Silas Creed entered Interview Two like a man arriving for an appointment he had chosen to keep.
That was the first thing Thane did not like.
Most people brought into the Cross Timber Police Department at 04:22 in the morning after being arrested outside a house they were not authorized to enter carried something with them.
Fear.
Anger.
Shame.
Panic.
Denial.
A desperate need to talk.
A desperate need not to talk.
Creed carried none of those things.
He walked between Darnell and Patel with his hands cuffed behind him, his dark hair still neat, his black shirt unwrinkled except where Mark had searched him, and his mouth set in a faint line that might have been amusement if amusement had forgotten how to be warm.
He looked at the walls.
The door hinges.
The camera dome in the corner of the interview room.
The table.
The chairs.
The ceiling tile.
The corners.
Routes.
Weak points.
Materials.
Not like a nervous suspect.
Like a contractor.
Thane stood in the hallway outside the room with Gabriel on his right and Mark on his left.
Crowe stood beside the door, arms folded, watching Creed step inside.
Voss and Rusk were already in the interview suite. Voss would lead. Rusk would sit second. Crowe had decided Night Shift would observe from outside and remain close.
Not because Creed had earned special treatment.
Because the scenes had earned caution.
Three homes connected.
Two completed burglaries.
One interrupted attempt.
A suspect with security credentials, a list of future targets, a vehicle tied to the scenes, stolen property located at the attempted burglary, and physical damage no one in the building liked saying out loud.
Creed paused just inside the room and looked back at Thane.
“You are staying close.”
Thane said nothing.
Creed smiled.
“Prudent.”
Crowe looked at Darnell.
“Seat him.”
Darnell guided Creed to the chair at the table.
Patel stood near the door while Darnell secured Creed’s cuffs to the table ring with a short chain.
Mark watched the process.
Standard cuffs.
Standard interview restraint.
Properly double-locked.
Properly seated.
Sufficient for humans.
He had said that earlier.
He did not say it again.
Creed sat comfortably.
That was the second thing Thane did not like.
Most suspects resisted the table restraint if only by shifting their shoulders or testing the chain with some small resentful movement.
Creed did not test it.
He simply rested his cuffed hands against the table as though the restraint were decorative.
Voss stepped in.
Darnell and Patel exited.
Crowe remained in the hall.
The interview room door closed.
The recording system began.
Just the fixed room system, Voss, Rusk, a suspect, and a case that had gone from strange to dangerous in less than one night.
Voss sat across from Creed.
“Silas Creed, I am Detective Voss. This is Detective Rusk. You are in custody. Before we ask questions, I am going to advise you of your rights.”
Creed leaned back slightly.
“Of course.”
Voss read the advisement cleanly.
No drama.
No shortcuts.
Creed listened with the patient expression of a man hearing a familiar disclaimer before signing a contract.
When she finished, she asked, “Do you understand each of those rights as I have explained them?”
“Yes.”
“Having those rights in mind, are you willing to speak with us?”
Creed’s eyes moved briefly toward the observation window.
He could not see through it.
He looked anyway.
“Yes.”
Voss placed the rights form on the table.
“Read and sign if that is accurate.”
Creed did.
His handwriting was controlled.
Sharp.
Almost elegant.
Rusk took the form back.
Voss began with simple things.
Name.
Date of birth.
Address.
Work.
Creed answered.
No hesitation.
No unnecessary detail.
Private security consultant.
Residential risk assessments.
High-value property protection.
Specialized client advisory.
“Do you work with Sterling Shield?” Voss asked.
“Sometimes.”
“Iron Gate Residential Security?”
“Sometimes.”
“Fortress & Hale?”
“Not directly.”
“Art handlers?”
“When clients require coordination.”
“Private acquisitions?”
Creed smiled slightly.
“That phrase covers many sins.”
Rusk looked at him.
“That sounded like practice.”
“It is a professional field with imprecise language.”
Voss opened the first folder.
“Arthur and Elise Redding. 1908 Glass House Lane.”
Creed did not react.
“Do you know them?”
“I know of them.”
“Did you attend a donor reception at their residence ten days ago?”
“Yes.”
“In what capacity?”
“As a guest.”
“Whose guest?”
“Thomas Vale.”
“Were you working?”
“No.”
