Crowe did not raise her voice.
That was how everyone knew the next few minutes mattered.
Sooner Stop glowed on Mark’s map like a bad idea waiting to become evidence. County Line Road cut along the south edge of Cross Timber, half city, half county, with fields and industrial lots beyond it. The mini mart sat at the corner of County Line and South Porter, open all night, bright canopy over six pumps, wide side lot, exterior ATM bolted to a concrete pad near the east wall.
Wide approach.
Fast exit.
No bollards.
Exterior machine.
Twenty-four-hour staff.
Multiple roads out.
Exactly the kind of place three masked men in a white dually would like.
Crowe stood in the Night Owl Express lot with one hand on her radio and the other pointing at Mark’s tablet.
“Say it again.”
Mark did.
“Sooner Stop is the strongest remaining match. South edge, exterior ATM, truck-accessible, no physical barriers, low overnight traffic, fast route to county roads, multiple exits, camera coverage useful but defeatable. If they continue tonight, that is the likely target.”
Gabriel looked at the map.
“If.”
Mark nodded.
“Yes.”
Everyone understood what the word meant.
Maybe the crew stopped after three.
Maybe the blood spooked them.
Maybe the increasing police response made them go home, park the white dually in a barn, and decide three ATMs was enough adventure.
Or maybe the adrenaline Thane smelled at Prairie Star was already pushing them toward a fourth.
Crowe looked at Thane.
“Same crew at all three?”
“Yes.”
“Injury at this scene?”
“Yes. One of the loaders. Tobacco scent. Right hand or wrist, likely.”
Mark added, “Blood collected and sealed. We will submit for rush processing, but not tonight-fast.”
Crowe nodded once.
“We do not need tonight-fast if they show up again.”
Gabriel’s ears angled back.
“That is the hopeful terrible sentence.”
Crowe ignored that.
She keyed her radio.
“Dispatch, move all ATM traffic to Tac Two and MDT where possible. Do not broadcast specific suspected target locations over main unless active event.”
A dispatcher answered.
“Copy.”
Crowe looked at Patel and Grant.
“Notify Sooner Stop quietly. Manager or clerk only. No public announcement. Doors stay locked if suspects arrive. Staff do not go outside. Panic button, 911, and stay behind cover. No hero work.”
Grant nodded.
“I can call.”
“Do it.”
Crowe pointed to Darnell, who had just arrived from the east.
“You take South Porter two blocks north, lights off, visible only if I call you in. Patel, county road west side. Grant, after the clerk call, take the old bank lot east of the intersection. Night Shift, you stay mobile but hidden.”
Gabriel glanced toward the Humvee.
“Hidden is a strong word for us.”
Crowe looked at the Humvee.
Then at Thane.
Then back at the Humvee.
“It is subtle in the way a tornado siren is subtle.”
Mark said, “There is a closed farm supply store one block north with a rear loading area. From there, we can reach Sooner Stop in under thirty seconds without being visible from the south approach.”
Crowe nodded.
“Use it.”
Thane said, “If they enter the lot?”
“Wait until they commit,” Crowe said. “No premature lights if all we have is a white truck. Once the plate is off, masks are visible, chain is out, or the ATM is targeted, we move.”
Mark nodded.
“That gives probable cause.”
Gabriel looked at Thane.
“And reduces ‘white truck just buying beef jerky’ risk.”
Crowe pointed at Gabriel.
“That stays off the radio.”
“Yes, Lieutenant.”
Crowe continued.
“No pursuit if they bolt and we do not have containment. We do not turn County Line Road into a wreck because three idiots like chains. We box if safe. We block exits if safe. We spike only if controlled and away from civilian traffic.”
Thane nodded.
“Yes, ma’am.”
Crowe looked at him a fraction longer.
“You are not standing in front of the truck.”
Thane’s jaw tightened.
Gabriel looked at him too.
Mark did not look up from the map, but his ears angled toward Thane.
Thane said, “Understood.”
Crowe’s voice hardened.
