Month: July 2026 Page 1 of 3

Chapter 94 — No Fourth

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.

Chapter 93 — White Truck

Friday evening opened with Rusk standing in the Night Shift office, staring at the evidence board like it had personally disappointed him.

The board had one photograph in the center.

A white Ford dually pickup.

No plate.

Black tarp in the bed.

Passenger-side cab clearance light out.

Three masked men moving around an exterior ATM with the efficiency of people who had practiced being stupid.

Gabriel stood beside Rusk with his arms folded.

“The truck is mocking us.”

Rusk did not look away from the photo.

“It is a white dually in Oklahoma. Mocking is implied.”

Mark sat at the table with his tablet, organizing still frames from the Redbud Mini Mart footage into a timeline. Thane stood near the board, studying the truck.

The first ATM had been ripped from its mounting pad at 21:47 the night before.

The suspects had arrived, chained, pulled, loaded, tarped, and left in roughly ninety seconds.

No plate in the lot.

Maybe a plate reattached as they left.

Maybe not.

The best frame from the lot exit showed a pale rectangle in the right place for a license plate, but motion blur had reduced it to a ghost.

White truck.

Three males.

Masks.

Gloves.

Fast.

That was not enough.

Voss stood near the doorway with a coffee cup in one hand and the expression she wore when the day shift had gotten less than it wanted.

“Financial Crimes is coordinating with the ATM service company. The machine was found?”

Mark looked up.

“No. Not yet.”

“Cash estimate?”

“Provider is still confirming. Enough to make the crime worth repeating if they think they got away clean.”

Rusk made a sound.

“They think they got away clean because they did.”

Thane kept looking at the image.

“For now.”

Gabriel glanced at him.

The sentence sounded calm.

That usually meant the opposite.

Mark tapped the tablet.

“Car wash camera caught the truck approaching from the south, but the camera angle is too wide and the plate area is overexposed. Storage facility camera confirms no rear plate as it entered the lot. Exit angle suggests a plate may have been restored, but not readable.”

Rusk pointed at the board.

“Passenger-side clearance light out.”

“Yes,” Mark said. “Also possible dent or reflection on the left rear fender. Aftermarket hitch. Black bed liner. Dual rear wheels. Crew cab. White.”

Gabriel sighed.

“You just described half the men who own chains.”

Voss looked at him.

“That is unhelpfully accurate.”

Mark continued.

“One suspect has a stiff right knee or recurring guarded step. One wore work pants with a partial reflective stripe under the hoodie. One used tobacco. One smelled like energy drink. One wore cheap body spray.”

Rusk looked at Thane.

“Can you smell cheap body spray on a still frame?”

Thane did not smile.

“At the scene.”

“Right.”

Gabriel looked toward Thane.

“Same three if they hit again?”

“Yes.”

Mark nodded.

“Scene scent comparison may help. Video comparison will help more.”

Voss looked at the map pinned beside the board.

“Mini marts and gas stations with Exterior ATMs have been notified?”

Mark nodded.

“Crowe had dispatch notify owners overnight. Patrol units are doing extra passes on known exterior machines. ATM service company is sending technicians to inspect mounting and camera coverage. But there are too many locations to cover continuously.”

Rusk took a drink of coffee.

“They will know we are watching.”

Gabriel looked at the still frame.

“Maybe that scares them off.”

No one answered.

Because it might.

Because it might not.

Thane looked at the route.

Redbud Mini Mart sat on North Mayfield, close to fast roads, open fields, and several ways out of Cross Timber before anyone could form a net.

“They chose the edge.”

Mark looked up.

“Yes.”

“Not the biggest ATM.”

“No.”

“Fast escape.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel’s expression sharpened.

“They did not pick money first. They picked time.”

Mark nodded once.

“That is my assessment.”

Voss looked from Mark to Thane.

“Then assume they will do that again.”

Rusk stared at the board.

“They hit one and everyone is looking for the truck. If they have any sense, they stop.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“They ripped an ATM off a sidewalk with a chain.”

“Fair.”

Crowe appeared in the doorway.

No one had heard her approach except Thane.

“Briefing,” she said.

Everyone turned.

Crowe stepped inside, looked at the board, and pointed at the white truck.

“I hate that truck.”

Gabriel lifted one paw.

“Consensus.”

Crowe ignored him.

“Patrol has extra attention on exterior ATMs, but we are not parking a unit at every mini mart in town. We do not have the bodies. If another hit comes in, priority is safety, scene preservation, immediate video, and direction of travel. Do not chase a maybe. We need identification, not a crash.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes, Lieutenant.”

Crowe looked at Mark.

“Can you build a live list of vulnerable locations and exit routes?”

“Already building.”

“Good. Share it with patrol supervisors.”

She looked at Gabriel.

“If you have funny names for this crew, keep them off the radio.”

Gabriel opened his mouth.

Crowe stared.

He closed it.

“Yes, Lieutenant.”

Crowe looked at Thane last.

“They are fast. You will hate that.”

Thane said nothing.

Crowe nodded as if that confirmed her concern.

“Do not let hating it make you careless.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

She left.

Rusk looked at Gabriel.

“What funny names?”

Gabriel’s face was pure innocence.

“None suitable for radio.”

Mark said, “Or anywhere.”

Voss pushed away from the doorway.

“Go work. Maybe we get lucky and they stay home.”

Thane looked at the white truck one more time.

Maybe.

But the image on the board looked like motion.

Not ending.


The first two hours of shift tried to pretend the city was normal.

At 19:12, Patel requested help at a small strip mall where a woman had reported a suspicious man photographing storefronts.

The suspicious man was the owner of the storefronts.

He was photographing a damaged gutter for his insurance company.

The caller, a salon owner two doors down, stood outside with her arms folded.

“He looked suspicious.”

The property owner held up his phone.

“It is my building.”

“You could have said that.”

“You did not ask.”

Gabriel looked at the gutter.

“To be fair, the gutter is suspicious.”

Mark glanced up.

“It is detached at the east bracket.”

“Suspiciously detached.”

Patel closed his notebook.

“No crime.”

The salon owner looked at Thane.

“I was just being careful.”

Thane nodded.

“Careful is fine. Staying inside and calling was fine.”

That satisfied her enough that she went back into the salon.

The property owner sighed.

“I still have to fix the gutter.”

Gabriel looked at the drooping metal.

“It has chosen a new direction.”

Mark said, “It needs a bracket.”

“It needs encouragement.”

“It needs a bracket.”

At 20:03, Darnell called them to a neighborhood park where teenagers had climbed onto a pavilion roof to retrieve a basketball and then discovered getting down was less theoretical than getting up.

One teenager kept insisting he had a plan.

The plan appeared to be “wait until gravity felt different.”

Darnell stood below with a flashlight.

“Gentlemen, the roof is not a recreational platform.”

The tallest teenager said, “We know that now.”

Gabriel looked up.

“Growth.”

Mark assessed the height.

“Ladder?”

Darnell pointed toward a maintenance shed.

“Parks has one on the way.”

Thane looked at the three teenagers.

“Sit down. Do not jump.”

“We were not going to.”

The shortest one looked guilty.

Thane narrowed his eyes.

“Do not jump.”

The shortest one sat immediately.

Parks arrived with a ladder eight minutes later. The teenagers climbed down one at a time, embarrassed and unharmed. The basketball remained on the roof because Darnell said it would be retrieved by maintenance and returned.

Gabriel liked that too much.

Mark refused to put it in the call notes.

At 20:48, Grant asked for backup on a welfare check involving a man standing in his driveway yelling at a bird feeder.

The man was not in crisis.

The bird feeder had been emptied by raccoons three nights in a row.

The yelling was tactical frustration.

Gabriel asked whether the raccoon had a snack cake.

The man said no.

Gabriel said, “Then it may be a different crew.”

Mark told him to stop building a raccoon conspiracy.

Thane kept half his attention on every truck that passed.

White pickups were everywhere.

Single rear wheel.

Dually.

Ford.

Chevy.

Dodge.

Work beds.

Flatbeds.

Toolboxes.

Trailers.

Ranch stickers.

No stickers.

A white Ford dually passed them on Western with a hay spear mounted in the bed and a plate clearly visible.

Not theirs.

Another sat parked at a feed store, passenger-side clearance light working.

Not theirs.

A third rolled past a gas station, but it was a Dodge.

Gabriel noticed Thane watching.

“You are going to start seeing white duallys in your sleep.”

“I already see them now.”

“That is not better.”

Mark’s tablet chirped with a location update from patrol.

“No new ATM reports.”

Gabriel leaned back.

“Good.”

Mark looked at him.

“What?”

“You said it.”

“I said no new reports.”

“That is adjacent to quiet.”

“It is not the same.”

The radio cracked.

“Units respond to 7301 West Charter, Prairie Star Fuel. Caller reports three masked subjects removing an exterior ATM. White pickup. Unknown plate. Chain attached.”

Gabriel slowly turned toward Mark.

Mark closed his eyes once.

Thane keyed the mic.

“Night Shift responding.”


Prairie Star Fuel was farther west than Redbud, out near a stretch of road where the city gave way to warehouse lots, storage yards, machine shops, and fenced construction equipment.

The suspects were gone before Night Shift cleared the last turn.

They knew it from dispatch before they arrived.

“Caller advises vehicle left westbound on Charter. ATM loaded in bed. No plate visible. Patrol units checking area.”

Crowe came over the radio.

“No pursuit unless positively identified and safe. Units use caution.”

Thane’s paws tightened on the wheel.

Gabriel said nothing.

Mark had the map open.

“Westbound Charter gives them three routes out: county road, industrial loop, or south to the bypass.”

“Too many,” Thane said.

“Yes.”

Prairie Star’s lot was wider than Redbud’s and darker along the edges. The exterior ATM had stood near the side wall beneath a security light.

Now it was gone.

Again.

The concrete pad was torn open. The bolts had pulled differently this time, tearing one corner of the base plate upward and leaving a curved gouge where the ATM had twisted before giving way.

Two patrol units were already there.

Grant held the clerk near the doorway, getting his statement. Patel was photographing the drag marks. A nervous customer sat in a parked sedan because he had been pumping gas when the truck arrived and had decided, correctly, that being very still behind his vehicle was better than intervening.

Thane stepped out of the Humvee and smelled them immediately.

Same three.

Diesel.

Hot rubber.

Cheap body spray.

Tobacco.

Energy drink.

Work gloves.

Metal dust.

Sweat.

Adrenaline with enjoyment in it.

That last part made something in him go cold.

Gabriel came around the front of the Humvee.

“Same?”

Thane nodded.

“Same.”

Mark stayed near the edge of the lot, scanning before stepping.

“Different approach?”

Patel looked up.

“They came from the west, pulled straight in, backed near the ATM.”

Grant walked over with the clerk.

The clerk was older than Mason had been, maybe late fifties, with a gray mustache and the particular anger of someone whose workplace had been turned into a stunt.

“Same truck as the alert,” he said. “White Ford. Big one. No plate. Three guys. Masks. They knew exactly what they were doing.”

Thane asked, “How long?”

“Not even two minutes. I saw the chain and hit the alarm. By the time dispatch answered, they had it loose.”

Mark looked at the mounting pad.

“This one had less secure concrete.”

The clerk looked offended on behalf of the concrete.

“It was installed five years ago.”

Mark did not apologize.

“It failed faster.”

Gabriel crouched near the drag marks.

“They are learning?”

Mark’s eyes narrowed.

“Or choosing easier targets.”

The customer from the sedan came over after Grant waved him forward.

“I got video,” he said.

Everyone looked at him.

He held up his phone.

“I was recording because I thought maybe nobody would believe me.”

Gabriel’s ears lifted.

“You are currently my favorite civilian.”

Mark said, “We need a copy without compression if possible.”

The customer blinked.

“I can AirDrop?”

Mark looked pained.

“We can manage.”

The video was shaky, filmed from behind the customer’s sedan through the gas pump island.

It showed the truck from the rear quarter.

No plate in the lot.

The tarp already folded near the front of the bed.

One suspect moving with a stiff right knee.

One in work pants with a reflective stripe visible when the hoodie lifted.

The driver got out after the pull.

Three men lifted the ATM with ugly coordination and practiced panic.

The camera caught sound too.

Chain scraping.

Engine revving.

Metal cracking.

One masked man yelling, “Go, go, go.”

Another saying, “Plate!”

The word snapped everyone still.

Mark rewound.

Played it again.

“Plate!”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“That confirms it.”

Mark nodded.

“They removed it.”

The customer swallowed.

“I didn’t know what that meant.”

“It helps,” Thane said.

“It does?”

“Yes.”

The customer looked relieved.

Grant took his information.

Patel came back from the street edge.

“There is a camera on the tire shop across Charter, facing the road.”

Mark looked west.

“If it caught them after the plate was restored—”

“It might have a plate,” Gabriel said.

“Maybe.”

They got the tire shop owner on the phone. He lived fifteen minutes away and said, with the sleepy irritation of a man dragged into police work by his own security system, that he could access it remotely if someone reminded him of his password.

His wife remembered it.

The video loaded on Patel’s phone.

They all watched a grainy road view from across Charter.

At 22:16:39, the white dually blasted through the frame westbound.

Plate visible.

For five frames.

Maybe six.

Blurred by speed, angle, and low light.

Mark froze the best frame and zoomed.

A pale plate.

Dark characters.

Not enough.

He adjusted brightness.

Contrast.

Still not enough.

“Partial,” he said.

Gabriel leaned closer.

“I see a seven.”

“Possibly.”

“Or a T.”

“Possibly.”

“That is frustrating.”

“Yes.”

Thane looked at the truck body.

“Same missing cab light.”

Mark nodded.

“Same truck. Also left rear fender appears dented. More visible here.”

Patel looked at the frame.

“Can we send it for enhancement?”

“Yes,” Mark said. “But enhancement is not magic.”

Gabriel looked offended on television’s behalf.

Mark ignored him.

Crowe arrived ten minutes later, still in uniform, still grim.

She looked at the missing ATM pad.

“Again.”

Thane said, “Same crew.”

Crowe looked at Mark.

“Plate?”

“Confirmed quick removal. Possible partial on exit from off-site camera. Not readable yet.”

“Direction?”

“Westbound. Likely out of city within minutes.”

Crowe stared down Charter Road.

“They hit after the alert went out.”

Gabriel said, “Either they did not get the alert—”

“Or they do not care,” Crowe finished.