“Did you inspect their gallery?”
“I looked at art.”
“Did you inspect their security layout?”
“No.”
Voss set a photograph on the table.
The rear door from Glass House Lane.
Torn off its hinges.
“Were you at the Redding residence Tuesday night?”
“No.”
She set down the vault photograph.
Bent steel.
Warped frame.
Open safe.
“Did you enter the hidden vault?”
“No.”
Another photograph.
The maintenance log from Sterling Shield.
Contractor token.
Silas Creed.
Authenticated 23:12.
Voss placed it beside the vault photo.
Creed looked down.
His expression did not change.
“That appears to be a credential issue.”
Mark stood on the other side of the observation glass with his arms folded.
Gabriel leaned closer to Thane.
“He is calm.”
Thane kept his eyes on Creed.
“He knows something he thinks we do not.”
Crowe, beside them, did not look away from the room.
“Then let him keep thinking it.”
Inside, Voss moved to Harlan.
Rear door.
Closet safe.
Study safe.
Gallery alcove.
Silas Creed named by Priya Harlan as the consultant who had reviewed their system.
Creed denied being there Tuesday night.
Then Albrecht.
Security maintenance scheduled from his contractor token.
Homeowners out of state.
Creed found on the rear patio.
Painting dropped at his feet.
Black Yukon confirmed on property.
Remote device in his pocket.
Target list in his pocket.
Creed’s answers grew shorter.
Not panicked.
Sharper.
“Yes, I was there.”
“For what purpose?”
“Consultation.”
“At 03:45 in the morning?”
“Clients with wealth value discretion.”
“Magnus Albrecht says he did not authorize you to be there.”
“Then perhaps Mr. Albrecht forgot.”
Rusk leaned back.
“Convenient.”
Creed looked at him.
“Memory often is.”
Voss set the folded list on the table, sealed in an evidence sleeve.
“Redding. Harlan. Albrecht. Six other addresses.”
Creed glanced at it.
“Professional notes.”
“Notes for what?”
“Potential clients.”
“Several of whom had hidden safes, private collections, and security systems you could access.”
“I am good at my work.”
Voss did not blink.
“You are also under arrest for doing it illegally.”
Creed’s eyes returned to the observation window.
This time, the smile faded.
Just a little.
Voss noticed.
“Are you worried about them?”
Creed looked back at her.
“Who?”
“You know who.”
Creed’s mouth curved again.
“No.”
Rusk said, “You keep looking.”
“I am curious.”
“About?”
Creed leaned forward as far as the chain allowed.
“How long it took them to understand.”
Thane’s ears lowered.
Gabriel went still.
Mark’s expression tightened.
Crowe said quietly, “There it is.”
Voss did not turn.
“Understand what?”
Creed looked at her as if she had asked a child’s question.
“That your case stopped being about burglary the moment they smelled the door.”
The air outside the room changed.
No one moved.
Inside, Rusk’s eyes sharpened.
Voss’s voice stayed even.
“What do you believe they smelled?”
Creed’s smile became real for the first time.
Not warm.
Not happy.
Predatory.
“Me.”
Voss let the silence stretch.
Creed enjoyed it.
“You have no idea how rare that is,” he said. “To be recognized by something close enough to matter.”
Thane’s chest tightened.
Close enough.
Gabriel whispered, “No.”
Mark did not answer.
Voss said, “Recognized as what?”
Creed’s gaze lifted again toward the dark glass.
“They know.”
Rusk looked toward the observation window for half a second.
Then back.
“Say it.”
Creed’s smile widened.
“Why? So it sounds insane on your recording?”
Voss folded her hands.
“You signed the waiver. You chose to talk.”
“I chose to see how much you had.”
“And?”
Creed looked down at the cuffs.
“You have enough for human court.”
The chain moved.
Not far.
Just a small sound of metal shifting.
Thane heard it.
So did Gabriel.
So did Mark.
Crowe keyed her radio softly.
“Interview hall, hold positions. No one enters without command.”
Inside, Voss heard the chain too.
Her posture changed by almost nothing.
But it changed.
Rusk’s hand lowered near his side.
Not to draw.
Not yet.
Ready.
Voss said, “Silas.”
Creed looked at her.
“You need to remain seated.”