“I mean it. A dually is a deadly weapon if they decide to make it one. You are not a bollard.”
Thane held her gaze.
“Yes, Lieutenant.”
Crowe nodded.
“Good. Let them bring us the crime. Then take them apart cleanly.”
Gabriel’s mouth moved.
Crowe saw it.
“What?”
“Nothing.”
“Say it.”
Gabriel sighed.
“I was thinking ‘take them apart cleanly’ is a Mark sentence with a Crowe delivery.”
Mark looked up.
“That is accurate.”
Crowe stared at both of them.
“Move.”
They moved.
Sooner Stop’s night clerk was named Dana Kepler.
She had worked overnights for nine years, had two grandchildren, one bad knee, and no interest in meeting masked men with a chain.
Grant called her from the old bank lot while Mark listened through the shared line.
“Yes, ma’am,” Dana said. “I see the alert. White big truck. No plate. Three masks. I stay inside.”
Grant’s voice was calm.
“Correct. If they arrive, you lock the door if it is not already locked, hit the panic button, call 911 if safe, and get behind the counter wall away from windows. Do not yell. Do not film from the door. Do not go outside.”
“I am not going outside for anybody’s ATM.”
Gabriel whispered, “I like her.”
Mark held up one paw for silence.
Dana continued.
“Do I close the store?”
Grant looked at Crowe, who had joined the call from her unit.
Crowe answered.
“No. Keep business normal. If you suddenly close, and if they are watching, they may know something changed. But keep the door locked between customers if that is your normal overnight policy.”
“It is after midnight.”
“Good.”
Dana paused.
“Are you close?”
Crowe said, “Close enough. You will not see us unless you need us.”
Dana exhaled.
“That is both comforting and not.”
“I know.”
“If they rip it out?”
“Let them try.”
There was steel in Crowe’s voice.
Dana heard it.
“Yes, ma’am.”
The call ended.
The farm supply store’s rear lot smelled like old fertilizer, dust, weathered pallets, diesel from trucks long gone, and dry grass at the fence line. The Humvee sat dark behind a delivery shed, engine off, windows down enough for air and sound.
Thane sat behind the wheel.
Gabriel sat beside him, quieter than usual.
Mark sat in the back with his tablet showing three windows: map, unit positions, and Sooner Stop exterior camera access that Dana’s manager had granted remotely after Grant said “police emergency” in the tone that moved passwords out of people quickly.
The camera feed showed the Sooner Stop side lot.
The ATM stood beside the east wall beneath a light.
Small.
Square.
Vulnerable.
A thing bolted down by people who had assumed bolts were enough.
Thane hated how ordinary it looked.
Gabriel watched the feed.
“Feels like bait.”
Mark said, “It is not bait if the crime target already exists and we are protecting it.”
“It feels like bait.”
“Yes.”
Thane looked through the windshield toward the narrow alley that would take them south to County Line.
“Time?”
Mark answered.
“02:04.”
The first ATM had hit at 21:47.
Second at 22:16.
Third at 01:07.
The gaps were not neat. They suggested movement, dumping or staging, checking police response, maybe waiting for roads to empty. Maybe nerves. Maybe opportunity.
Maybe they were done.
Maybe they were already on their way.
The radio stayed quiet for three minutes.
Then four.
Then ten.
Somewhere south, a semi rolled along County Line and faded away.
A dog barked twice behind a fence.
Gabriel shifted in his seat.
“I do not like waiting.”
Mark did not look up.
“You like talking during waiting.”
“That is different.”
“Yes.”
Thane kept his eyes forward.
His mind tried to build the truck from memory.
White cab.
Dual rear wheels.
Passenger-side cab light out.
Dented left rear fender.
Black tarp.
Aftermarket hitch.
Magnetic plate mount.
Three men.
One stiff knee.
One reflective stripe.
One cut and bleeding.
They had used speed as a weapon.
Not against people yet.
Against time.
Against response.
Against the ordinary expectation that something bolted to the ground would remain part of the ground.
Gabriel’s phone buzzed silently.