Thane looked at the torn concrete.

“They care about speed. They care about cameras enough to remove the plate. They do not care about being seen.”

Crowe nodded.

“That is worse.”

Mark stood from the camera case.

“Two ATMs in two nights. Similar locations. Edge roads. Exterior machines. Fast exits.”

Crowe looked at him.

“You think there will be another?”

Mark did not answer immediately.

That was answer enough.

Crowe turned toward the patrol units.

“Push the alert again. Every exterior ATM gets extra attention. Tell owners if they see that truck, they call from inside and do not engage. White Ford dually, missing passenger cab light, black tarp, no plate in lot, possible quick-mount plate.”

Gabriel watched officers move.

“They are going to move faster now.”

Thane looked at the empty pad.

“Yes.”


By 00:31, the case room looked like a white truck had exploded across it.

Photos from Redbud.

Photos from Prairie Star.

Map points.

Camera stills.

Truck diagrams.

Suspect notes.

Possible exit routes.

ATM service locations.

Known exterior machines.

Patrol check times.

Crowe stood at the head of the table while Mark connected his tablet to the room display.

Voss and Rusk had come back in, neither pretending they had gone home properly.

Mercer had been notified but was not yet present, which Gabriel considered merciful for everyone’s blood pressure.

Mark brought up the map.

“Redbud was northeast edge. Prairie Star west industrial edge. Both have direct access to low-traffic routes out of city limits. Both have exterior ATMs near side walls, not inside vestibules. Both have camera coverage strong enough to show the event but weak enough to miss plate details if removed.”

Rusk looked at the map.

“They are avoiding central locations.”

“Yes.”

Voss pointed to a cluster of pins.

“Remaining high-risk machines?”

“Too many,” Mark said. “But if they continue pattern, likely smaller fuel stops and mini marts near boundary roads.”

Crowe crossed her arms.

“They may quit after two.”

Gabriel looked at the board.

“They may.”

No one believed it.

Thane stood near the wall, arms folded.

His mind kept replaying the video.

Truck stops.

Chain.

Pull.

Lift.

Tarp.

Gone.

It was not complicated.

That was part of why it worked.

Rusk pointed at the suspect notes.

“Three men strong enough to load an ATM.”

Mark nodded.

“Not necessarily unusually strong. Motivated, coordinated, likely experienced moving heavy equipment or scrap. They know chains, hitches, weight, and speed.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“Construction?”

“Maybe.”

Mark said, “Could be construction, towing, farm, oilfield, scrap, heavy moving, or anyone who works with trailers and chain regularly.”

Rusk sighed.

“So still Oklahoma.”

“Yes.”

Voss looked at the truck still.

“Where do they take the ATMs?”

Silence.

That was the harder question.

Not to the open road forever.

Not to a house in a neighborhood.

Somewhere private enough to unload and break into the machines.

A barn.

A shop.

A storage building.

A rural lot.

An industrial yard.

Somewhere loud would not matter.

Somewhere a white dually pulling in with a tarp-covered load would not look strange.

Thane looked at the map edges.

“They need space.”

Mark nodded.

“And tools.”

Gabriel added, “And privacy.”

Rusk said, “And arrogance.”

Thane thought of Silas in the break room, sheepishly laughing about the interview room. Confidence could be a mask. Arrogance could be armor. But this crew’s arrogance felt different.

Less wounded.

More thrilled.

“They are having fun,” he said.

The room went quiet.

Voss looked at him.

“You smelled that?”

“At Prairie Star. Adrenaline. Excitement. They were scared, but not enough.”

Crowe’s jaw tightened.

“That makes them sloppy eventually.”

“Or bolder,” Mark said.

Crowe looked at him.

“Yes.”

Dispatch broke over Crowe’s radio before anyone could answer.

“Units, respond to 4608 East Choctaw Road, Night Owl Express. Caller reports white dually truck attempting to remove ATM. Three masked subjects. Chain attached.”

For one second, the room was frozen.

Then it moved.

Crowe grabbed her radio.

“All units, Night Owl Express. Use caution. Do not engage alone. Night Shift responding?”

Thane was already moving.

“Responding.”

Gabriel was at his side.

Mark had the tablet.

Rusk said, “That is east edge.”

Voss looked at the map.

“Opposite side.”

Crowe followed them into the hall.

“They are hitting while we are chasing the last one.”

Thane did not answer.

He was already running.


Night Owl Express sat near the east boundary, where Choctaw Road ran past light industrial yards, a closed nursery, a self-storage place, and a half-finished subdivision with dark streets and no houses yet.

The call came at 01:07.

They arrived at 01:14.

Too late again.

A patrol unit had beaten them by less than a minute, but the suspects were gone.

The ATM was gone.

The mounting pad looked like a broken tooth.

The clerk was crying angry tears behind the counter while a second employee stood at the door with both hands shaking.

A customer had been in the restroom when it happened and came out to find the front window full of dust, lights, and a white truck leaving with the back end sagging under weight.

Thane got out and stopped before stepping closer.

Same smell.

Same three.

But stronger this time.

Sweat heavier.

Adrenaline sharper.

One of them bleeding.

“Blood,” Thane said.

Gabriel’s head turned.

Mark froze.

“Where?”

Thane moved slowly along the outer edge of the drag marks, following the scent.

There.

Near the broken concrete, on a jagged edge of metal from the ATM housing.

A smear.

Small.

Dark.

Fresh.

Mark’s voice tightened.

“Photograph first.”

Grant, who had arrived seconds after them, took photos.

Mark collected the sample after documenting it.

Gabriel looked at the smear.

“One of them got cut.”

Thane inhaled.

“Driver? No. One of the loaders. Tobacco.”

Mark noted it.

“Tobacco suspect injured.”

Patel arrived from the south approach.

“Nothing on the road. They were gone.”

Crowe’s voice came over the radio.

“Status.”

Thane answered.

“Suspects gone. ATM removed. Same crew. Possible blood evidence recovered.”

Crowe’s response came after a beat.

“Say again.”

“Possible suspect blood at scene.”

“Secure it. Full processing.”

Mark was already doing that.

The Night Owl footage was better and worse than the others.

Better because one camera faced the approach road.

Worse because the suspects had learned.

They pulled farther from the brightest lights.

They angled the truck to block some of the view.

One suspect reached for the rear plate before the truck fully entered the lot. This time, the movement was unmistakable.

A rectangular plate came off the tailgate area.

Magnetic mount.

Or bracket.

He carried it in one hand as the truck rolled forward.

Gabriel leaned close to the screen.

“There.”

Mark nodded.

“Yes.”

The chain went on.

The truck pulled.

The ATM resisted longer than the second one.

The driver backed, jerked forward again, and the machine snapped loose. One loader stumbled as the ATM shifted. His arm hit something sharp.

That had to be the blood.

He cursed loudly enough for the camera to catch the rhythm if not the words.

The third man yelled at him.

They lifted anyway.

The injured one favored his right hand or wrist as they shoved the machine into the bed.

The tarp came over.

The truck left eastbound.

At the edge of the frame, the plate went back on.

For one beautiful, infuriating instant, the front of a neighboring business camera caught the rear of the truck under a streetlight.

Mark froze the frame.

Everyone leaned in.

It was better than Prairie Star.

Still blurred.

Still angled.

But better.

A state plate.

Maybe Oklahoma.

First character maybe H.

Or M.

Second maybe 7.

Last two maybe 4 and K.

Not enough.

Enough to haunt them.

Gabriel stared at the frame.

“I hate almost knowing.”

Mark’s voice was clipped.

“Yes.”

Thane looked at the truck.

This time, the bed sag was visible under the tarp.

Three ATMs in two nights.

They were not stopping.

Crowe arrived on scene at 01:38, hair pulled back, expression carved from irritation and focus.

She looked at the torn pad.

Then at Thane.

“Blood?”

“Collected.”

“Same crew?”

“Yes.”

“Direction?”

“Eastbound. Plate reattached after leaving lot. Partial frame.”

Mark handed her the tablet.

Crowe looked at it.

“That is almost useful.”

“Yes,” Mark said.

“Can we narrow plate possibilities?”

“With state database and vehicle type, maybe. But partial characters uncertain. If we search too broadly, we get thousands.”

Crowe handed the tablet back.

“Do it anyway. Start with white Ford dually registrations in state and surrounding counties. Missing cab light, dented fender, aftermarket hitch, if any prior stops or inspection images show it.”

Mark nodded.

“Already starting.”

Gabriel looked toward the road.

“They hit three corners.”

Thane turned.

Gabriel gestured broadly.

“Northeast. West. East.”

Mark’s eyes moved to the map.

“They are not moving randomly.”

Crowe looked at him.

“What?”

Mark opened the map layer and marked all three locations.

Redbud.

Prairie Star.

Night Owl.

Three points near boundary roads.

Different parts of town.

Not the closest targets to each other.

Not the richest ATMs necessarily.

Not clustered.

Thane saw it a second after Mark did.

“They are testing response.”

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

“Or proving they can beat it.”

Mark drew rough drive-time circles.

“Each location offers multiple outbound routes. Each hit occurs when patrol attention has shifted after the prior event. They may be staging outside city limits and selecting targets from a preplanned list.”

Crowe looked at the map.

“Can you predict the next one?”

Mark did not answer immediately.

His silence tightened everyone around him.

“Maybe not exact. But I can narrow the risk.”

Gabriel looked at the three points.

“They are making a shape.”

“Not a shape,” Mark said. “A pattern of constraints.”

Rusk would have hated that sentence.

Thane loved it.

Mark continued.

“They need exterior access, truck approach, low vehicle congestion, quick exit to non-city roads, camera positions they can defeat, and enough time between patrol passes. They are avoiding locations with bollards, narrow lots, or interior vestibules.”

Crowe pointed at him.

“Build me that list now.”

“Yes.”

The injured clerk from inside shouted something at the owner over the phone, then slammed the receiver down hard enough to make Gabriel wince.

People were tired.

Angry.

Afraid.

The thieves were not just stealing money.

They were making the city feel like it could be yanked loose in ninety seconds.

Thane walked back to the empty pad.

He crouched beside it, careful not to touch anything.

The concrete was scarred and ugly.

Three men and a truck had done this.

Just planning, speed, and the confidence that no one would arrive in time.

For now, they were right.

That sat badly.

Gabriel came up beside him.

“We will get them.”

Thane looked at the drag marks.

“Yes.”

Mark stepped out of the store with the exported video drive and the look that meant his mind was already three streets ahead.

“I have a preliminary list,” he said.

Crowe turned.

“How many?”

“Seven high-risk locations remaining in city limits. Eleven if we include immediate county edge. Of those, three match the pattern strongly.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“Third chapter.”

Thane looked at him.

“What?”

Gabriel shook his head.

“Nothing.”

Mark ignored that entirely.

“One is closed overnight. One has bollards recently installed. One is vulnerable.”

Crowe’s face hardened.

“Where?”

Mark brought up the map.

“Sooner Stop on County Line Road.”

Thane looked at the pin.

South edge.

Fast roads.

Exterior ATM near the side wall.

Open twenty-four hours.

Lot wide enough for a truck.

No bollards.

Multiple exits.

A white Ford dually could be gone before anyone breathing normal human air knew what happened.

Crowe keyed her radio.

“Dispatch, increase patrol attention at Sooner Stop, County Line Road. Quietly. Do not alarm staff over open radio. I want a unit nearby but not sitting in the lot.”

Thane stood.

The night had become very still inside him.

Gabriel’s humor was gone.

Mark’s eyes stayed on the map.

Crowe looked at all three of them.

“They have beaten us three times.”

Thane looked toward the dark road where the truck had vanished.

“They do not get four.”

Chapter 92 — The Blank Plate

Thursday evening began with Mark reading a fast-food receipt like it had committed fraud.

Gabriel stood beside him in the McDonald’s parking lot holding a paper bag in both paws and watching steam escape from the top.

“It is food,” Gabriel said.

“It is a receipt.”

“It represents food.”

“It includes two large fries.”

“Yes.”

“One is emotional support fries.”

Mark looked up slowly.

“For whom?”

Gabriel looked at the bag.

“For the situation.”

Thane stood beside the Humvee, one arm resting against the open driver’s door, trying not to smile.

Mark looked at him.

“You approved this?”

“I drove.”

“That is not approval.”

“It is involvement.”

Gabriel pointed at Thane.

“Leadership.”

Mark folded the receipt.

“The food is for Silas.”

“Yes,” Gabriel said. “The main food. The support fries are for ambient morale.”

Thane checked the time.

“His dinner break starts in eight minutes.”

“Then we are punctual,” Gabriel said.

“We are six minutes from Red Dirt,” Mark said.

“Punctual-adjacent.”

Thane opened the driver’s door fully.

“Get in.”

Silas’s work schedule put his fifteen-minute dinner break at 19:15. He had mentioned earlier in the week, with careful non-requesting precision, that he usually brought leftovers.

Gabriel had interpreted that as a humanitarian crisis.

Mark had interpreted Gabriel’s interpretation as excessive.

Thane had driven to McDonald’s.

The Quarter Pounder combo sat in the bag beside the alleged support fries. Gabriel held it like evidence he did not intend to submit.

Red Dirt ReBuild glowed under warehouse lights when they pulled into the side lot. The roll-up door was open halfway. A box truck sat backed to the dock. Through the opening, Thane could see stacks of doors, cabinets, appliances, salvaged lumber, and Silas Creed moving a pallet of donated tile under Alejandra Suarez’s direction.

Human form.

Work clothes.

Gloves.

Ankle monitor visible above his boot.

Alive in the ordinary way.

Thane parked near the visitor spaces.

Gabriel lifted the bag.

“Delivery.”

Mark looked at him.

“Do not make this dramatic.”

“It is a Quarter Pounder. Drama is inherent.”

They walked toward the open dock.

Alejandra saw them and pointed toward the break room without missing a beat.

“He has fourteen minutes. Do not make him late.”

Gabriel lifted the bag.

“We bring tribute.”

Alejandra looked at the golden arches on the bag.

“Tribute has saturated fat.”

“Traditional.”

She shook her head and called over her shoulder, “Creed. Break.”

Silas turned.

The moment he saw them, his face did something he had not yet learned to control.

It opened.

Only for a second.

Surprise, warmth, pleasure, caution, all stacked too fast to separate.

Then he set down the pallet jack handle properly, removed his gloves, and walked over.

“You are on shift.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

Silas looked at Gabriel’s bag.