He laughed once.
Soft.
Almost disappointed.
“You still think seated matters.”
The change began in his hands.
Not like the trio.
They had no change to begin.
They were what they were.
Creed’s fingers lengthened first, skin drawing tight over knuckles that shifted with a wet, grinding sound. Nails darkened and pushed into claws. The cuffs bit into expanding wrists.
Voss stood.
“Silas, stop.”
Rusk moved with her, backing toward the door without turning his back.
Creed’s shoulders hunched.
His spine bowed.
The table jerked as his arms thickened against the restraint.
The first cuff snapped.
Not opened.
Snapped.
Metal split at the hinge with a sharp crack.
Gabriel breathed, “Move.”
Crowe hit the door release.
“Voss, Rusk, out.”
The second cuff failed.
Creed surged upward, the chair skidding back and slamming the wall.
His face changed as he rose—jaw lengthening, teeth pushing forward, dark hair spreading into darker fur along his neck and arms. His shirt tore at the seams. His body expanded, not to Thane’s size, but far beyond human, dense and powerful and wrong in the confined room.
Voss and Rusk got through the door as Creed slammed one hand into the table.
The bolted ring tore free.
The table lurched sideways.
Patel shouted from the hall.
Darnell pulled the outer door open.
Crowe stepped back, weapon up, but Thane was already moving.
“Hold fire,” he said.
Not an order over Crowe.
A fact.
Too many people.
Too close.
Too much unknown about what would stop Creed and what would only make him worse.
Creed hit the interview room door from inside before it fully closed again.
The frame cracked.
The second hit tore the latch plate loose.
The door slammed outward.
Silas Creed stepped into the hall as a werewolf.
Not like them.
That was the first thing Thane understood.
Creed was tall, maybe six and a half feet in that shape, leaner than Thane, darker fur streaked with gray along the spine, eyes amber and too bright under the fluorescent lights. His muzzle was narrower. His ears pinned back hard. His claws flexed open and closed as though he were discovering his own hands again after too long without them.
He was powerful.
Fast.
Dangerous.
But he was not pack.
He smelled like hidden rooms and expensive cologne burned away by heat.
He smelled like rage wearing freedom as an excuse.
The hallway froze for one heartbeat.
Creed looked left.
Voss and Rusk were there, behind Crowe and moving back.
Darnell and Patel stood near the secured door.
Officers beyond them.
Glass.
Desks.
Civilians somewhere farther in the building.
Then Creed looked right.
Thane stood in the center of the hall.
Gabriel stood to his right.
Mark to his left.
Three wolves blocking the way out.
Creed’s mouth opened into something almost like a grin.
“There you are.”
Thane did not move.
“Down.”
Creed laughed.
It came out rough now, lower, layered with a growl he had not earned enough control to hide.
“You wear their badge and give me commands?”
“Yes.”
Creed’s shoulders rolled.
“You think wearing a badge makes you alpha?”
Gabriel’s eyes flashed.
Mark shifted his weight.
Thane’s voice stayed calm.
“No. Restraint does.”
Creed’s grin vanished.
Then he charged.
He went for Thane.
Of course he did.
Fast enough that a human officer might have seen only a dark blur crossing the interview hall.
Thane saw the shoulder drop.
The left hand open.
The right hand drawn back to strike.
He let Creed come the last half step.
Then he moved.
Not back.
In.
Thane caught the striking wrist with his left paw, turned his body, and drove his right forearm across Creed’s chest before the blow could land.
The impact shook the hallway wall.
Creed snarled and twisted, trying to rip free.
Thane did not hold where a human joint would have failed.
He held where a werewolf joint could take pressure without breaking immediately.
Creed’s other hand came up for Thane’s face.
Gabriel intercepted it with both paws, redirecting claws away from Thane’s eyes and down toward the wall.
Mark struck low—not a kick, not a blow for pain, but a precise drive into Creed’s knee line to break balance.
Creed hit the wall hard enough to crack drywall.
He roared.
Officers behind Crowe flinched.
Crowe did not.
“Clear the hall,” she snapped. “Now.”
Darnell and Patel moved everyone back.
Voss pulled Rusk farther toward the side corridor.
Creed shoved off the wall and surged again, dragging Gabriel half a step with him.
