since the case began, Thane knew with certainty that the strange part had not ended at the burglary scene.

It had only followed them home.