“That smells like fries.”

Gabriel held it out.

“Your investigative skills are impressive.”

Silas stared at the bag.

“You brought me dinner?”

Thane said, “Quarter Pounder combo.”

Gabriel added, “And ambient morale.”

Mark said, “One additional fry order of unclear custody.”

Silas took the bag carefully.

He looked down into it, then back at them.

“I had leftovers.”

Gabriel put one paw over his chest.

“We saved you from repetition.”

“I like leftovers.”

“Then we enhanced the evening, not rescued it.”

Silas laughed softly.

That had become one of Thane’s favorite sounds.

Not because it was big.

Because it had stopped sounding surprised by itself.

They sat in the break room with the door open to the warehouse floor, as Alejandra required. Silas took the chair nearest the table. Thane leaned against the counter. Gabriel sat backward in a chair because Gabriel considered normal seating a suggestion. Mark remained standing until Silas looked at him and pointed at the empty chair.

Mark sat.

Silas unwrapped the burger.

For a moment, he just looked at it.

Gabriel narrowed his eyes.

“You have had McDonald’s before.”

“Yes.”

“Good. I cannot handle another cultural emergency this week.”

Silas took a bite.

His ears were human, so they could not lift.

But his eyebrows did.

Gabriel pointed.

“Approval.”

Silas swallowed.

“It is good.”

Thane reached into the bag and took one of the support fries.

Mark looked at him.

Thane said, “Ambient morale.”

Gabriel beamed.

For a few minutes, the conversation stayed easy.

Alejandra’s war against mislabeled salvage bins.

Cam’s theory that every donated cabinet had at least one mysterious screw in the bottom.

The fact that Silas had learned to identify whether a door was solid-core by sound, weight, and Mark’s preferred method, which involved “not just guessing because it feels door-ish.”

Mark said, “That was good instruction.”

Silas smiled faintly.

“It was a twelve-minute lecture about doors.”

“Necessary.”

Gabriel leaned back.

“You two having door opinions is dangerous given your history.”

Silas looked at him.

Then at Thane.

Then, unexpectedly, he smiled.

“I suppose that is fair.”

Thane reached into the bag and took one of the fries Gabriel had declared ambient morale.

Then he looked toward the warehouse floor, where Cam was arguing with a stack of trim pieces and Alejandra was pointing at something that apparently needed to be somewhere else immediately.

“You know,” Thane said, “in a warehouse job like this, teamwork matters.”

Silas looked at him.

“Yes.”

“Following instructions matters.”

“Yes.”

“Not making people nervous by doing everything alone matters.”

Silas’s eyes narrowed slightly.

“I hear a but.”

Thane gave him a sly smile.

“But every now and then, it is perfectly acceptable to show off a little.”

Silas blinked.

Gabriel slowly turned toward Thane.

Mark looked up.

Silas said, “Show off.”

“A little,” Thane said. “Safely. When it helps. When it is not about proving anything ugly.”

Gabriel pointed one fry at him.

“That is a very specific loophole.”

“It is not a loophole,” Mark said. “It is a controlled morale allowance.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“A controlled morale allowance.”

Mark paused.

“Yes.”

Silas looked from one to the other, then back at Thane.

“You want me to lift something heavy because it makes you happy.”

Thane’s smile widened.

“Yes.”

Silas laughed under his breath and looked down at his burger wrapper.

“That is absurd.”

“Probably.”

“I am supposed to be learning humility.”

“You are,” Thane said. “Humility does not mean pretending you are not strong. It means remembering strength is for use, not permission.”

That quieted him.

Silas looked toward the warehouse again.

A cabinet base sat near the loading dock where two volunteers had clearly decided it was tomorrow’s problem.

He looked back at Thane.

“Safely.”

“Yes.”

“When it helps.”

“Yes.”

“Not ugly.”

“Never ugly.”

Silas nodded once.

Then, very quietly, said, “I think I can do that.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Excellent. Legal showing off.”

Mark said, “I dislike that phrase.”

“You will grow into it.”

Thane took another fry.

“I was thinking about the interview room.”

Silas’s smile faded, but not in fear.

More like bracing.

“The one I broke?”

“Yes.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark went still, but did not interrupt.

Thane kept his tone light enough to make clear where he was going.

“You were very sure of yourself.”

Silas looked down at the burger wrapper.

“I was arrogant.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel said, “Spectacularly.”

Silas gave him a look.

Gabriel lifted both paws.

“Historically.”

Thane smiled.

“You sat there like you had the whole thing handled. Calm. Polite. Looking at the walls. Watching the glass. Acting like we were all five moves behind you.”

Silas rubbed one hand over the back of his neck.

“I thought you were.”

Mark said, “You underestimated the hallway.”

Silas glanced at him.

“I underestimated Thane.”

Gabriel said, “Common mistake. Usually less expensive.”

Thane shook his head, still smiling.

“I am not picking on you.”

Silas looked at him.

“I know.”

“I kind of liked it.”

Silas blinked.

“What?”

“You were so confident. It was like watching a supervillain in a Marvel movie.”

For one second, Silas looked horrified.

Then Gabriel lost it.

He laughed so hard he had to put one paw on the table.

Mark closed his eyes.

Silas stared at Thane.

“A supervillain.”

Thane nodded.

“The outfit. The calm voice. The little smile. The ‘you have no idea what you are doing’ line.”

Gabriel pointed at Silas.

“You did say that.”

Silas groaned and covered his face with one hand.

“I said that.”

Mark nodded.

“Yes.”

Gabriel leaned forward.

“And then you transformed.”

Thane grinned.

“Very dramatic.”

Silas lowered his hand.

His face was red.

“I hate all of you.”

Gabriel wiped at one eye.

“No, you do not.”

Silas looked at Thane.

“I was trying to intimidate you.”

“I know.”

“And you enjoyed it?”

“A little.”

Silas stared.

Then he laughed.

Not softly this time.

A real laugh, embarrassed and warm and helpless.

Thane stepped closer and slapped him lightly on the shoulder.

Not hard.

Not dominance.

Just pack-shaped affection that did not yet call itself that.

“I am having fun with you. Not at you.”

Silas looked up at him.

The laughter softened into something more fragile.

“I know.”

“Good.”

Silas took another fry, still smiling.

“For the record, I did not plan to sound like a supervillain.”

Gabriel leaned back.

“That is exactly what a supervillain would say after workshopping the monologue.”

Silas lifted both hands.

“No monologues. Court order.”

“That is not literally in the order,” Mark said.

“It is implied.”

Gabriel pointed at him.

“See? Growth.”

Alejandra’s voice carried from the warehouse.

“Creed. Two minutes.”

Silas stood immediately.

“Yes, ma’am.”

He gathered the wrapper and empty fry carton.

Gabriel looked into the bag.

“You finished the support fries.”

Silas paused.

“I thought they were ambient.”

“They were. You absorbed the ambience.”

Mark stood.

“That is not a problem.”

Gabriel sighed.

“Fine.”

Silas threw away the trash, then turned back to Thane.

“Thank you for dinner.”

“You are welcome.”

“And for…” He gestured vaguely, as if no one word covered teasing, memory, shame, laughter, and not being alone in any of it.

Thane nodded.

“You are welcome.”

Silas looked at all three of them.

Then went back into the warehouse, put on his gloves, and resumed moving tile where Alejandra pointed.

Thane watched long enough to see him check with Cam before lifting the next stack.

Good.

Gabriel stood beside him.

“He laughed about the interview room.”

“Yes.”

Mark’s voice was quiet.

“That is significant.”

Silas looked over once from the warehouse floor.

Thane lifted one paw.

Silas returned the gesture.

Then Cam pointed toward a heavy cabinet base sitting awkwardly near the loading dock.

“We were going to get the dolly for that one,” Cam said.

Silas glanced toward Alejandra.

Alejandra looked at the cabinet, then at Silas.

“Safely,” she said.

Silas looked back at Thane.

Thane gave him the smallest sly smile.

Silas’s mouth twitched.

Then he bent, got both hands under the cabinet base, and lifted it cleanly off the floor.

Not with a grunt.

Not with drama.

Just up.

Cam took one step back.

“Well, okay then.”

Gabriel’s ears rose.

Mark watched the lift angle automatically.

Silas carried the cabinet six feet, set it exactly where Alejandra pointed, and stepped back with his hands open.

No thud.

No crack.

No showing teeth.

Just useful strength.

Alejandra nodded once.

“That works.”

Silas looked over again.

This time, he was trying not to smile.

Thane failed completely at doing the same.

Then Silas got back to work.


The evening settled into the kind of patrol-assist rhythm Gabriel called “municipal jazz.”

At 20:04, Grant requested assistance at a laundromat where a man had reported someone stealing his clothes.

The clothes were not stolen.

They were in Dryer Seven.

The man had put them in Dryer Seven.

He had then waited beside Dryer Four for thirty-one minutes and grown increasingly suspicious of everyone present.

Grant stood near the folding table while the man stared at Dryer Seven as if it had moved there on purpose.

“I swear I used that one,” he said, pointing at Dryer Four.

A woman folding towels said, “You did not.”

“I might have.”

“You did not.”

Gabriel looked at the two dryers.

“Are these dryers known to migrate?”

Mark said, “No.”

The woman pointed at the man.

“He was on the phone talking about fantasy football and put his clothes in that one.”

The man looked wounded.

“My running back situation is complicated.”

Grant opened Dryer Seven.

Warm clothes tumbled inside.

The man looked at them.

“Oh.”

Thane nodded.

“Found.”

The woman smiled.

“Detective work.”

Gabriel bowed slightly.

“We specialize in textile recovery.”

Mark entered the call as a misunderstanding.

Gabriel tried to make him add “fantasy football impairment.”

Mark refused.

At 20:51, Patel needed help with a confused delivery driver trying to drop sixteen cases of sports drink at a yoga studio instead of the youth soccer office two doors down.

The yoga instructor had declined delivery by saying, “We are hydrated spiritually.”

Gabriel wrote that down.

Mark said, “Do not.”

Thane carried eight cases at once to the correct door because the driver had already blocked traffic long enough.

At 21:33, Darnell stood outside a small house where a smoke alarm had been chirping for two days and the homeowner insisted it was “probably a bird.”

It was not a bird.

It was a low battery.

Mark replaced it.

The homeowner gave them peaches.

Mark checked that accepting them was permissible because they were offered to all responding personnel and valued at less than emotional complication.

Gabriel took two.

Thane took one.

Darnell took three and said nothing.

The night was normal enough that Thane began to believe it.

That was when dispatch called.

“Night Shift, respond to 11802 North Mayfield, Redbud Mini Mart. Reported larceny in progress, exterior ATM being removed from property. Caller reports a white dually pickup and three masked males. Patrol en route.”

Thane’s body changed before his voice did.

“Night Shift responding.”

Gabriel was already upright in the passenger seat.

Mark had the tablet open.

“Redbud Mini Mart. North edge. Seven minutes.”

Thane turned the Humvee hard enough that Gabriel grabbed the dash but not hard enough to complain.

Dispatch continued.

“Caller states suspects chained the ATM to the truck. Vehicle leaving northbound. No plate visible.”

Gabriel’s expression sharpened.

“No plate.”

Mark said, “Exterior ATM theft.”

Thane keyed the mic.

“Dispatch, direction of travel confirmed northbound?”

“Affirmative. Caller says vehicle left northbound on Mayfield. White Ford dually pickup, black tarp in bed, three males in dark clothing and masks. No further description.”

“Any injuries?”

“Negative so far.”

Crowe came over the channel.

“All units, do not pursue unless located and safe. Get vehicle description out countywide. Night Shift, secure scene and video if suspects gone.”

“Copy,” Thane said.

He pressed the accelerator.


The Redbud Mini Mart sat at the edge of a four-lane road where Cross Timber thinned toward fields, storage lots, and new subdivisions not yet finished pretending they had always been there.

The exterior lights were bright.

The glass storefront was intact.

The ATM pad near the south wall was not.

A rectangle of torn concrete and exposed mounting bolts marked where the machine had stood. Two bolts had sheared. Two had pulled chunks of concrete up with them. Scrape marks ran from the pad toward the edge of the parking lot.

A few feet away, a broken plastic ATM fascia piece lay under the harsh white light.

Patel was already on scene with one patrol unit. Grant arrived seconds behind Night Shift. The clerk stood just inside the front door, pale and furious, speaking on the phone with someone who was probably the owner.

Thane parked clear of the evidence area.

Gabriel stepped out and scanned the lot.

Mark went immediately to the mounting pad.

“Do not step through the drag marks,” he said.

Grant froze mid-step.

“Thanks.”

Patel walked over.

“They were gone before I was dispatched. Clerk says whole thing took maybe ninety seconds.”

Gabriel looked at the empty pad.

“To remove an ATM.”

“Yes.”

Thane looked north along Mayfield.

No white dually.

No taillights.

No sound.

Just road.

Mark crouched near the bolts.

“Chain drag marks here. Force direction toward the parking lane. The ATM was pulled off its mounting, then lifted or slid into the truck bed.”

Gabriel looked at the concrete.

“Fast.”

“Yes.”

Thane walked a careful arc around the scene, staying out of the scrape path.

The smells were messy.

Gasoline.

Diesel.

Hot rubber.

Metal.

Concrete dust.

Adrenaline from the clerk.

Old oil in the parking spots.

A recent truck.

Three males.

Sweat, ski-mask fabric, work gloves, denim, cheap body spray, tobacco on one, energy drink on another.

Three men working hard and scared but excited.

Thane looked at Gabriel.

“Three.”

Gabriel nodded.

“I smell three.”

Mark looked up.

“Three suspects, consistent with caller.”

Patel gestured toward the store.

“Clerk saw masks. Black ski masks. Dark shirts. Jeans. Gloves. Says one drove, two jumped out, then driver got out to help load after the pull.”

Thane looked at the pad.

“They loaded it?”

“Into the bed,” Patel said. “Clerk saw enough through the glass to say they lifted it together and threw a tarp over it.”

Gabriel stared at the empty rectangle.

“That is not light.”

“No,” Mark said.

“But three motivated adult males could move some exterior ATMs if already broken free and if they did not care about injury or damage.”

Thane looked at the drag marks.

“They cared about speed.”

Mark nodded.

“Yes.”

The clerk came outside with Grant.

His name tag read Mason. He was maybe twenty-four, shaking with adrenaline and anger.