Gabriel released before Creed could use his grip against him.
Mark shifted to the rear angle.
Thane took the center.
Creed lunged low this time, trying to get inside Thane’s reach and drive him back.
That was his mistake.
Thane was stronger.
Not a little.
Not almost.
Stronger in the way a storm door was stronger than paper.
He caught Creed under the shoulder and across the back of the neck, turned with the motion, and put him down.
The floor shook when Creed hit.
Creed tried to roll.
Mark was already on one leg, controlling the ankle and knee.
Gabriel caught the free wrist again and forced it wide, away from his own body, away from everyone else.
Thane dropped one knee across Creed’s upper back, not on the spine, not crushing the ribs, but heavy enough that Creed’s chest met the floor and stayed there.
Creed bucked.
The hallway tile cracked under one clawed hand.
Thane adjusted, seized the wrist Gabriel had controlled, and folded it upward behind Creed’s shoulder.
Creed snarled.
Thane increased pressure.
Not rage.
Not punishment.
Control.
Control calibrated for a body that had just torn through steel cuffs, an interview-room door, and half the hallway.
“Human form,” Thane said.
Creed spat something that was not a word.
Thane bent the wrist another inch and shifted his weight through Creed’s shoulder.
Creed’s snarl became a sound with pain in it.
Gabriel’s voice was tight.
“Thane.”
“I have him.”
Creed twisted his head enough to bare his teeth.
“You think this hurts?”
Thane leaned closer.
“Yes.”
Then he changed the angle.
Not more force.
Better force.
A pressure line through wrist, elbow, shoulder, and the heavy pin across Creed’s back that made every attempt to rise feed pain back into the joint.
Creed’s breath hitched.
Thane’s voice dropped.
“Human form. Now.”
Creed clawed at the floor with his free hand.
Mark moved with him, controlling the leg before he could get leverage.
Gabriel held the far arm wide.
Thane increased pressure again.
Creed shouted.
Not a roar.
A shout.
Human enough to know it was working.
Thane’s eyes stayed clear.
“You are not leaving this building through anyone.”
Creed panted against the floor.
His fur bristled.
His claws dug grooves into the tile.
For one terrible second, Thane thought he would force them to break something.
Then Creed’s body shuddered.
The change reversed in harsh, uneven waves.
Fur receded.
Muscle contracted.
The muzzle shortened.
Claws pulled back into human nails.
The body under Thane’s knee became smaller, softer, human-shaped again, shaking with breath and fury.
Thane did not release immediately.
“Hands visible,” Crowe said from behind him.
Creed lay facedown on the floor, naked where the change had destroyed most of his clothes, one cheek pressed to the tile, eyes open and burning.
He laughed once.
It sounded thin now.
“Still think you can hold me?”
Thane kept the wrist controlled.
“Yes.”
Creed’s eyes cut toward him.
For the first time, there was fear under the anger.
Not much.
Enough.
Crowe stepped closer.
“Medical restraint. Now.”
Rusk was already on the radio.
“Dispatch, send EMS to the secured garage entrance. Combative detainee, extraordinary restraint issue, medical evaluation and chemical restraint assessment needed. Notify Chief Whitaker and Deputy Chief Mercer. County holding supervisor. State liaison.”
Voss stood at the side corridor, breathing hard but steady.
She looked at Thane.
Thane looked back.
She nodded once.
Not praise.
Not relief.
Acknowledgment.
He had stopped when the danger stopped.
Even though the danger had not felt fully stopped.
That mattered.
The next thirty minutes became the strangest kind of order.
Crowe kept command in the hallway.
No one crowded.
No one filmed.
No one joked.
No one said monster.
Creed remained pinned until additional restraints arrived.
Not standard cuffs alone.
Flex restraints rated for large animals from Animal Control’s emergency kit, soft medical restraints from EMS, and a restraint board used under paramedic direction because the problem was no longer only custody.
It was medical safety.
Officer safety.
Public safety.
A living impossibility in a police hallway.
Chief Whitaker arrived twelve minutes after the call, hair pulled back, face calm in the way that made everyone else calmer by force of example.
Mercer arrived three minutes later and stopped at the edge of the damaged hallway.
He looked at the broken interview door.
The cracked tile.
The torn cuff still attached to the chain.