He looked down.
A faint smile crossed his face.
“Silas says, ‘Work done. Home. No issue.’”
Thane’s shoulders eased by a fraction he had not realized he was holding.
Mark said, “Good.”
Gabriel typed something.
Thane glanced at him.
“What did you say?”
“‘Do not steal any ATMs.’”
Mark looked up sharply.
Gabriel lifted one paw.
“I did not send that.”
Thane stared at him.
Gabriel sighed and erased it.
“I am under stress.”
Mark said, “Send ‘Good. Sleep.’”
Gabriel typed.
“Sent.”
Thane looked back toward the road.
Quiet returned.
At 02:26, Mark’s tablet chirped softly.
He leaned closer.
“Vehicle south approach.”
Thane started the Humvee but kept the lights off.
Gabriel’s posture changed.
On the camera feed, headlights appeared at the far edge of the road.
A truck slowed before the Sooner Stop lot.
White.
Big.
Dually.
Thane’s pulse did not speed.
It narrowed.
Mark switched to the road-facing feed.
The truck rolled along County Line from the east, slowing as it neared the entrance.
Passenger-side cab clearance light dark.
Gabriel whispered, “There you are.”
The truck did not enter immediately.
It passed the lot.
Thane’s paws tightened on the wheel.
Mark tracked it on the camera until it disappeared west.
“Scouting pass.”
Crowe’s voice came over Tac Two, low and controlled.
“All units hold.”
No one moved.
Thane listened past the idling engine.
Far off, the truck slowed.
Turned somewhere.
Came back.
Mark’s tablet picked it up on another camera, this time from the west approach.
“Returning eastbound.”
Gabriel’s ears flattened.
“They are checking for us.”
Thane said, “They do not see us.”
The truck slowed again.
This time, just before the entrance, the passenger door opened.
A masked man leaned out.
No.
Not passenger door.
Rear door.
He reached toward the tailgate area as the truck rolled.
The rear plate came off in his hand.
Mark’s voice sharpened.
“Plate removed. Confirmed.”
Crowe said, “Hold until commitment.”
The truck turned into the Sooner Stop lot.
No rear plate.
The driver swung wide, backing toward the ATM with practiced confidence.
Dana Kepler vanished from the front counter camera, exactly as instructed.
The truck stopped.
Three doors opened.
Three masked men got out.
One moved with a stiff right knee.
One had reflective-striped work pants.
One held his right hand slightly away from his body.
Tobacco.
Blood.
The injured loader.
The chain came out of the bed.
Crowe’s voice cut across the channel.
“Move.”
Thane hit the lights and accelerated.
The Humvee came out of the farm supply alley like a wall with headlights.
Thane did not aim for the truck.
He aimed for the driveway exit.
Patel’s unit lit up from the west.
Grant’s unit lit from the east.
Darnell came down South Porter with lights blue and red against the gas pumps.
Crowe’s unit rolled in from the north, blocking the secondary exit.
Four directions.
No pursuit.
No open road.
The masked men froze for half a second with the chain halfway around the ATM.
Half a second was long enough to become a choice.
The driver made the worst one.
He dropped the chain and ran for the truck cab.
Gabriel was already out of the Humvee before Thane fully stopped.
“Police! Hands!”
The man with the stiff knee bolted toward the side of the store.
Mark moved to intercept, not fast-looking until he was suddenly there, cutting off the path without grabbing.
“Stop!”
The man skidded, slipped on loose gravel, and went down on one knee.
Grant covered him.
“Hands out! Now!”
The reflective-stripe suspect raised both hands immediately.
“I’m done! I’m done!”
Darnell moved in.
“On the ground!”
The injured one tried to climb into the bed.
Thane saw the right hand.
Wrapped in a dirty cloth.
Blood smell sharp.
The man grabbed for something near the tarp.
Not a gun.
A pry bar.
Still a weapon.
Thane’s voice dropped.
“Do not.”
The man looked at him.
For one insane second, his body said maybe.
Maybe he could swing.