“They just drove up,” he said before anyone asked. “Like they were supposed to be here. I thought maybe maintenance. Then one guy wrapped a chain around the machine, and I was like, no, that is not maintenance.”

Gabriel’s expression changed.

“No. It is not.”

“I hit the panic button. I called 911. I yelled through the door, but I was not going out there.”

“Good,” Thane said.

Mason looked at him.

“I should have gotten a better look.”

“You stayed safe.”

“They were wearing masks.”

“Then you were not going to get faces.”

Mason swallowed.

“Truck was white. Big. Dually. Ford, I think. I saw the tailgate before they dropped it.”

Mark asked, “Plate?”

“No plate. I looked. Nothing. Maybe covered? I do not know.”

Gabriel looked toward the front of the store.

“Cameras?”

Mason pointed.

“Everywhere. Outside, pumps, front, ATM, road side. Owner is pulling remote access. I can get the local playback.”

Mark stood.

“We need copies immediately.”

Mason nodded and hurried inside.

Grant looked at the road.

“A white Ford dually in Oklahoma.”

Gabriel sighed.

“That narrows it to everyone with livestock, construction work, a trailer, or a cousin.”

Patel said, “And half the parking lot at any feed store.”

Mark looked toward the camera above the awning.

“It may still have identifiers. Damage, decals, trim level, bed liner, lights, missing accessories, tire pattern, hitch type.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“Truck fingerprint.”

“Yes.”

“Good. Because ‘white dually’ is basically ‘man wearing hat’ around here.”

Thane crouched near the broken fascia piece.

There was a smear on it.

Not blood.

Glove residue. Black fabric or rubber.

He pointed.

“Photo.”

Grant took pictures.

Mark looked at the far edge of the lot.

“Need to check for plate removal behavior.”

Patel frowned.

“What do you mean?”

Mark pointed toward the road.

“If no plate at the store, either it was removed before arrival, covered, fake, or stolen. If removed nearby, other cameras may catch the truck with a plate before entering the lot or after leaving.”

Gabriel looked north.

“Mini mart cameras face the lot, not necessarily the road approach.”

“Traffic cameras?” Grant asked.

Mark checked the tablet.

“Nearest city camera is at Mayfield and 122nd. Too far north. Private cameras at the car wash across the street and storage facility south.”

Thane stood.

“Get them.”

Patel nodded.

“I will hit the car wash.”

Grant said, “I will check storage.”

Mason returned with a laptop balanced in both hands and the face of a man who had just watched something outrageous happen twice—once in life and once on video.

“You need to see this.”

They gathered inside behind the counter, careful to keep patrol visible outside.

The exterior camera showed the white Ford dually turning into the lot at 21:47:18.

No front plate.

Three seconds later, it angled toward the ATM.

The truck had no obvious markings. White cab. White bed. Dual rear wheels. Large trailer hitch. Dark grille. One cab clearance light out on the passenger side.

It stopped hard.

Two men jumped out.

Black masks.

Dark hoodies.

Gloves.

One carried a heavy chain.

The driver remained behind the wheel.

The two men looped the chain around the ATM cabinet with practiced speed.

The driver pulled forward.

The ATM jerked.

Did not come free.

The driver reversed slightly.

The two men adjusted.

The driver pulled again.

This time the concrete around the bolts cracked, and the ATM came loose in an ugly burst of dust and motion.

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

“Bold.”

Mark watched the timer.

“Thirty-two seconds.”

The driver exited.

All three men lifted, shoved, and muscled the ATM into the bed. Not clean. Not graceful. Fast. One nearly fell. Another slammed the tailgate. A tarp came over the bed.

At 21:48:47, the truck left northbound.

Ninety seconds.

Mason whispered, “See?”

Mark rewound the clip.

“Play entrance again.”

Mason did.

Mark leaned closer.

“No rear plate either.”

“Maybe stolen truck?” Grant said.

“Maybe.”

Thane watched the driver’s door.

The driver wore gloves too.

All three similar height ranges. Adult males. One broader through the shoulders. One moved with a limp or stiff right knee. One had a reflective stripe on his work pants partly covered by the hoodie.

Mark noted each detail.

“Need camera before entry.”

Mason clicked another angle, road-facing but limited.

The truck approached from the south.

Just before it entered the lot, it slowed near the edge of the camera’s view.

A blur of movement at the back.

One passenger jumped off the rear step or out from the bed area briefly near the lot entrance.

He reached toward the tailgate area.

Then the truck rolled forward into the lot with no visible rear plate.

Gabriel leaned in.

“Did he just pull the plate?”

Mark’s eyes sharpened.

“Possibly.”

They watched again.

The image was grainy, but the motion was clear enough to matter.

A hand at the plate area.

Quick.

Practiced.

Then the man jumped back onto the running board or into the bed area.

Mason switched to the exit view.

As the truck accelerated northbound, just at the edge of the lot, the same rear figure leaned down at the tailgate.

The plate area became a pale rectangle again before the truck disappeared.

Mark went very still.

“Magnetic or quick-mount plate.”

Grant looked at him.

“They remove the plate before the lot and put it back on after?”

“Likely.”

Gabriel let out a low whistle.

“That is clever in the worst way.”

Thane looked at the screen.

“Fast too.”

Mark rewound.

“Frame export. Entrance, no plate. Pre-entry movement. Exit, plate restored if visible. We need higher resolution from the original system.”

Mason nodded quickly.

“Yes. Owner can export.”

Patel’s voice came over the radio.

“Patel to Night Shift. Car wash has cameras facing Mayfield. Manager is remote but reachable. Waiting on access.”

Grant keyed her radio.

“Grant. Storage facility office closed, but cameras visible. Contacting owner.”

Crowe came over the channel.

“Night Shift, status.”

Thane took his radio.

“ATM removed from exterior pad. Suspects gone prior to arrival. White Ford dually pickup, three masked males, no plate visible in lot. Store video suggests plate may have been removed just before entry and replaced on exit. Suspects in and out in approximately ninety seconds.”

Crowe was silent for half a beat.

Then, “Well, that is new.”

Gabriel looked at Mark.

Mark said quietly, “It will not be the last.”

Thane heard him.

He looked at the empty ATM pad outside through the store glass.

Concrete torn.

Bolts exposed.

A fast white truck vanishing into a state full of fast white trucks.

The shift had been normal.

Until it was not.

Crowe said, “Secure video. Process scene. Get county alert out for white Ford dually with possible quick-remove plate, one passenger-side cab light out, unknown plate. No pursuit without identification. Notify financial crimes and property crimes. Night Shift, you own initial overnight coordination.”

“Copy,” Thane said.

Mason looked from one wolf to another.

“You think they will do it again?”

No one answered quickly enough.

That was answer enough.

Gabriel’s humor was gone now.

Mark closed the video export window and began organizing requests.

Thane looked back at the screen frozen on the truck entering the lot.

Three masked men.

No plate.

Ninety seconds.

“They came prepared,” Thane said.

Mason swallowed.

“Yeah.”

Thane’s eyes stayed on the white dually.

“And now we know to be prepared too.”

Chapter 91 — A Hand Offered

Wednesday night began with a call about a suspicious umbrella.

Gabriel stared through the Humvee windshield at the object in question.

It stood open in the middle of a sidewalk outside a closed insurance office, black canopy tilted against a streetlight, handle hooked around the base of a newspaper box as if it had chosen that exact place to contemplate its decisions.

Darnell stood beside it with his flashlight lowered.

A woman from the upstairs apartment leaned out of a second-floor window.

“It was not there earlier,” she called.

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Thane looked at Mark.

Mark looked at the umbrella.

“It is an umbrella.”

The woman said, “Suspiciously.”

Darnell made the mistake of looking at Gabriel.

Gabriel stepped forward with professional solemnity.

“Ma’am, did the umbrella threaten anyone?”

The woman frowned.

“No.”

“Move aggressively?”

“No.”

“Make statements?”

She paused.

“What?”

Mark said, “Gabriel.”

Gabriel lifted one paw.

“Establishing facts.”

Thane crouched near the umbrella, keeping one paw free in case the city had finally produced hostile rain gear.

The smell was rainwater, dust, cheap metal, and human hand oil.

No blood.

No chemical.

No danger.

He lifted it carefully.

A laminated tag dangled from the handle.

PLEASE TAKE ME. FREE. STILL WORKS.

Darnell read it.

Then looked up at the woman.

“It appears to be donated.”

The woman squinted from the window.

“Oh.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“Suspicious generosity.”

Mark entered notes on his tablet.

“Abandoned umbrella determined non-criminal.”

Gabriel leaned over.

“Add emotionally misunderstood.”

“No.”

The woman called down, “Can I have it?”

Thane looked at Darnell.

Darnell shrugged.

“It does say please take me.”

Thane held the umbrella up.

The woman disappeared from the window and came downstairs two minutes later in slippers, accepted the umbrella, and apologized for calling police on it.

Darnell told her it was better to call than worry all night.

Gabriel told the umbrella to make better choices.

Mark refused to document that.

The night moved on.

Normal, by Cross Timber standards.

The kind of normal that had started meaning small calls, odd people, useful patience, and no one bleeding.

Thane appreciated it more than he used to.


The second call was a parking-lot dispute outside a discount grocery store where two men were arguing over a shopping cart.

Not the contents.

The cart.

Each believed he had chosen the cart first.

Both carts in the return rack were dented, sticky, and wobbling.

The disputed cart rolled straight.

This had apparently become important.

Grant stood between the men with the expression of someone silently counting all the better uses of city resources.

“Gentlemen,” she said as Night Shift approached, “we are not going to court over a shopping cart.”

The older man, wearing a ball cap with a faded tractor logo, pointed at the cart.

“I had my hand on it.”

The younger man, holding a reusable bag and a loaf of bread, said, “You touched the handle after I pulled it out.”

“You stepped away.”

“I stepped around the puddle.”

Gabriel looked at the puddle.

It was small.

Possibly symbolic.

Mark examined the cart return.

“There are other carts.”

“They wobble,” both men said at once.

Gabriel’s ears lifted.

“Shared values.”

Grant looked at him.

“Please do not encourage the cart faction.”

Thane walked to the cart return, pulled out one of the wobbling carts, and looked at the front wheel. A piece of plastic was wedged around the axle. He removed it with one claw, set it aside, and pushed the cart forward.

It rolled straight.

Everyone watched.

Thane pushed it back.

“There.”

The older man looked at the repaired cart.

The younger man looked at the original cart.

Grant said, “Now there are two functioning carts.”

The men stared at each other.

Then, with the solemn dignity of people who had nearly made a terrible point, each took one.

Gabriel watched them go.

“Community restored through wheel maintenance.”

Mark entered the call notes.

Grant looked at Thane.

“Thank you.”

Thane nodded.

The piece of plastic lay on the pavement.

Gabriel picked it up and held it.

“Cause of disturbance located.”

Mark said, “Do not bag it.”

“I was not going to.”

“You were thinking about it.”

“As a teaching aid.”

“No.”


At 21:08, the radio sent them toward the south side.

“Night Shift, assist Patel with traffic hazard near Red Dirt ReBuild, 410 South Larkspur. Loose lumber in roadway.”

Thane’s ears shifted before he answered.

“Night Shift responding.”

Gabriel looked at him from the passenger seat.

“Near Red Dirt.”

“Yes.”

Mark glanced up from the tablet in the back.

“Silas’s workplace.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel’s expression softened immediately.

“You thinking what I think you are thinking?”

Thane kept his eyes on the road.

“Maybe.”

Mark looked at the dispatch notes.

“His shift tonight is 14:00 to 22:00. Approved work location. Probation schedule active. If we stop, it should be brief and not interfere.”

Thane nodded.

“I know.”

Gabriel leaned back.

“Look at us, having clean emotional impulses.”

Mark said, “Some cleaner than others.”

Patel had the roadway mostly handled by the time they arrived.

Three boards had fallen from the back of a pickup turning too sharply out of the industrial lane. No one had been hit. The pickup driver had stopped, embarrassed and cooperative. Patel had parked with lights angled to protect the lane while a forklift operator from Red Dirt helped move the boards back to the truck.

Silas was not outside.

Thane noticed.

He also noticed that he wanted to see him.

That want had become less sharp since the chain.

Less panic.

More pull.

Like pack in the distance, not yet home, but within hearing.

Thane parked the Humvee behind Patel’s unit.

Gabriel got out with him.

Mark followed.

Patel looked relieved.

“Mostly cleaned up. Driver needs help re-securing the load.”

The driver, a middle-aged man in a construction company shirt, looked at the three wolves and said, “I swear I strapped it.”

Mark examined the remaining straps.

“You strapped the top layer. The lower boards shifted under acceleration.”

The man blinked.

“That sounds right.”

“It is.”

Gabriel picked up one of the loose boards and handed it to the forklift operator.

“Good news: no one was hit.”

The driver nodded hard.

“Yes. Absolutely. Thank God.”

Thane helped lift the heavier boards while Mark directed proper stacking and strap placement with enough specificity that the driver took notes on his phone.

Gabriel stood near the cones and kept traffic from getting curious.

Within ten minutes, the roadway was clear.

Patel thanked them, the driver thanked everyone, and Mark made the driver add a second strap before leaving.

Then Thane looked toward the Red Dirt warehouse.

The roll-up door was partly open. Warm light spilled onto the loading dock. He could hear pallet jacks, a radio playing low, and someone laughing inside.

Gabriel saw him look.

“Go.”

Thane glanced at him.

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“We will wait.”

Mark checked the time.

“Five minutes. We are available for dispatch if needed.”

Thane nodded.

Then walked toward the warehouse alone.


Red Dirt ReBuild smelled like dust, lumber, old paint, cardboard, metal shelving, and work done without glamour.

Silas was near the back, stacking salvaged cabinet doors by size.

Human form.

Work shirt.

Jeans.

Gloves.

Ankle monitor visible above one boot.

He was working with Cam, who was talking with both hands and no apparent concern that his coworker could turn into something capable of throwing a refrigerator.

Silas saw Thane before Cam did.

His body changed in small ways.

Shoulders loosening.

Eyes lifting.

Something like happiness trying to appear without knowing whether it was allowed.

Cam turned.

“Oh hey. Detective.”

“Evening.”

Silas set the cabinet door down carefully.

“You are on shift.”

“Yes.”

“Is something wrong?”

“No.”

That answer landed.

Silas blinked once.

Thane looked toward Cam.

“Can I borrow him for two minutes?”

Cam looked at Silas.