The deep claw marks in the floor.
Then at naked, furious, human Silas Creed restrained beneath Thane’s control.
Mercer inhaled.
“I am adding werewolf-rated detention to the list of things I did not expect to need this fiscal year.”
Gabriel, still holding Creed’s far wrist, closed his eyes.
“Not now.”
Mercer looked at him.
“I know.”
But his voice had shaken slightly.
Not fear.
Not only fear.
Recognition of scale.
Chief Whitaker stepped beside Crowe.
“Status.”
Crowe answered.
“Creed shifted in Interview Two after waiving rights and during questioning. Broke cuffs and interview-room door. Attempted escape. Night Shift stopped him. He reverted under controlled pain compliance. EMS en route for medical evaluation and emergency chemical restraint assessment. No officer injuries reported yet beyond possible strains. Voss and Rusk clear.”
Whitaker looked at Voss.
Voss nodded.
“We are clear.”
“Rusk?”
Rusk flexed one hand.
“Clear. Angry at architecture.”
Whitaker looked at Thane.
“Thane?”
“Clear.”
“Gabriel?”
“Clear.”
“Mark?”
“Clear.”
Creed laughed against the floor.
“Clear,” he repeated. “Listen to you.”
Thane shifted pressure slightly.
Creed stopped laughing.
Whitaker looked down at him.
“Silas Creed, you are in custody. You will receive medical evaluation. You will not be questioned further right now.”
Creed turned his head as much as Thane’s hold allowed.
“Afraid?”
Whitaker’s face did not change.
“Responsible.”
That seemed to irritate him more than fear would have.
EMS arrived through the secured garage entrance with two paramedics and an EMT escorted by Patel.
The lead paramedic, Alvarez, took one look at the hallway and said, “I was not briefed for this.”
Crowe said, “Neither were we.”
Alvarez looked at Thane.
“Is he stable?”
“Physically, yes. Combative if released.”
Creed snarled.
Human throat.
Still convincing.
Alvarez crouched at a safe angle.
“I need to assess breathing and circulation.”
Thane looked to Crowe.
Crowe nodded.
“Maintain control.”
They did.
Alvarez worked carefully, professionally, and with visible effort not to stare too long at the claw marks.
He checked Creed’s breathing, pulse, pupils, responsiveness, and restraints. Then he stood and spoke quietly with Crowe, Whitaker, and the second paramedic.
“Given demonstrated strength, escape attempt, and risk to himself and others, we can administer emergency sedation under medical protocol for safe transport and evaluation. He needs a monitored setting. Not a jail cell.”
Mark said from his position near Creed’s legs, “A normal jail cell will not hold him if he changes again.”
Alvarez looked at him.
“I believe you.”
Mercer said, “County does not have anything rated for this.”
Whitaker said, “Then he goes to secure medical under guard until we have a lawful holding plan.”
Crowe nodded.
“I will coordinate with county, state, legal, and the hospital administrator.”
Creed’s eyes moved from face to face.
For the first time, he seemed to understand that being impossible had not made him untouchable.
It had made every serious person in the building become more careful.
Alvarez prepared the sedative.
Creed looked at Thane.
“You are wasting yourself.”
Thane looked down at him.
“No.”
“You could have taken anything.”
“I know.”
“You could have owned rooms like theirs.”
“I know.”
Creed’s lip curled.
“And instead you serve them.”
Gabriel’s voice went cold.
“We serve the law.”
Creed looked at him.
“You serve humans.”
Mark’s grip tightened, controlled but firm.
Thane said, “We help people.”
Creed’s eyes burned.
“They would cage you if they could.”
Thane leaned closer.
“They are trying to figure out how to cage you because you ripped doors off houses, stole from people, broke cuffs, and tried to run through a police station.”
Creed’s jaw tightened.
“That is not the same thing.”
“No,” Thane said. “It is not.”
The paramedic administered the medication.
Creed’s eyes stayed on Thane as the sedative began to take hold.
“You think restraint makes you better.”
Thane’s voice was quiet.
“No. It makes me safe enough to stand near.”
Creed tried to answer.
The words blurred.
His body fought the medication for several seconds longer than a human body should have.
Then his muscles softened.
His breathing steadied.
His eyes closed.