Maybe he could run.
Maybe the mask made him someone else.
Thane took one step.
The man dropped the pry bar.
“Okay! Okay!”
Gabriel reached the driver’s side as the driver got the door open.
“Do not start that truck!”
The engine was already running.
The driver slammed the door.
Gabriel stepped away from the path, exactly as Crowe had ordered, and drew his weapon.
“Hands! Now!”
The truck lurched.
Not forward.
Reverse.
The driver tried to back away from the ATM, chain dangling half-attached from the bed, tires squealing as the rear end swung toward the side lot.
He had nowhere to go.
Thane did not stand in front of him.
He moved to the side, toward the truck’s rear quarter, away from the direct path, and drove one paw down onto the loose chain trailing from the hitch assembly where it had fallen across the pavement.
Not to stop the truck by strength alone.
To keep the chain from whipping into Grant, Darnell, or the clerk’s window as the driver panicked.
The truck jerked.
The chain snapped taut for a split second, then clanged loose from the ATM housing where it had not been fully secured.
Mark shouted, “Chain clear!”
Patel’s unit angled in, blocking the reverse path but leaving enough room not to create a crush point.
Crowe’s voice boomed across the lot.
“Driver! Shut it down now!”
The driver tried to swing forward.
The front tires hit the curb near the pump island. The truck bounced, stalled, then roared again as he overcorrected.
Gabriel stayed at an angle, weapon trained, not in the truck’s path.
“Stop the truck!”
Thane moved along the driver’s side from behind the front wheel, still outside the direct line, and slammed one open paw against the side window.
Not breaking it.
Not yet.
The sound cracked across the lot like a gunshot.
The driver flinched hard enough that the truck lurched to a stop.
Thane leaned close enough that the driver could see his eyes through the glass.
“Turn. It. Off.”
The driver’s hands shook on the wheel.
For one second, engine noise filled everything.
Then the key turned.
The truck died.
“Hands where I can see them,” Gabriel ordered.
The driver raised both hands.
Crowe moved in with two patrol officers.
The door opened.
The driver came out shaking, mask still on, eyes wide and furious and terrified.
Thane stepped back and let Crowe’s people take him.
That mattered.
It would matter later.
Crowe looked once at Thane.
He nodded.
No one hurt.
No truck chase.
No fourth ATM.
The first suspect to give his name was the one in reflective-striped work pants.
He was also the one who had surrendered immediately.
“Brandon Kyle,” Darnell said after checking his ID. “Thirty-four. Works pipeline maintenance. Outstanding traffic warrant out of Logan County.”
Gabriel looked at the work pants.
“Pipeline explains chain comfort.”
Mark noted it without looking up.
The stiff-knee suspect was Mason Rudd, thirty-nine, independent contractor, prior arrest for receiving stolen property, bad knee from a rodeo injury according to his own angry muttering.
The injured suspect, tobacco smell and right-hand blood, was Cody Lark, thirty-six, scrap yard employee with a torn palm currently being wrapped by EMS while he complained that he did not need “a whole ambulance for a scratch.”
Thane looked at the bandage.
“That scratch put you at Night Owl.”
Cody stopped complaining.
Gabriel’s ears tipped forward.
“Interesting silence.”
The driver was Trent Hollis, forty-one, owner of the white Ford F-350 dually registered to an address outside county limits.
The plate was found under the front passenger seat.
The back of it had two strong magnets and a homemade bracket system mounted to a thin metal backing.
Mark photographed it from every angle before it was removed.
The truck had no front plate mounted.
The rear plate mount showed fresh scratches from repeated removal.
The passenger-side clearance light was out.
The left rear fender had a dent.
The hitch was oversized and scarred.
The bed held chains, hooks, tarps, gloves, a battery grinder, two pry bars, bolt cutters, and a folded moving blanket streaked with concrete dust.
No ATM in the bed tonight.
That felt good.
Not enough.
But good.
Crowe stood near the tailgate while Mark and a crime scene tech processed the equipment.