Silas looked at the supervisor’s office.

Alejandra Suarez appeared in the doorway before anyone called her, as if she had radar for complicated moments.

“Break room,” she said. “Five minutes. Door open.”

Thane nodded.

“Thank you.”

She pointed at Silas.

“You clock back in after.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Gabriel would have liked her.

Silas removed his gloves and followed Thane to the side break area, a small space with a table, two vending machines, a bulletin board, and a refrigerator covered in magnets. The door remained open to the warehouse floor, but the hum of fans and work noise gave them just enough privacy.

Silas stood near the table.

He looked suddenly nervous.

Not afraid of Thane.

Afraid of wanting too much from the visit.

Thane understood that better than Silas probably knew.

“I wanted to see how you were.”

Silas looked down.

“At work?”

“Yes.”

“I am fine.”

Thane gave him a look.

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“I am learning that fine is suspicious.”

“It can be.”

“I am…” He searched for the word. “Steady.”

Thane nodded.

“That is better.”

Silas leaned back against the table, hands loose at his sides.

“Work is good. Tiring. Simple in the right way. Alejandra yells before I do something wrong enough to matter. Cam talks constantly. I know where things go now.”

“That sounds good.”

“It is.”

The words came softly.

Then Silas looked up.

“Why are you really here?”

Thane took a breath.

The warehouse sounds continued beyond the doorway.

Boards moving.

A pallet jack rolling.

Someone calling for tape.

Normal life around them, indifferent and therefore kind.

“I wanted to remind you.”

Silas went still.

“Of what?”

“That I meant what I said.”

Silas’s eyes changed.

Thane stepped closer.

“I am dedicated to your life, Silas. Not to excusing what you did. Not to buying your way out of consequences. To your life.”

Silas looked away fast.

Thane continued anyway.

“You are not alone. Not in the apartment. Not at work. Not when you want to do right and do not know how. Not when you feel wrong inside your own skin. Not when the rules feel like walls. You call. You tell the truth. You let yourself be stopped.”

Silas’s jaw tightened.

Thane softened his voice.

“And if you keep choosing right, if you keep doing the work, someday I still want you as pack.”

Silas closed his eyes.

The breath that left him sounded wounded.

“Do not say it too often.”

“Why?”

“Because I will start believing it.”

Thane moved closer.

“Good.”

Silas opened his eyes.

They were wet.

“Thane.”

“You should believe true things.”

Silas looked at the open doorway, then back.

“I have done things.”

“Yes.”

“Bad things.”

“Yes.”

“I am not fixed.”

“I know.”

“I still think wrong sometimes.”

“That is why you have rules.”

“I still get angry.”

“That is why you call before anger moves.”

Silas swallowed.

“I still want to run sometimes.”

“That is why you tell us before you do.”

Silas stared at him.

“Why are you not tired of this?”

Thane answered honestly.

“Because I know what it is to be strong enough that the wrong move could ruin everything.”

Silas looked down.

Thane continued.

“I had Gabriel and Mark. Voss. Rusk. Hale. Crowe. People who told me no before I needed the no. You did not. You have them now.”

Silas wiped one eye with the back of his wrist and gave a small, broken laugh.

“Late.”

“Yes.”

“Still?”

“Yes.”

For a moment, they just stood there in the break room, beneath a fluorescent light, beside a vending machine full of chips and off-brand candy bars.

Then Thane asked, “Can I have a hug?”

Silas looked at him as if the question had once again opened a door he did not understand how to walk through.

“You are asking me?”

“Yes.”

“You subdued me in a hallway.”

“Yes.”

“You are asking for a hug.”

“Yes.”

Silas laughed, and it turned into a breath that almost broke.

Then he nodded.

“Yes.”

Thane stepped in carefully.

Silas met him halfway.

This hug was different from the first one at the loading dock.

Less desperate.

More chosen.

Silas still held tight, but not like a drowning man. More like someone testing whether ground could hold.

Thane wrapped both arms around him and held him there.

“You are not alone,” he said quietly.

Silas nodded against him.

“I am trying to believe that.”

“Good.”

They stood that way for several seconds.

Then Silas pulled back, wiping his face with the heel of one hand.

“You are going to make me useless at work.”

“No.”

“I have to stack doors.”

“You can stack doors with feelings.”

Silas stared at him.

Then laughed.

“Did Gabriel teach you that?”

“No.”

“He would have said it louder.”

“Probably.”

Thane smiled.

Then, because he could not help it, said, “Also, I still want to see the shift again.”

Silas blinked.

“What?”

“Not full. You are at work. Rules.”

Silas’s expression changed from emotional to suspiciously amused.

“You really do think it is cool.”

“Yes.”

“It makes you happy.”

Thane shrugged.

“Yes.”

Silas stared at him for half a second.

Then he looked toward the doorway.

“Alejandra can see us.”

“Then do not violate anything.”

Silas pulled his probation phone from the clear pouch and typed.

Thane looked at him.

Silas held up one finger.

“Partial controlled shift. Approved mentor present. Private work break area. Requesting forearm and hand only.”

He sent it to Hale.

Thane’s eyebrows lifted.

“You have a condition for that?”

“Control training,” Silas said. “Nora and Mark wrote it into the plan. Hale approved partial-shift practice with approved mentor, private setting, no public display, report stable.”

Thane’s smile grew.

Silas looked at him.

“You knew that?”

“No.”

“You are smiling like a child.”

“I am not.”

“You are.”

The phone buzzed.

Silas looked down.

Approved. Forearm/hand only. Stable report after. Do not damage workplace.

Silas showed Thane.

Thane read it.

His smile got worse.

Silas shook his head.

“You are ridiculous.”

“Yes.”

Silas held out his right arm.

Human skin.

Human hand.

Long fingers.

A scar across one knuckle from some old life he had not explained.

He took one breath.

Then another.

The change began below the elbow.

Slow.

Controlled.

Not violent.

Dark fur rose along his forearm. Muscle shifted under the skin, reshaping, thickening. His wrist broadened. Fingers lengthened. Nails darkened, curved, and extended into claws. The hand became larger, stronger, unmistakably wolf, while the rest of him remained human.

It was impossible.

It was beautiful.

It was controlled.

Silas flexed the clawed hand once, carefully, palm up.

“There.”

Thane stared.

Silas’s ears would have flattened if he had been fully shifted. Instead, his human face showed the embarrassment plainly.

“You look like Gabriel at pancakes.”

“It is awesome.”

Silas laughed.

“You are serious.”

“Yes.”

“It is just my hand.”

“No,” Thane said. “It is you choosing it.”

The laughter faded.

Silas looked at the shifted hand.

His voice lowered.

“I used to only do this when I needed to scare someone or open something.”

Thane reached out slowly and stopped short of touching.

“May I?”

Silas looked surprised.

Then nodded.

Thane touched the back of Silas’s shifted hand with one paw.

Fur.

Heat.

Power held still.

Silas watched him with tears gathering again, not falling yet.

Thane said, “This does not have to belong to fear.”

Silas swallowed.

“No.”

“Or crime.”

“No.”

“Or cages.”

Silas closed his clawed hand gently around Thane’s paw.

Not gripping hard.

Just holding.

“No,” he said.

For a second, neither moved.

Then Silas let go and reversed the shift.

It took effort.

More than Thane expected.

Fur receded. Claws shortened. Fingers returned. Muscle settled back into human shape.

Silas exhaled hard.

Then texted Hale.

Stable. No damage. Returned to human.

The response:

Good. Clock back in.

Silas laughed through a breath.

“She always knows how to ruin a moment.”

Thane smiled.

“She keeps you safe.”

“Yeah.”

Silas looked down at his human hand.

Then back at Thane.

“Thank you for wanting to see it.”

Thane’s smile softened.

“Thank you for showing me.”

Silas’s eyes shone.

Alejandra called from the warehouse.

“Creed. Doors are not going to stack themselves.”

Silas turned.

“Yes, ma’am.”

Thane stepped toward the doorway.

Silas said, “Thane.”

He turned.

Silas stood in the break room, human again, face still damp but steadier.

“I followed the rules today.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

“And showed off a little.”

Thane’s grin returned.

“Yes.”

“Permissible?”

Thane laughed softly.

“Permissible.”

Silas smiled.

Not big.

Not careless.

But real.

Then he went back to work.


When Thane walked out of Red Dirt ReBuild, he was smiling so hard Gabriel started laughing before Thane reached the Humvee.

“Oh no.”

Thane opened the driver’s door.

Gabriel leaned out the passenger window.

“Oh, look at you.”

Thane said nothing.

Mark looked up from the backseat.

“What happened?”

Thane climbed in.

“Nothing.”

Gabriel pointed at his face.

“That is not nothing. That is the face of a man who has just emotionally acquired a stray wolf.”

Thane started the engine.

Mark studied him carefully.

“Silas?”

“Yes.”

“Good?”

“Yes.”

Gabriel softened immediately.

“Hug?”

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel’s smile became gentler.

“You have a particular post-hug smugness.”

Thane put the Humvee in gear.

Mark said, “Partial shift?”

Thane glanced at him in the mirror.

Mark’s mouth moved faintly.

“I helped Nora write the control-practice framework.”

Gabriel turned fully toward Thane.

“He did the hand thing?”

Thane’s smile widened before he could stop it.

Gabriel clapped once.

“Oh, that is beautiful.”

Mark looked pleased in his own quiet way.

“Stable?”

“Yes.”

“No damage?”

“No.”

“Reported to Hale?”

“Yes.”

“Good.”

Gabriel settled back into his seat, still smiling.

“I want details.”

Thane pulled out of the lot.

“No.”

“What?”

“No.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“Thane.”

“I am keeping it.”

Gabriel’s expression changed.

He understood.

So did Mark.

The Humvee rolled onto South Larkspur under streetlights and summer darkness.

Gabriel did not ask again.

Mark returned to his tablet, but his ears stayed relaxed.

Thane drove.

His paws rested on the wheel.

His chest felt too full and exactly right.

A hand offered.

A hand changed.

A hand held still instead of breaking anything.

Some moments were too small for reports and too large for jokes.

So the pack let him have it.

For two whole minutes.

Then dispatch called.

“Night Shift, assist Grant at 7th and Maple. Caller reports a possum refusing to leave a porch swing.”

Gabriel slowly turned toward the windshield.

“A possum.”

Mark looked up.

“Refusing.”

Thane’s smile did not fade.

He keyed the mic.

“Night Shift responding.”

Gabriel leaned back.

“Fine. We will discuss the magic hand later.”

“No,” Thane said.

Gabriel smiled.

“Today?”

Thane glanced at him.

“Maybe.”

Mark looked at both of them.

“Possums can be defensive when cornered.”

Gabriel pointed forward.

“Onward to the porch swing hostage crisis.”

Thane drove toward 7th and Maple, still smiling.

Behind them, at Red Dirt ReBuild, Silas Creed stacked salvaged doors under warehouse lights with human hands, a probation monitor on his ankle, and one more memory that did not belong to fear.

Ahead of them, a possum waited.

Quiet counted.

So did this.

Chapter 90 — Quiet Counts

Tuesday evening arrived without drama.

That felt suspicious.

Gabriel said so at 17:41 while standing in the cabin kitchen with one paw in a bag of tortilla chips and the other holding a jar of salsa Mark had labeled MEDIUM — ACTUALLY MILD after conducting what Gabriel considered an unnecessary emotional audit of spice.

Mark looked up from the counter.

“Quiet is not suspicious.”

“It is absolutely suspicious.”

“Quiet is a lack of evidence.”

“Exactly. Evidence is hiding.”

Thane walked in from the hall, wearing dark duty pants and a plain black shirt, badge clipped at his belt, sidearm secured, and expression already prepared for the night to disagree with everyone.

“Evidence does not hide because the evening is quiet.”

Gabriel pointed a chip at him.

“That is what evidence wants you to think.”

Mark closed the salsa lid.

“You are not eating the entire jar before shift.”

“I was testing readiness.”

“Of the salsa?”

“Of myself.”

Thane poured water into a large bottle and looked toward the window. Outside, the woods were green-black in the fading light. Heat still held close to the ground, the kind of Oklahoma summer evening that made asphalt breathe and cicadas sound professionally committed.

Normal.

No active major case.

No emergency court hearing.

No concrete medical room.

No market victim encounter.

No chain.

No door.

Just shift.

Patrol assists.

Reports.

Maybe someone doing something foolish with fireworks despite it not being a holiday.

Maybe a welfare check.

Maybe a lost dog.

Maybe nothing.

Nothing had become more valuable than Thane used to understand.

Gabriel leaned against the counter.

“You think Silas is okay?”

Thane looked at him.

Mark did too.

Gabriel lifted one paw.

“I know. Approved channels. No smothering. No unauthorized emotional surveillance.”

Mark’s ears tipped forward.

“That phrase is disturbingly accurate.”

Gabriel ignored him.

“I just mean after Sunday.”

Thane picked up his phone and checked it.

Silas had texted earlier through the approved support contact thread.

Work was fine. Home now. Staying in tonight.

Thane had answered:

Good. Eat dinner.

Silas had replied:

Bossy.

Then, after two minutes:

I will.

That had made Gabriel laugh when Thane showed him.

Mark had said, “That is an appropriate level of compliance with mild resistance.”

Gabriel had called it “growth with seasoning.”

Now Thane looked at the message again.

“He is home.”

Gabriel’s expression softened.

“Good.”

Mark picked up his tablet.

“He has probation check-in tomorrow morning. Work Thursday. Therapy Friday.”

“Do you have his schedule memorized?” Gabriel asked.

“Yes.”

“Of course you do.”

“It is relevant.”

Gabriel took one last chip before Mark moved the bag out of reach.

Thane clipped his radio to his belt.

“Ready?”

Gabriel looked at Mark.

“Is the salsa detained?”

“Yes.”

“Then ready.”

They left for the station.


Silas Creed’s apartment was quiet at 18:07.

That was new enough to still feel like a physical object.

Silas stood in the kitchen, human for the moment, holding a skillet in one hand and staring at the stove as though the stove might judge him if he did dinner wrong.

The apartment smelled like onions, ground beef, cumin, coffee, and the faint cedar smell from the little carved wolf keychain sitting on the counter near his probation folder.

He had bought the keychain.

One dollar.

Purchased.

Permissible.

Mark had used that word, and Silas had found himself thinking it at odd times.

Permissible.

A strange, small word.

A word that meant there were things he could have without stealing them.