Thane did not release until Alvarez confirmed sedation was sufficient and the restraints were secured for transport.
Only then did Thane stand.
His knees did not shake.
His hands did not shake.
But he felt the weight of the hallway all at once.
The broken door.
The cracked tile.
The smell of Creed’s change.
The sound of metal snapping.
Gabriel stepped close to his right.
Mark to his left.
For a moment, the three of them stood together without speaking.
Pack.
Not because they were strongest.
Because they had stopped together.
Creed was transported under EMS monitoring to the secure medical wing at Cross Timber Regional, escorted by Crowe, Patel, Darnell, and two county deputies who had arrived looking skeptical and left looking pale.
Chief Whitaker stayed at the station.
So did Mercer, Voss, Rusk, and Night Shift.
No one pretended the rest of the morning was normal.
The conference room became command again.
Only this time, the board had changed.
Burglary suspect.
Werewolf shifter.
Escaped standard restraints.
Emergency medical hold.
Secure transport.
Additional warrants.
State notification.
Containment planning.
Media risk.
Legal risk.
Evidence preservation.
Use-of-force review.
The words looked ridiculous together.
They were still true.
Mark stood at the whiteboard, writing with careful block letters despite the fact that the cuff fragments from Interview Two sat in evidence packaging on the table behind him.
“Creed’s townhome search warrant is being served now,” he said. “Storage facility warrant pending. Yukon held. Remote device and phone in evidence. Target list photographed and bagged. Interview recording preserved through rights waiver and shift event.”
Voss added, “Questioning stops at shift. Anything after that is custody and emergency response. No further interrogation until counsel issue is reviewed and medical status resolved.”
Rusk looked at the broken cuff in its evidence bag.
“He shifted because the evidence boxed him in.”
Gabriel stood near the window.
“Or because he wanted us to see.”
Thane looked at him.
Gabriel’s face was serious.
“He kept looking at us. He wanted the reveal to matter.”
Mark nodded.
“He believed it changed the power structure.”
Mercer sat heavily in a chair.
“It did.”
Whitaker looked at him.
Mercer gestured toward the hallway.
“Not in the way he wanted. But it did.”
No one argued.
Because it had.
Until that morning, the department had known three permanent werewolves.
Their werewolves.
Their detectives.
Their policy memos wearing fur, as Mercer had once said.
Now they knew there were others.
Others who could look human.
Others who could change.
Others who could break normal restraints.
Others who might hide in professional clothes, polite credentials, expensive rooms, and smooth voices.
Whitaker folded her hands on the table.
“We handle one case first.”
Voss nodded.
“Creed.”
“One suspect,” Whitaker continued. “One set of crimes. One use-of-force review. One emergency detention problem. We do not turn this into panic about every rare bloodline in Oklahoma.”
Rusk said, “That would be helpful.”
Mercer looked at Night Shift.
“You three knew this was possible?”
Thane answered honestly.
“We knew shifters existed. Rarely. Most bloodlines lost it. Some can change. Some cannot. Some stay one way.”
Gabriel said, “We had not met one using it to rip vault doors open.”
Mark added, “There are likely very few.”
Mercer leaned back.
“Likely.”
“I cannot quantify it.”
“That was not comforting.”
“No.”
Whitaker looked at Thane.
“What did you know in the hallway?”
Thane thought about that.
Then said, “He was strong. Fast. Not used to restraint in that shape. He wanted to run through whoever was in front of him.”
“And you?”
“I was in front of him.”
“That is not an answer.”
Thane met her eyes.
“I knew I could stop him.”
The room went quiet.
Whitaker waited.
Thane continued.
“I did not know how much force it would take. I knew regular cuffs were gone. I knew there were officers behind us. Voss and Rusk were still close. If he reached the garage or public area, someone would get hurt.”
Gabriel said, “He went for Thane first.”
Mark nodded.
“Dominance challenge. Tactical error.”
Rusk looked at him.
“Your calm is unsettling.”
“It was both.”
Voss studied Thane.
“You used pain compliance.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“To force reversion without breaking a limb or escalating to deadly force.”
Voss nodded once.
“Say that in the statement.”
“I will.”
Crowe’s voice came through the phone on the conference table. She had called in from the hospital.