Grant took statements from Dana Kepler, who had stayed behind the counter wall exactly as told and emerged afterward with a trembling fury that made Gabriel step slightly aside when she marched out.
“That them?” she asked.
Crowe said, “Yes, ma’am.”
Dana looked at the four handcuffed men.
“You boys picked the wrong night.”
Gabriel’s face brightened.
Thane pointed one claw at him without looking.
“No.”
Gabriel closed his mouth.
Dana looked at Thane.
“You are the big one.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“You all got here fast.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Good.”
Then she went back inside and locked the door again with great satisfaction.
Patel walked over from his unit.
“No civilian injuries. One suspect hand injury. Minor damage to ATM housing but machine still attached.”
Mark looked toward the ATM.
“They had not completed the chain wrap.”
Gabriel smiled.
“So technically, this ATM is undefeated.”
Mark did not respond.
Crowe did.
“It is not getting a medal.”
Gabriel sighed.
“No one appreciates resilience.”
Thane stood near the truck and inhaled.
Same scents.
All of them.
Redbud.
Prairie Star.
Night Owl.
Sooner Stop.
The truck bed smelled like concrete dust from three sites. ATM metal. Cash dust, faint but there. Burned cutting wheel. Oil. Dirt. Sweat. Old tobacco. Energy drink spilled near the passenger floor.
He looked at Mark.
“Three machines were in this bed.”
Mark nodded.
“Document that in your observations. Carefully. Separate scent observation from conclusion.”
“I know.”
Mark’s expression softened by a fraction.
“Yes.”
Gabriel came around the truck holding a black ski mask in an evidence bag.
“Found behind the driver’s seat.”
Mark looked at him.
“Do not wave evidence.”
“I am not waving. I am presenting.”
“You are gesturing.”
Gabriel lowered the bag.
“Fine.”
Crowe walked toward them.
“Truck gets impounded. Warrants for vehicle search beyond plain view. Warrants for residences, workplaces, outbuildings if probable cause supports. We need the missing ATMs.”
Mark said, “The grinder and pry bars in plain view support equipment use. Truck matches video. Plate mechanism matches method. Suspects caught masked with chain at ATM. Blood likely ties Cody Lark to Night Owl. We can support warrants quickly.”
Crowe nodded.
“Do it.”
Thane looked toward the driver sitting in the back of Grant’s unit.
Trent Hollis glared through the window.
Not scared now.
Angry.
Humiliated.
Still trying to look like someone who had almost gotten away with it.
Thane had seen that expression before.
Not on Silas.
Not exactly.
Silas’s arrogance had been armor over old pain.
This was different.
This was a man angry that the game had ended.
Gabriel followed Thane’s gaze.
“He thought he could drive out.”
“Yes.”
“Crowe was right.”
Thane looked at him.
Gabriel’s voice was quiet.
“You are not a bollard.”
Thane nodded once.
“I know.”
Mark glanced up from the evidence log.
“Good.”
Thane did not argue.
That was also good.
The warrants came faster than anyone enjoyed and slower than anyone wanted.
At 04:12, Judge Bellamy signed search warrants for the truck, Trent Hollis’s rural property, a leased storage unit connected to Brandon Kyle, and an outbuilding on Cody Lark’s family land where phone location data and ALPR hits placed the truck after the Redbud and Prairie Star thefts.
By then, the suspects were booked.
Masks removed.
Names confirmed.
Hands photographed.
Clothing collected.
Cody’s injury treated and swabbed.
The truck processed enough for transport.
The ATM at Sooner Stop still stood where it belonged, scratched, dented, and newly beloved by Dana Kepler, who had taped a handwritten note to the inside of the window:
ATM 1, IDIOTS 0
Crowe saw it and pretended not to.
Gabriel took no photo because Mark looked at him before he could.
At 04:56, Night Shift rolled with Crowe, Voss, Rusk, and patrol support to Cody Lark’s family outbuilding.
The property sat outside city limits but within joint warrant authority coordinated with the county. A deputy met them at the gate, sleepy and interested.