A word that meant boundaries did not always exist to humiliate him.

He stirred the meat.

The recipe was simple because Gabriel had texted it with commentary.

Taco rice bowl. Hard to ruin unless you are emotionally committed to failure.

Then Mark had immediately sent a second text.

Brown meat fully. Drain excess grease. Add seasoning and water per package. Simmer. Rice first or simultaneously. Refrigerate leftovers within two hours.

Then Thane had sent:

Eat.

Silas had stared at the three messages for several minutes.

Not because he did not understand them.

Because they sounded like a room full of people assuming he would still be there tomorrow.

He did not know what to do with that.

So he cooked.

The rice cooker clicked from cook to warm.

Silas looked at it.

Small victory.

He took a bowl from the cabinet.

His own cabinet.

The apartment was still too neat, but less like a staged unit now. A book lay on the coffee table. Work gloves sat beside the door. His boots were lined neatly beneath the coat hook. The probation folder had sticky notes, handwritten questions, and a printed calendar Mark had helped him build.

He had not shifted since Sunday.

Not because he was afraid.

Not exactly.

Because the last time had mattered.

IHOP had mattered.

The market had mattered more.

Priya Harlan laughing at a jam booth had stayed with him in a way the court had not.

In court, she had been a victim.

At the market, she had been a person buying strawberries.

That was worse.

Better.

Both.

He had wanted to go to her so badly his claws had almost flexed before he remembered he was not allowed to use need as permission.

Thane had said no.

Silas had stopped.

He still felt the stop in his bones.

He spooned rice into the bowl, added meat, cheese, salsa, and lettuce because Gabriel had declared lettuce “technically moral,” then carried it to the small table.

The apartment was quiet.

No television yet.

No music.

Just the air conditioner, distant traffic, and a fork against ceramic.

Silas ate.

It was good.

Not restaurant good.

Not pancake good.

But his.

He had made it.

He looked toward the door.

No chain followed him when he moved.

No one opened the door unless he opened it.

No one closed it unless he closed it.

The ankle monitor on his leg was real.

The sentence over his head was real.

The restrictions were real.

The guilt was real.

The room was real too.

Quiet counted.

He picked up his phone and typed carefully.

Dinner made. Eating.

He hesitated.

Then added:

Did not ruin it.

He sent it to the approved thread.

Gabriel responded first.

Historic.

Mark followed.

Refrigerate leftovers.

Thane answered last.

Good. Stay in.

Silas looked at the messages.

Then set the phone down.

He ate another bite.

“Bossy,” he said to the empty room.

But he smiled when he said it.


Night Shift handoff was thin enough that Rusk held it with two fingers.

“No murders,” he said. “No impossible burglaries. No werewolf detention infrastructure meetings. No vault doors. No chain discussions. No Kaden Face-related traffic obstructions.”

Gabriel looked offended.

“One quiet Kaden Face at the library is not an obstruction.”

Rusk looked at him.

“It delayed an elderly man returning indoors.”

“He was emotionally refreshed.”

Voss handed Mark the actual sheet.

“Patrol support only tonight unless something develops. Grant has a possible noise complaint near Oak Terrace. Darnell is checking on repeated reports of someone knocking on doors and running away near Prairie View. Patel is tied up with a minor collision at the grocery store lot. There is also a caller concerned about smoke in an alley behind three restaurants downtown.”

Thane nodded.

“We will start downtown.”

Voss watched him for a moment.

“You good?”

“Yes.”

That answer had become a measurement.

Tonight it felt true.

Voss seemed to agree.

“How is Silas?”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark looked at his tablet.

Thane said, “Home. Made dinner.”

Rusk raised an eyebrow.

“Did not steal it?”

Gabriel opened his mouth.

Voss said, “Owen.”

Rusk held up a hand.

“Too soon.”

“Yes,” Voss said.

Rusk nodded once.

“My apologies.”

Thane accepted it with a small nod.

Rusk’s voice lost the edge.

“Dinner is good.”

“Yes,” Thane said.

Voss closed her folder.

“Go help with smoke.”

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“Normal sentence.”

Rusk pointed at him.

“Keep it that way.”


The smoke behind the downtown restaurants came from a man named Lenny who owned the barbecue place and had decided that 19:02 on a Tuesday evening was the correct time to test a new portable smoker behind the alley.

It was not the correct time.

That conclusion had been reached by the owners of the Thai restaurant, the bakery, the bookstore across the alley, two upstairs tenants, and a woman walking a dachshund who objected strongly to hickory smoke on behalf of both herself and the dog.

Grant stood in the alley with a flashlight, speaking to Lenny, who wore an apron that said RUB ME THE RIGHT WAY.

Gabriel read the apron and stopped walking.

“No.”

Mark looked at the apron.

“No what?”

“No comment.”

“That is unusual.”

“I am growing.”

Thane approached Grant.

“Problem?”

Grant looked at the smoker, then at the alley, then at Lenny.

“Mostly timing, placement, ventilation, and Lenny believing ‘test smoke’ is a recognized zoning category.”

Lenny spread both hands.

“I was improving the menu.”

The Thai restaurant owner, Mrs. Suri, stood near her back door with arms folded.

“You were smoking my whole kitchen.”

“It was drifting.”

“It was invading.”

Gabriel nodded.

“That is a serious diplomatic distinction.”

Lenny looked at him.

“Whose side are you on?”

“The side of breathable air.”

Mark crouched near the smoker.

“It is too close to the building and under the overhang.”

Lenny frowned.

“It is portable.”

“That does not make the smoke portable away from the structure.”

Grant covered a smile.

Thane looked at Lenny.

“Turn it off.”

Lenny opened his mouth.

Thane waited.

Lenny closed his mouth.

“Yes, sir.”

The smoker was turned off and moved away from the overhang with Thane’s help, though Lenny insisted on carrying one side until he realized Thane could have moved the entire thing with one paw and decided supervision was also a contribution.

Mrs. Suri accepted Lenny’s apology after making him agree to bring her staff brisket samples “when properly produced and not when used as atmospheric warfare.”

Gabriel wrote that phrase down.

Grant looked at him.

“That is going in your report?”

“No,” Mark said immediately.

Gabriel looked wounded.

Thane stood back as the alley cleared.

The dachshund sniffed the air, sneezed once, and looked personally betrayed.

Gabriel crouched.

“I agree.”

The dog ignored him.

Grant looked at Thane.

“Quiet night?”

“Do not say that.”

“I already did.”

Gabriel stood.

“We are all doomed.”

Nothing happened.

The evening remained quiet.


Silas washed his dishes.

That took longer than expected because he had made more dinner than one person needed and because Mark’s voice existed in his head now.

Refrigerate leftovers.

So he found a container.

Then another.

Then he labeled one with masking tape and a marker because Mark had labeled things in the apartment once and now the habit had infected him.

He wrote:

TACO RICE — TUESDAY

He stared at it.

Then added:

EDIBLE

That made him laugh.

Alone, in his own kitchen, over leftovers.

He did not know when he had last laughed alone without it sounding bitter.

He put the containers in the refrigerator.

Then stood there with the door open too long, because the refrigerator held food he had not taken from anyone, and that still felt worth looking at.

He closed it.

The quiet returned.

He went to the living room and turned on the television.

News first.

That was a bad habit.

He knew it.

He still did it.

The local station showed weather, a school board item, road work, and a segment about summer produce.

No mention of him.

No footage from court.

No old photograph.

No phrase like “werewolf burglar.”

He changed the channel before the relief became too big.

A nature documentary appeared instead.

Wolves.

Of course.

Silas stared.

A gray wolf crossed snow under a low winter sky while a narrator talked about territory, family structures, and survival.

Silas almost changed it.

Then did not.

The wolf on-screen lowered its head and pushed through wind.

Not hiding.

Not performing.

Just existing in weather.

Silas leaned back on the sofa.

His body wanted to shift.

Not violently.

Not from rage.

From recognition.

The apartment was approved for voluntary controlled shifts. He knew that. Mark had explained it. Hale had confirmed it. If he shifted inside, remained calm, and reported any issue, it was allowed.

Permissible.

Silas took a breath.

Then another.

He stood and set the coffee table clear, because even allowed things needed space.

He texted Hale.

Requesting voluntary shift at home. Calm. Staying inside.

He waited.

The response came after thirty seconds.

Approved. Text when stable.

Silas stared at the word.

Approved.

Then set the phone on the table.

The shift came slowly.

Not like the interview room.

Not like anger splitting skin open.

Not like fear in a bathroom at thirteen.

This time, he let it arrive.

Hands first.

Knuckles changing.

Claws extending.

Spine lengthening.

Jaw, shoulders, fur, breath.

He gripped the back of the sofa once, then made himself release it before claws dug in.

Control.

The room grew smaller.

The ceiling lower.

The couch less suited to him.

He stood in the middle of the living room in wolf form, wearing loose pants and nothing else because he had not planned for clothing beyond the shift itself.

No one screamed.

No chain tightened.

No cuffs snapped.

No door broke.

The television wolf crossed the snow.

Silas looked at his own clawed hands.

Then texted Hale with careful taps.

Stable. No issue.

She answered:

Good. Remain inside.

He texted the pack thread after a moment.

Shifted at home. Calm. No issue.

Mark responded first.

Good. Move breakable items away from tail range.

Thane:

Good. Stay calm.

Silas looked at the messages in his clawed hand.

Then looked around the living room.

He moved one lamp away from the end table.

Mark was usually right about tail range.


At 21:14, Darnell’s door-knocker call became three middle-school boys, one guilty older sister, and a ring camera with better night vision than anyone involved had expected.

Prairie View was a tidy neighborhood of brick houses, small lawns, basketball hoops, and porch lights bright enough to make poor decisions more visible.

Darnell stood on the sidewalk with one arm folded and the other holding his phone.

Three boys stood in a line near a mailbox, looking as if they had discovered consequences too late.

A teenage girl stood slightly behind them with her arms crossed, trying to look uninvolved and failing because one of the boys kept looking at her for help.

Darnell looked relieved when Night Shift arrived.

“Backup for hardened criminals?”

Gabriel looked at the boys.

“They look twelve.”

“Thirteen,” the tallest said.

Gabriel nodded.

“My mistake. Hardened thirteen.”

The girl rolled her eyes.

Darnell held up his phone.

“Three houses reported door knocking and running. One provided video. One of the suspects tripped over a decorative goose.”

Mark looked at the boys.

“Which one?”

The shortest boy raised his hand.

The tall boy hissed, “Dude.”

Gabriel crouched slightly.

“Was the goose armed?”

“No.”

“Then the fall was avoidable.”

The girl finally spoke.

“It was just a joke.”

Darnell looked at her.

“You suggested it.”

“I did not.”

Darnell tapped his phone.

“You are visible on the ring camera pointing at the first house.”

She closed her eyes.

“Okay, I suggested it.”

Thane looked down the street.

Porch lights. Watching neighbors. Annoyed but not frightened. No damage. No threats.

A normal small thing that needed to stay small.

“Parents called?” Thane asked.

Darnell nodded.

“All on the way.”

Gabriel looked at the boys.

“Do you know why people hate this?”

The tall one shrugged.

“Because they are old?”

Mark said, “Because unexpected knocks at night can frighten people. Some may be elderly, ill, home alone, caring for small children, or worried about crime.”

The boys looked down.

Gabriel nodded toward Mark.

“What he said, but with fewer syllables: you scared people for fun.”

The shortest boy, goose victim, looked genuinely miserable.

“I am sorry.”

Darnell said, “You are going to apologize to the homeowners too. With your parents present. And if anyone asks, you were defeated by lawn poultry.”

Gabriel turned away.

Thane felt his own mouth twitch.

The parents arrived in stages.

Embarrassed.

Annoyed.

One mother marched her son back to the first house so fast he had to jog to keep up.

The girl’s father looked at her and said only, “Really?”

She said, “I know.”

“No phone for a week.”

“I know.”

Darnell closed the call with warnings, apologies, and no citations.

As they walked back toward the vehicles, Gabriel said, “Lawn poultry is going in my heart forever.”

Mark entered notes on his tablet.

“No property damage. Parents notified. Warnings issued. Apologies arranged.”

“Add goose.”

“No.”

“Mark.”

“No.”

Thane opened the Humvee door.

“Put decorative lawn obstacle.”

Mark paused.

Gabriel gasped softly.

Mark typed.

Gabriel put one paw over his chest.

“That is leadership.”

Thane climbed in.

“Do not make it weird.”

“Too late.”


Silas sat on the floor by the couch because the couch was more comfortable in human form than wolf form.

The documentary had moved on to ravens following wolves across snow.

He found that unfairly interesting.

He had never thought much about animals before.

Not real ones.

He had thought about wolves only as the thing people feared in him or the shape he used when fear stopped mattering.

The wolves on the screen were not metaphors.

They were hungry.

Cold.

Social.

Careful.

Alive.

One bumped another with its shoulder while walking.

Silas thought about Gabriel shoulder-bumping Thane in the kitchen at the cabin. Mark correcting them both. Thane pretending not to smile.

Pack was not romance.

Not in the storybook sense.

It was interruption.

Correction.

Food reminders.

Rides.

No.

Today.

Text Hale.

Refrigerate leftovers.

Do not stare at victims.

Do not break doors.

You are not alone.

Silas leaned his head back against the sofa cushion.

The apartment was quiet around him.

He did not hate it now.

That surprised him.

He picked up his phone and took a picture of the labeled leftover container in the refrigerator.

Then he hesitated.

Was that weird?

Probably.

He sent it anyway to the pack thread.

Gabriel replied first.

EDIBLE is a bold claim.

Mark:

Good labeling. Date included.

Thane:

Proud of you.

Silas stared at that last one.

Proud of you.

Two words he knew as a concept.

Not as weather.

Not as something that arrived on an ordinary Tuesday night while he sat in wolf form on an apartment floor beside a documentary about wolves and ravens.

He put the phone face down.

His eyes burned.

He did not cry this time.

Not because he was holding it back.

Because the feeling settled somewhere deeper than tears.

He stayed on the floor until the documentary ended.

Then he shifted back carefully, dressed, texted Hale again, and made a note on his calendar:

Quiet night. No issue.

After a moment, he added:

Good.


At 23:06, the gas station on Porter Avenue called because a raccoon had entered through the automatic doors and refused to leave.

Patel stood inside the convenience store near the chip aisle with a broom in one hand and a facial expression that suggested law enforcement had taken a strange turn.