“Medical update. Creed is sedated, monitored, and restrained in secure treatment under guard. He has not shifted again. Hospital legal is involved. County is sending a supervisor. State is sending someone who sounds extremely awake now.”
Mercer muttered, “Good for them.”
Crowe continued, “We need a plan before sedation wears off.”
Whitaker looked at Mercer.
“We are working on it.”
Mark said, “A standard holding cell is inadequate. A reinforced medical room with controlled access may be adequate temporarily if sedation, monitoring, and multiple guards are maintained. Long-term, he requires a detention environment that accounts for transformation, strength, claw damage, and restraint failure.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“You have been waiting your whole life to say ‘werewolf detention environment.’”
“No,” Mark said. “I would have preferred not to need the phrase.”
Rusk nodded.
“That makes all of us.”
Voss’s phone buzzed.
She checked it.
“Storage warrant approved.”
Mark looked up.
“Creed’s storage facility may contain Redding and Harlan property.”
Whitaker nodded.
“Then finish the burglary case.”
Mercer looked at the broken cuff.
“And then figure out the rest of reality.”
They found the stolen property at 09:12.
Not all of it.
Enough.
Creed’s rented storage unit on South Larkspur held a black rolling crate, two climate-controlled art cases, a reinforced trunk, and shelves organized with the same clean precision he had used in other people’s homes.
The LeClerc sketches were there.
The Turner study, wrapped properly.
The Madsen bronze.
The Harlan bronze bird.
The abstract painting.
Watches.
Coin cases.
Jewelry.
Cash bundles.
A ledger.
Photographs of vault panels, hidden doors, safe locations, camera angles, alarm pads, service entrances, and ridge routes.
No crew.
No accomplice visible in the planning.
No division of labor.
No split shares.
No communications discussing partners.
Just Creed.
Selecting.
Studying.
Entering.
Taking.
Leaving.
Rusk stood in the storage unit doorway after crime scene opened the first case.
“Well,” he said quietly. “That is a confession with shelving.”
Voss looked at the art cases.
“Careful.”
Mark photographed the visible labels before anyone moved them.
Gabriel stood beside Thane, staring at the recovered pieces.
“He could have kept going.”
“Yes,” Thane said.
“Redding. Harlan. Albrecht. Then the rest of the list.”
“Yes.”
Gabriel’s ears lowered.
“He liked it.”
Thane thought of the scent in the vault.
Excitement.
Heat.
Not desperation.
Not survival.
“Yes.”
Mark stepped back from the ledger.
“Insurance values, sentimental notes, security features, owner travel patterns, public social media posts, event schedules, staff routes.”
Voss’s jaw tightened.
“He turned their lives into shopping lists.”
Rusk looked toward the storage facility drive, where morning heat had begun rising off the pavement.
“And thought being stronger meant no one could tell him no.”
Thane said nothing.
Gabriel looked at him.
Thane finally said, “He was wrong.”
By late afternoon, Creed remained in secure medical custody.
The burglary case had become strong enough that even Arthur Redding stopped demanding reassurance and started asking when his property could be photographed for insurance.
Priya Harlan cried when told the bronze bird had been recovered.
Not loudly.
Not for long.
Enough that Gabriel had to step outside after the call and pretend to study a vending machine for two minutes.
Mark completed the first evidence summary.
Crowe completed the preliminary command report.
Voss drafted the interview timeline.
Rusk wrote the phrase suspect transformed into non-human werewolf form in an official report, stared at it for thirty seconds, then said, “I hate paperwork.”
Gabriel looked over his shoulder.
“That sentence is historic.”
“I hate historic paperwork.”
Mercer spent most of the day on calls with county, state, hospital legal, city legal, and people who did not believe the first version of anything he said.
Chief Whitaker held the department steady with one simple instruction:
No rumors.
No hallway mythology.
No jokes where the public could hear them.
No speculation about other werewolves, shifters, bloodlines, or monsters.
The case was a case.
The suspect was a suspect.
The law still applied.
The building took longer to believe that emotionally than procedurally.
At 17:46, after nearly thirty hours awake, Thane, Gabriel, and Mark stood in the damaged interview hallway while facilities placed temporary plywood over the broken frame.
The claw marks remained in the tile.
For now.
Gabriel looked down at them.