The outbuilding was a long metal shop behind an old house, set back from the road, surrounded by scrap metal, dead equipment, old trailers, and the smell of rust baked into dirt.
A white dually could come and go here without anyone looking twice.
The overhead door was locked.
Cody’s father, who lived in the house and looked furious enough to chew nails, insisted he had no idea what his son did in the shop after midnight and then immediately asked whether this was about “that damn truck.”
Rusk looked at Voss.
Voss said nothing.
Mark documented the lock.
The county deputy opened it with the key provided by the father after Crowe explained that the warrant did not require his enthusiasm.
The shop lights came on.
There they were.
Three exterior ATMs.
One upright.
One on its side.
One half-open, cut marks bright along the access panel.
Gabriel exhaled.
“Found.”
Thane stood in the doorway and let the scene settle.
Redbud.
Prairie Star.
Night Owl.
Metal boxes ripped from concrete and hauled here like trophies.
Around them sat chains, cutting wheels, pry bars, gloves, an engine hoist, a pallet jack, and piles of broken concrete. A black tarp lay on the floor beneath one machine. Cash trays from one ATM sat on a workbench, pried and damaged. A stack of currency bands lay near a toolbox.
Mark’s eyes moved across everything.
“Do not touch anything until full photos.”
Rusk looked at the three machines.
“I hate when the answer is exactly as stupid as expected.”
Gabriel said, “But organized stupid.”
Voss looked at the workbench.
“Cash?”
“Some missing,” Mark said. “Some likely recovered. ATM provider will reconcile.”
Thane stepped inside after the scene tech cleared the entry path.
The smells layered together.
All four suspects.
Concrete dust from all three scenes.
Burned metal.
Cash.
Oil.
Tobacco.
Energy drink.
Cheap body spray.
Excitement gone stale.
He stopped near the half-open ATM.
The cut marks were rough but effective.
“They were getting faster.”
Mark looked over.
“Yes.”
Crowe stood with hands on her belt.
“Then I am glad they did not get a fourth.”
Gabriel looked toward the open shop door, where dawn had started to pale the sky.
“No fourth.”
Thane nodded.
“No fourth.”
Voss came beside him.
“You okay?”
He looked at the machines.
Then at the tools.
Then at the drag marks on the shop floor.
People liked to imagine crimes as clever when they happened fast.
Sometimes fast was just practice plus disregard.
“They used force because it worked,” he said.
Voss nodded.
“And then?”
“Then they used it again.”
“And then?”
“Then they expected it to keep working.”
Voss looked at him.
“But it did not.”
Thane’s mouth moved faintly.
“No.”
Rusk walked past carrying a roll of evidence tape.
“Please tell me none of you are about to make this inspirational.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“The ATM held.”
Rusk stopped.
“No.”
“Against adversity.”
“No.”
“Bolted by hope.”
“Gabriel.”
Mark said, “The fourth ATM remained attached because the suspects were interrupted prior to successful removal.”
Gabriel looked at him.
“You are allergic to poetry.”
“Yes.”
Rusk pointed at Mark.
“That is the correct allergy.”
By 06:33, the three stolen ATMs were being prepared for transport back to the provider’s secure facility for forensic examination.
The outbuilding was taped.
The truck was impounded.
The suspects were in custody.
The magnetic plate mount had been photographed, seized, and placed in the evidence log with the careful satisfaction of a small trick that had stopped being clever.
The blood from Night Owl would still matter.
The video would matter.
The tools would matter.
The truck would matter.
The cash trays would matter.
The phones would matter if the warrants expanded there.
But the case had changed shape.
It was no longer a white truck vanishing into roads full of white trucks.
It had names now.
Trent Hollis.
Brandon Kyle.
Mason Rudd.
Cody Lark.
It had a shop.
A plate.
Three machines.
A fourth still bolted to the ground.
Morning handoff happened late and mostly in the case room, because everyone who mattered was already there.