The raccoon sat on top of a stack of bottled water.

It held a snack cake.

The clerk stood behind the counter.

“I did not sell that to him.”

Gabriel stared at the raccoon.

“No one is accusing you.”

The raccoon stared back.

Mark said, “Animal control?”

“On the way,” Patel said. “Ten minutes.”

The raccoon began opening the snack cake with tiny, horrifying competence.

Gabriel whispered, “He has hands.”

Mark said, “We all have hands.”

“Not like that.”

Thane stood near the automatic door to keep it open.

“Can we guide it out?”

Patel looked at the broom.

“I tried. He climbed the water.”

Gabriel crouched slowly.

“Sir.”

The raccoon paused.

Gabriel pointed toward the open door.

“You have committed snack theft. Leave peacefully.”

The raccoon resumed opening the cake.

Mark looked at Gabriel.

“That was unlikely to work.”

“It deserved due process.”

The clerk said, “Do I need to press charges?”

Patel looked at him.

“No.”

Animal Control arrived with a carrier, thick gloves, and the weary confidence of someone who had met raccoons before.

The raccoon was removed after finishing half the snack cake and dropping the rest on the bottled water.

The clerk insisted on writing it off as shrinkage.

Gabriel insisted the raccoon had a criminal mastermind face.

Mark noted “animal inside business, removed by Animal Control.”

Gabriel said, “Add snack cake recovered partially.”

Mark did not.

As they left the gas station, Patel looked at Thane.

“I miss normal calls.”

Thane looked back through the glass at the clerk cleaning frosting off the water bottles.

“This counted.”

Patel considered that.

“Barely.”


At 00:42, the call was a possible fight outside a closed laundromat.

It was not a fight.

It was two grown brothers arguing over who had left a load of wet towels in the washer since Sunday.

The answer was both of them, somehow.

Darnell mediated for three minutes before saying, “I am not issuing a legal finding on towel custody.”

Gabriel looked at the washers.

“Shared negligence.”

Mark nodded.

“Probable.”

The brothers glared at each other, then at the towels.

One said, “They smell weird now.”

Thane said, “Wash them again.”

Both brothers looked at him as if he had delivered ancient wisdom.

Darnell closed his notebook.

“Call resolved.”

Gabriel waited until they were back outside.

“Towel custody.”

Mark said, “No.”

“I did not ask anything.”

“You were about to.”

“I was going to ask whether we should start a civil division.”

“No.”

Thane looked up at the laundromat sign buzzing in the dark.

“Quiet night.”

Gabriel spun toward him.

“You said it.”

“I did.”

“Bold.”

Thane looked around.

No shouting.

No smoke.

No suspect vehicle.

No emergency.

Just a laundromat, wet towels, and a summer night.

“Quiet counts.”

Gabriel’s expression softened.

“Yeah.”

Mark checked the call list.

“No pending assists.”

Gabriel looked alarmed.

“Now you said it.”

Mark said, “It is a factual statement from dispatch.”

“That is worse.”

Nothing happened.

The night continued.


At 02:17, Silas woke on the couch in human form with the television off and the apartment dark except for the light above the stove.

For one disoriented second, he did not know where he was.

Then he did.

Apartment.

Home.

Probation.

Door locked from the inside.

No chain.

He sat up slowly.

His neck did not hurt.

That still surprised him sometimes.

He checked his phone.

No missed calls.

No probation alerts.

No emergency messages.

One text from Gabriel sent at 23:18:

Raccoon stole snack cake. Lawlessness everywhere.

A second from Mark:

Animal Control handled it.

A third from Thane:

Go to bed.

Silas looked at the time.

Then typed:

Woke up. Going to bed now.

Thane answered almost immediately.

Good.

Silas stared at the message.

Then got up, turned off the stove light, checked the lock once, and went to the bedroom.

He stopped at the doorway and looked back into the apartment.

Quiet.

His.

Temporary if he failed.

Real if he did not.

He went to bed.


Morning handoff came at 06:21 with a tray of gas station coffee, two remaining reports, and Gabriel explaining to Rusk why the raccoon had “felonious energy.”

Rusk listened for almost fifteen seconds.

Then said, “No.”

“You did not hear the evidence.”

“I heard enough.”

Voss took the shift summary from Mark.

“No major incidents?”

“No,” Mark said.

“Smoke complaint. Door-knock juveniles. Raccoon in gas station. Laundromat dispute. Two traffic assists. One alarm that was weather-related electrical fault. No arrests.”

Rusk looked at Thane.

“Quiet.”

Thane nodded.

“Quiet.”

Gabriel looked between them.

“I feel like we are tempting something retroactively.”

Voss smiled faintly.

“You survived the night.”

Grant came through the doorway behind them, off shift and holding a coffee.

“Did you hear about the raccoon?”

Gabriel turned.

“Yes. Finally, someone serious.”

Mark closed the tablet.

Thane stood.

His phone buzzed.

He looked down.

Silas.

Slept. No issue. Work at 10.

Thane showed Gabriel and Mark.

Gabriel’s expression warmed.

Mark nodded once.

“Good.”

Thane typed back:

Good. Follow the rules today.

The reply came almost immediately.

Today.

Thane looked at the word.

One right choice.

Then another.

Then another.

Voss noticed his expression.

“Silas?”

“Yes.”

“Good?”

Thane looked up.

“Yes.”

Rusk took a sip of coffee.

“That sounded true.”

“It was.”

Gabriel stretched and yawned.

“Can we go home before the raccoon escalates?”

Mark said, “Animal Control has custody.”

“For now.”

Thane headed for the garage.

The Humvee waited in the early light.

No new case.

No major call.

Just a normal week evening that had become morning, full of small problems solved well enough and one man in an apartment learning that quiet did not have to mean abandoned.

Thane climbed into the driver’s seat.

Gabriel got in beside him.

Mark settled into the back.

As the garage door opened, Gabriel looked out at the pale sky.

“Quiet counts,” he said.

Thane started the engine.

“Yes.”

Mark buckled in.

“Documented.”

Gabriel smiled.

“That almost makes it official.”

Thane drove them home.

Chapter 89 — The Hardest No

Sunday morning began with Gabriel announcing that Silas required public wolf enrichment.

Mark looked up from the kitchen island.

“That is not an approved probation category.”

“It should be.”

“It is not.”

Gabriel leaned both paws on the counter and looked toward Thane, who was pouring coffee with the quiet focus of someone trying to avoid being recruited too early into whatever Gabriel had already emotionally built.

“Tell him it should be.”

Thane took a drink of coffee.

“It sounds like something that would make Supervisor Hale sigh.”

Gabriel pointed at him.

“See? Recognition. That is basically approval.”

Mark returned his attention to the tablet in front of him.

“It is not.”

The cabin was quiet in the softer Sunday way. Saturday had left pancake containers in the trash, a lingering smell of coffee in the kitchen, and a strange warmth none of them had fully named.

Silas had gone to IHOP as a wolf.

He had walked in with them.

He had sat at the table.

He had eaten chocolate-chip pancakes with the expression of a man discovering that joy could arrive covered in syrup.

He had come home, texted probation, and stayed inside.

No issue.

No incident.

No damaged doors.

No panic.

No cage.

It had been a good day.

Good days, Mark had reminded everyone later, did not automatically authorize bigger days.

Gabriel disagreed in spirit, if not in law.

“Farmers market,” Gabriel said.

Mark did not look up.

“Public. Crowded. Outdoor. Variable stimuli. Children. Food. Dogs. Possibly victims.”

Gabriel’s ears lowered a fraction.

“Possibly victims” changed the shape of the room.

Thane set down his coffee.

Mark looked up then.

“I am not saying no. I am saying it is materially different from IHOP.”

Gabriel nodded slowly.

“Yeah.”

The Cross Timber Sunday Market ran from late morning into early afternoon in the public square near the old courthouse. Farmers, bakers, food trucks, crafts, honey, flowers, local produce, kettle corn, homemade salsa, kids with face paint, retirees with tote bags, and the kind of ordinary civic chaos Gabriel considered proof that people were fundamentally strange and worth saving.

Night Shift had gone before.

They were known there.

Children waved.

Vendors fed them samples.

Someone always asked Thane for the quiet Kaden Face.

Mark always found one booth where the labels were almost correct and suffered visibly.

The market was normal.

That was what made it good.

That was also what made it risky.

Thane leaned against the counter.

“Probation decides.”

Mark nodded.

“Yes.”

Gabriel held up one paw.

“And if probation says yes, we do it carefully.”

Mark studied him.

“That sounded sincere.”

“It was.”

“Good.”

Gabriel looked toward the windows.

“I do not want to make it harder for him.”

“No,” Thane said.

“I just…” Gabriel stopped, then shrugged with less humor than usual. “He looked different after IHOP.”

Thane nodded.

“He did.”

“Like he found a room in himself that did not have a lock on it.”

Mark’s expression softened slightly.

“That is poetic.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“I contain multitudes.”

“You contain syrup.”

“Also yes.”

Thane picked up his phone.

Supervisor Hale answered with the tone of someone who had expected trouble and found it arriving on schedule.

“Detective.”

“Supervisor.”

“What kind of breakfast-related legal adventure are you proposing today?”

Gabriel covered his mouth with both paws.

Mark closed his eyes.

Thane looked toward the ceiling for a second.

“Sunday market. Cross Timber public square. Approved mentor outing. Pick up from apartment, market walk, return home. No cabin visit. No unscheduled stops.”

There was a pause.

“Is he requesting this?”

“No. We have not asked him yet.”

“So this is your idea.”

“Yes.”

“I am shocked by the complete absence of shock.”

Thane waited.

Hale continued.

“Purpose?”

“Social integration. Normal public setting. Practice staying calm in a busier outdoor environment. Continued controlled wolf-form presence if approved.”

“Wolf form again?”

“Yes.”

“Is this because you think the transformation is cool?”

Gabriel lost the fight and made a sound.

Mark turned away.

Thane’s ears warmed.

“Partly.”

Hale was silent.

Then she said, “I appreciate the honesty more than the judgment.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“But the actual supervision purpose?”

“Silas needs to learn that being seen as wolf does not mean danger. He also needs practice following public rules while seen. The market is familiar to us, open-air, easy to leave, and low barrier.”

“That was better.”

“Thank you.”

“Conditions,” Hale said.

Thane put the phone on speaker and set it on the counter.

Gabriel immediately straightened.

Mark picked up a pen.

Hale said, “One: two-hour outing maximum. Apartment to market and back. No additional stops.”

“Yes.”

“Two: voluntary shift inside his apartment before departure only if calm and controlled. If he seems unstable, no outing.”

“Yes.”

“Three: he texts before leaving, upon arrival, upon departure, and upon return.”

“Yes.”

“Four: no photos of him without prior approval.”

“Yes.”

“Five: no discussion of the case.”

“Yes.”

“Six: no contact with victims. That includes intentional approach, apology, explanation, note-passing, lingering, staring, or using you three as emotional delivery vehicles.”

The room went very still.

Thane said, “Understood.”

Hale continued.

“If a victim is present, he maintains distance. If distance cannot be maintained, he leaves. If he sees a victim and becomes distressed, he leaves. If he wants to apologize, he does not. If he thinks his apology is more important than their right not to receive it, the outing ends and we have a different conversation.”

Mark wrote quickly.

Gabriel’s expression had gone serious.

Thane said, “Understood.”

“Seven: you three are responsible for immediate support and de-escalation. If there is any public attention beyond casual recognition, you redirect.”

“Yes.”

“Eight: dogs.”

Gabriel blinked.

“Dogs?”

Hale heard him.

“Yes, Detective Gabriel. Dogs. Farmers markets have dogs. If a dog reacts badly to four werewolves, you leave the dog alone. You do not turn it into a public relations event.”

Gabriel looked offended.

“I would never.”

Mark looked at him.

Gabriel lowered his ears.

“I probably would not.”

Hale said, “Nine: no produce competitions.”

Thane frowned.

“Produce competitions?”

“You will understand if it happens.”

Mark wrote that down too.

Gabriel whispered, “I want to understand now.”

Hale continued.

“Ten: if this goes well, it goes well. It does not authorize anything else automatically.”

“Yes.”

“Approved.”

“Thank you.”

“Do not ruin squash season.”

The call ended.

Gabriel stared at the phone.

“What does she know about squash season?”

Mark looked at his notes.

“I am more concerned that there was a reason to specify produce competitions.”

Thane picked up his coffee.

“Call Silas.”

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“Public wolf enrichment, phase two.”

Mark looked at him.

“Do not call it that in front of Hale.”

“I value my life.”


Silas opened the apartment door in human form and looked immediately suspicious.

That was becoming progress.

Early suspicion meant he expected something strange from them instead of something bad.

He stood barefoot on the inside threshold wearing jeans and a black T-shirt, probation phone clipped in its pouch, hair still damp from a shower. His apartment smelled faintly of coffee, laundry, and the breakfast he had apparently cooked instead of skipping.

That was progress too.

Gabriel noticed the pan drying beside the sink and looked pleased.

“You ate.”

Silas looked at him.

“Good morning to you too.”

“That was good morning.”

“It was an inspection.”

“Emotional inspection.”

Mark stepped inside after Thane.

“Supervisor Hale approved a mentor outing.”

Silas went very still.

His eyes went to Thane.

“Another one?”

“Yes.”

“Where?”

“Sunday market,” Thane said.

Silas looked past them, as if the public square might be visible from his apartment doorway.

“The farmers market?”

“Yes.”

“That is more people.”

“Yes.”

“Children.”

“Probably.”

“Dogs.”

“Supervisor Hale mentioned dogs,” Gabriel said.

Silas stared.

“She mentioned dogs?”

“With legal weight,” Mark said.

Silas looked at the floor for a second.

Then back up.

“Do I have to go?”

“No,” Thane said.

The answer came fast.

Silas blinked.

Thane continued.

“You never have to do an outing because we asked. You can say no.”

Silas looked at Gabriel.

Gabriel nodded.

“Breakfast adventures are voluntary.”

Mark added, “Court conditions are not. Mentor outings are.”

Silas absorbed that.

He walked farther into the room, leaving the door open behind them. The apartment still looked too orderly, but not untouched anymore. A book sat on the small table, face down. A coffee mug rested near the couch. The folder of probation conditions was still on the counter, but it had a pencil beside it and several sticky notes visible from across the room.

Silas stood near the kitchen.