“Those are going to be hard to buff out.”
Mark said, “They will need tile replacement.”
“I know.”
“You said buff out.”
“I was being emotionally hopeful.”
Thane crouched near one of the marks.
The grooves were deep.
Creed had tried to climb out through the floor because he could not get out through them.
Mark stood beside him.
“You okay?”
Thane looked at the claw marks.
“Yes.”
Gabriel leaned against the wall.
“That sounded mostly true.”
Thane smiled faintly.
“Everyone keeps saying that.”
“Because you keep saying yes like it has paperwork attached.”
Thane stood.
“I am okay.”
Mark studied him.
“He was not like us.”
“No,” Thane said.
Gabriel’s voice softened.
“But he was close enough.”
Thane looked toward Interview Two.
The room beyond the damaged door was empty now.
Table shifted.
Chair overturned.
Metal ring torn loose.
A place built for human truth had briefly held something else.
“Yes,” Thane said. “Close enough.”
Mark’s expression stayed serious.
“He used what he was as permission.”
Gabriel nodded.
“To take.”
Rusk appeared at the end of the hall with coffee and the expression of a man who had survived the kind of day that aged municipal carpet.
“I am told facilities can repair the door by Friday.”
Gabriel looked at the frame.
“Can they make it werewolf-rated?”
Rusk stared at him.
Gabriel lifted one hand.
“Too soon.”
“Yes.”
Rusk walked closer.
Then looked at the three of them.
“Voss wants your statements before you go home. Crowe wants them too. Chief wants you to eat something first. Mercer wants someone to explain the phrase ‘transformation risk profile’ in a way that will not make him retire.”
Mark nodded.
“I can do that.”
Rusk looked at him.
“I was afraid of that.”
Thane looked down the hall toward the garage.
“Where is Creed?”
“Still sedated. Stable. Guarded. Legal circus assembling.”
Gabriel sighed.
“Good.”
Rusk took a drink of coffee.
“For what it is worth, you stopped him before he got past the interview hall.”
Thane nodded.
“He was not leaving through anyone.”
Rusk’s expression shifted.
He had heard the line in the reports already.
Maybe from Voss.
Maybe from Crowe.
Maybe from the recording.
“Good,” Rusk said.
Not lightly.
Thane accepted it.
A few minutes later, they sat in the conference room with food none of them had ordered but all of them needed.
Sandwiches.
Chips.
Water.
A banana Gabriel claimed had “witnessed too much.”
Mark opened his statement form.
Gabriel opened his.
Thane looked at the blank page.
For a moment, he saw Creed on the floor again.
Amber eyes.
Bared teeth.
Human form returning under pressure.
Fear arriving late.
He wrote carefully.
Observed suspect exit Interview Two in non-human werewolf form after breaking standard restraints and door hardware. Suspect attempted to flee toward occupied police facility hallway. I positioned myself between suspect and other persons. Suspect charged me. I used physical control techniques with assistance from Detectives Gabriel and Mark to stop forward movement, place suspect prone, and prevent further escape. Suspect continued resisting. Due to demonstrated strength and failure of standard restraints, I applied joint pressure/pain compliance to compel suspect to cease resistance and return to human form. Force ended once suspect was controlled and medical restraints were available.
He paused.
Then added:
Objective was containment and protection of persons in the building.
He looked at the sentence.
It was not everything.
Reports never were.
But it showed the road.
Gabriel leaned over slightly.
“Good?”
Thane looked at him.
“Good.”
Mark read the line from his seat.
“Accurate.”
Gabriel nodded.
“Then we keep going.”
Thane looked across the conference room.
Voss stood near the door, speaking quietly with Crowe.
Rusk argued with the coffee machine.
Mercer paced near the far wall with his phone pressed to his ear.
Chief Whitaker listened to someone on speaker and somehow made silence feel like command.
The department was still standing.
The case was still moving.
The law was still there.
Bent, maybe.
Stressed.
Forced to hold something no one had planned for.
But not broken.
Creed had thought being stronger made him free.
He had thought hidden doors, steel safes, human cuffs, police hallways, and ordinary rules existed only until someone powerful enough decided they did not.
He had been wrong.
Thane looked back down at his statement.
Strength opened doors.
Restraint decided which ones should stay closed.