Mercer arrived at 06:45, looked at the board, looked at the photographs of three stolen ATMs sitting in a metal shop, and said, “They stole the whole ATM.”
Gabriel blinked.
“Yes.”
Mercer looked at him.
“I knew that from the briefing. It still sounds fake.”
Rusk nodded.
“That is where I started.”
Crowe handed Mercer the summary.
“Three suspects in custody. Three stolen machines recovered. Fourth attempt interrupted. No civilian injuries. One suspect minor hand injury. Truck seized.”
Mercer read quickly.
“Good work.”
Dana Kepler’s window note had somehow made it into Grant’s verbal summary.
Mercer looked up.
“ATM one, idiots zero?”
Gabriel’s expression became dangerously hopeful.
Mark said, “It was not in the official report.”
Mercer looked at Gabriel.
“Do not make it the title.”
Gabriel lowered his ears.
“Fine.”
Voss stood near the board with a fresh coffee.
“Mark’s prediction put us at Sooner Stop.”
Mark looked down at his tablet.
“It was a constraint analysis.”
Rusk said, “You guessed right.”
“I narrowed probabilities.”
“You guessed right with math.”
“That is not—”
Gabriel smiled.
“Take the win.”
Mark stopped.
Then nodded once.
“Fine.”
Thane stood slightly apart, looking at the final still from Sooner Stop.
The white truck entering.
The plate gone.
The chain visible.
The moment before everything failed for the men inside it.
Gabriel came to stand beside him.
“You did good not being a bollard.”
Thane looked at him.
Gabriel’s voice was light, but his eyes were not.
“I mean it.”
Thane nodded.
“Crowe said no.”
“And you listened.”
Mark joined them.
“That matters.”
Thane looked toward Crowe, who was speaking with Mercer and Voss.
“She was right.”
“Yes,” Mark said.
Gabriel smiled faintly.
“Annoying when that happens.”
Thane’s phone buzzed.
He pulled it out.
Silas.
Awake for work. Saw alert that ATM guys caught. That was you?
Thane showed Gabriel and Mark.
Gabriel grinned.
“Tell him the ATM was brave.”
Mark said, “Do not.”
Thane typed:
Us and patrol. Teamwork. Follow your rules today.
Silas answered:
Today. Also, did you get to hit the truck?
Thane stared at the message.
Gabriel leaned in and laughed.
Mark’s mouth twitched.
Thane typed:
No. Crowe said I am not a bollard.
The reply came after a pause.
She is smart.
Gabriel laughed harder.
Thane shook his head, but he was smiling.
A second message appeared.
Still would have been cool.
Thane’s smile widened.
He did not answer immediately.
Somewhere across town, Silas Creed was in a small apartment getting ready for honest work, thinking about cool things that did not have to be crimes, force that did not have to become harm, and rules that kept people alive.
Thane typed:
Yes. But not right.
Silas replied:
I know.
Then:
Good job today.
Thane looked at the words longer than necessary.
Gabriel saw and said nothing.
Mark saw and said nothing.
They gave him the space.
Voss called from the table.
“Night Shift. Go home before another appliance commits a felony.”
Rusk looked offended.
“Do not put that in the universe.”
Gabriel turned.
“Too late.”
Crowe pointed toward the door.
“Home.”
Thane put the phone away.
They walked out together.
Past the board.
Past the white truck photographs.
Past the map that had turned from uncertainty into a route.
Outside, morning had brightened over Cross Timber.
The city looked ordinary again.
Mini marts opening.
Roads filling.
People buying coffee without checking whether the ATM was still attached to the wall.
That was the work, Thane thought.
Not making the world perfect.
Not stopping every bad idea before it found a chain and a hitch.
Just getting there before the fourth one came loose.
In the garage, the Humvee waited.
Gabriel climbed into the passenger seat.
Mark settled into the back.
Thane took the wheel.
Gabriel leaned back and closed his eyes.
“No fourth.”
Mark buckled in.
“No fourth.”
Thane started the engine.
The sound filled the garage, steady and familiar.
“No fourth,” he said.
And drove them home.