“If I go, wolf form?”

Thane nodded.

“If you want. Hale approved it.”

Silas looked at him.

“You want.”

“Yes.”

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“Because it is cool as hell.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel looked delighted.

Mark said, “Also because the approved therapeutic and social goal is identity integration in a controlled environment.”

Silas looked at Mark.

“That sounds less fun.”

“It is more legally durable.”

Gabriel nodded.

“Mark is where fun goes to get notarized.”

Silas laughed softly, then looked toward the bedroom.

“I want to.”

Thane said nothing.

Silas looked back.

“I am scared.”

“That is okay.”

“I do not want to be.”

“That is okay too.”

Silas rubbed one hand over his jaw.

“What if people stare?”

“They will,” Gabriel said.

Silas gave him a look.

Gabriel shrugged.

“They stare at us. Sometimes because they are curious. Sometimes because Thane is enormous. Sometimes because Mark looks like he will correct their filing system.”

Mark said, “Only if it is wrong.”

Gabriel gestured to him.

“See?”

Silas’s shoulders eased by a fraction.

Thane stepped closer.

“If someone stares, you keep walking. If someone asks a question, we handle it. If you get overwhelmed, we leave. If you see someone from the case, you do not approach. We leave that area.”

Silas’s face changed.

“The victims?”

“Could happen.”

He looked toward the window.

“I thought about that last night.”

Thane waited.

Silas’s voice dropped.

“What if I see them?”

“You obey the no-contact order.”

“I know.”

“No apology.”

Silas’s jaw tightened.

“I know.”

“No explanations.”

“I know.”

“No proving you are different.”

That one hit.

Silas looked down.

Thane’s voice softened.

“Respecting them may mean leaving them alone.”

Silas nodded once.

It looked like it hurt.

Good, Thane thought.

Some pain taught without breaking.

Silas went into the bedroom with Mark’s duffel bag.

The transformation came easier this time.

Still effort.

Still strange.

But less like a locked part of him forcing its way out.

More like something he was choosing to open.

When he came out in wolf form, wearing the modified pants and sleeveless shirt Mark had adjusted after IHOP, he looked steadier.

Not comfortable.

But less surprised by his own size.

His dark fur lay smoother. His ears were high enough to show attention rather than defensive shame. His amber eyes found Thane first.

Thane smiled.

“Still cool.”

Silas rolled his eyes.

Gabriel gasped.

“A wolf-form eye roll. Historic.”

Mark checked the shoulder seam.

“Fit is improved.”

Silas looked at him.

“Thank you.”

Mark nodded.

“You are welcome.”

Silas texted Hale with careful claw taps.

Leaving apartment with approved mentors for Sunday market.

The reply came:

Remember the rules. Especially dogs.

Silas stared.

Gabriel leaned in.

“She is very concerned about dogs.”

Silas looked at him.

“Should I be?”

“No.”

Mark said, “Possibly.”

Thane opened the door.

“Come on.”


The Sunday market filled three sides of the old courthouse square and spilled into the first block of Maple Street.

White canopies lined the sidewalks. Chalk signs leaned against crates of tomatoes, peppers, peaches, onions, zucchini, herbs, eggs, bread, honey, soap, candles, flowers, and crafts. A bluegrass trio played beneath the courthouse steps. Food trucks smoked and sizzled at the far end. Children ran with paper cups of lemonade while parents pretended not to lose track of them.

Dogs were everywhere.

Silas noticed that first.

One golden retriever near the flower booth froze with a sunflower stem in its mouth and stared.

Silas froze back.

Gabriel leaned toward him.

“Do not get into a staring contest with the flower thief.”

The dog’s owner turned, saw the four wolves, and immediately tugged the sunflower from the dog’s mouth.

“Sorry.”

Gabriel smiled.

“We respect a bold floral crime.”

The owner laughed nervously, then relaxed when no one else seemed concerned.

The dog wagged once.

Silas exhaled.

Mark looked at him.

“Dog event successful.”

Silas looked at him.

“That was an event?”

“For documentation, yes.”

Thane led them toward the first row of stalls.

People noticed.

Of course they did.

But the market had already known three wolves.

Four took longer, but not as long as Silas seemed to expect.

Some people stared.

Some waved.

A vendor selling peaches called out, “Morning, Night Shift.”

Gabriel lifted a paw.

“Morning.”

The vendor’s eyes moved to Silas.

“New friend?”

Thane answered before Silas had to.

“Yes.”

“Good enough. Peach sample?”

Gabriel immediately turned.

“Public fruit diplomacy.”

Mark said, “We have not even been here five minutes.”

“That is prime sample time.”

Thane looked at Silas.

“You want one?”

Silas looked at the peach slices in a small paper cup.

The vendor held it out without hesitation.

Silas took one carefully.

“Thank you.”

The vendor smiled.

“You’re welcome.”

Silas ate it.

His ears lifted.

Gabriel saw it.

“Peach approval.”

Silas looked at him.

“It is good.”

The vendor grinned.

“Best in the county.”

Mark leaned closer to the crate label.

“From Texas.”

The vendor looked at him.

“Best available in the county.”

Gabriel pulled Mark gently by the shoulder.

“Do not interrogate the peaches.”

Silas laughed.

Small but real.

They walked.

Mark bought honey after asking the beekeeper eight questions about floral source, filtration, heating, and whether the label’s “raw” claim reflected actual processing method.

Gabriel bought a bag of cinnamon pecans, a blueberry scone, and something called cowboy brittle from a man who admitted he had invented the name because “regular brittle sounded lonely.”

Thane bought tomatoes because an older woman told him he looked like someone who understood tomatoes.

Silas carried nothing at first.

Then a woodworker offered him a small carved wolf keychain.

Silas stared at it.

Thane watched carefully.

The woodworker, a man with a gray beard and cedar dust on his shirt, said, “No charge. Made too many.”

Silas’s shoulders tightened.

“No.”

The man blinked.

Gabriel’s expression shifted.

Mark watched Silas’s hands.

Silas swallowed.

“I mean… thank you. But I cannot take gifts like that.”

The man looked confused.

Thane stepped in gently.

“He is on court supervision. Gifts get complicated.”

The woodworker’s face cleared.

“Oh. Fair enough.” He thought for a second. “Dollar?”

Silas looked at Thane.

Mark said, “A small fair-market purchase is permissible if not connected to the case or restricted activity.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“You brought legal energy to a keychain.”

“It was needed.”

Silas pulled a folded bill from his pocket with careful claws.

“One dollar.”

The woodworker accepted it solemnly and handed over the keychain.

“Then you bought it.”

Silas held the little carved wolf in his palm.

It was simple.

Dark-stained cedar. Pointed ears. Tail curve. No detail beyond shape.

He looked like he did not know where to put it.

Gabriel pointed to the probation phone pouch.

“Not there. Hale will think it is a device.”

Silas huffed a laugh and slipped it into his pocket.

“Purchased,” Mark said.

Silas nodded.

“Purchased.”

They kept walking.

For nearly forty minutes, the outing went well.

Not perfect.

Silas startled once when a child ran too close behind him.

He stepped sideways, not back, and kept his hands open.

Good.

A woman asked whether he was “with the police wolves,” and Gabriel answered, “With us today,” then redirected her toward the salsa booth.

Good.

A terrier barked aggressively from beneath a folding table. Silas looked at it, then looked away.

Very good.

Thane felt himself begin to relax.

That was usually when the city taught him not to.

They had reached the east side of the square near the flower stalls and the artisan bread booth when Silas stopped so suddenly that Gabriel almost bumped into him.

Thane knew before he looked.

The scent hit first.

Priya Harlan.

Not close.

Across the aisle, near a booth selling jars of jam.

She wore a green dress and sunglasses pushed on top of her head. Her hair was tied back. She held a canvas bag in one hand and a carton of strawberries in the other.

She had not seen them.

Not yet.

Silas had seen her.

His whole body changed.

Not toward violence.

Toward grief.

His ears flattened. His shoulders dropped. His mouth opened slightly, then closed.

One step.

Only one.

But it was toward her.

Thane said, “No.”

The word was quiet.

It did not need to be loud.

Silas stopped.

Gabriel’s face went still.

Mark immediately looked at the distance, sightlines, movement, exits.

Silas did not look away from Priya.

“I need to tell her I am sorry.”

Thane moved beside him, blocking the line of movement without blocking his view.

“No.”

Silas’s claws flexed once.

“I hurt her.”

“Yes.”

“She is right there.”

“Yes.”

“I need—”

“No.”

This time the word cut harder.

Silas looked at him then.

Pain, anger, shame, pleading.

All of it.

Thane held steady.

“You already spoke in court.”

“That was not enough.”

“It may never be enough.”

Silas flinched.

Gabriel stepped in on Silas’s other side.

“Your apology cannot require her participation.”

Silas looked at him.

Gabriel’s voice was gentle, but there was steel under it.

“You do not get to heal yourself by surprising her with your guilt.”

The words landed.

Hard.

Silas looked back toward Priya.

She was laughing at something the jam vendor said.

It was a small laugh.

Ordinary.

Unguarded.

For that moment, she was not in court. Not holding a tissue. Not talking about the bronze bird.

She was buying jam at the market.

Silas whispered, “I took that from her.”

Mark said, “Then do not take this too.”

Silas closed his eyes.

His breathing changed.

Thane listened.

Not a shift.

Not yet.

But emotion had weight in him. Silas had said anger made the change harder to stop. Shame might do the same.

Thane lowered his voice.

“You are going to text Hale.”

Silas opened his eyes.

“What?”

“You saw a victim. You maintained distance. You are leaving this area voluntarily.”

Silas stared at him.

Mark said, “That is the correct action.”

Silas looked down at his hands.

“I can report it?”

“Yes,” Thane said.

“I will not be punished?”

“Not for following the rule.”

Silas looked toward Priya one last time.

She still had not seen him.

Or if she had, she had chosen not to show it.

That choice belonged to her.

Silas took out his phone.

His claws shook slightly as he typed.

Saw Priya Harlan at market. Did not approach. Leaving area with mentors.

He showed it to Thane before sending.

Thane nodded.

Silas sent it.

Hale’s response came within seconds.

Correct. Maintain distance. Return home if distressed.

Silas stared at the word.

Correct.

His breath shook once.

Gabriel touched his shoulder lightly.

“You did the right thing.”

Silas’s voice was rough.

“It feels terrible.”

Thane looked at Priya across the aisle.

“Good.”

Silas looked at him sharply.

Thane met his eyes.

“That feeling is the part of you that knows it mattered.”

Silas’s anger collapsed before it could rise.

He looked down.

Mark said, “We are moving west.”

Silas nodded.

They turned away.

Not dramatically.

Not as if fleeing.

Just three wolves guiding a fourth away from a woman who deserved to buy jam without becoming someone else’s lesson.

Silas did not look back.

That mattered more than almost anything else he had done that morning.

They made it half a block before the wind changed.

A gust rolled through the square hard enough to snap canopy fabric and send napkins skittering across the pavement.

Someone shouted near the west corner.

Thane turned.

A vendor’s canopy had come loose from one side. The wind caught the white fabric and lifted it like a sail. The metal frame twisted. A woman beneath it grabbed one leg and lost her footing as a display of glass jars tipped toward the sidewalk.

Silas moved on instinct.

Then stopped.

He looked at Thane.

Not long.

Half a second.

Permission.

Thane pointed.

“Help.”

Silas ran.

Controlled.

Fast but not frightening.

Thane, Gabriel, and Mark followed.

Silas reached the canopy first and caught the lifted frame before it could flip into the walkway. His claws closed around the metal pole, and for one second the wind pulled hard enough that a normal man would have gone with it.

Silas held.

Not showing off.

Not grinning.

Not proving strength.

Holding.

Gabriel grabbed another leg and steadied it. Mark moved the glass jars away from the table edge. Thane took the windward pole and drove it down until the vendor could get both feet under her.

“Everyone clear?” Thane asked.

A teenager ducked out from beneath the table.

“Yeah.”

The vendor, a woman in a wide-brim hat, looked from Silas to Thane to the canopy.

“Oh my God. Thank you.”

Silas still held the pole.

His eyes flicked toward Thane.

Thane nodded.

“Stay until it is weighted.”

Silas stayed.

Several people rushed over with sandbags and water jugs. The canopy legs were secured. The display was righted. Only two jars had broken, both already safely away from foot traffic.

The vendor looked at Silas.

“You saved me a real mess.”

Silas loosened his grip on the pole.

“I was told to help.”

She smiled.

“Well, you helped. Thanks, man.”

Thanks, man.

Two ordinary words.

Silas looked like they had hit him harder than the chain.

“You are welcome,” he said carefully.

Gabriel leaned toward Thane.

“Good wolf enrichment.”

Mark said, “Do not call it that.”

“I will call it that privately.”

“No.”

The vendor began reorganizing her table.

Thane stepped back, giving room.

Silas followed.

For a moment, people looked at him.

Not with fear.

Not exactly.

With the kind of quick public gratitude people gave someone who caught a falling thing before it broke.

Then they went back to the market.

The bluegrass trio resumed.

Someone laughed near the kettle corn booth.

A child chased a napkin.

The world kept going.

Silas stood very still in the middle of it.

Gabriel’s voice softened.

“You okay?”

Silas blinked.

“No.”

Thane looked at him.

Silas took a breath.

“But not bad no.”

Mark nodded.

“That is useful differentiation.”

Silas let out a shaky laugh.

“Of course you would think so.”

His phone buzzed.

Hale.

If distressed, return home. Your call.

Silas showed it to Thane.

Thane said, “Your call.”

Silas looked down the market.

Then toward the aisle where Priya had been.

Then toward the canopy he had just helped save.

“I want to go home.”

“Okay,” Thane said.

Silas’s shoulders eased.

Not because home was easier.

Because no one argued.

Gabriel said, “We can go.”

Mark checked the time.

“Within approved window.”

Silas typed.

Returning home.

Hale replied:

Good decision. Text on arrival.

Silas read that twice.

Then followed them back toward the Humvee.

They did not buy more food.

They did not stop for kettle corn.

Gabriel did not complain.

That was how Thane knew he understood.

On the way out, the peach vendor lifted a hand.

“Heading out?”

Gabriel smiled.

“Market victory. Strategic retreat.”

The vendor nodded like that made sense.

Maybe at the Sunday market, it did.


The ride back to Silas’s apartment was quiet.

Silas sat in the back beside Mark, still in wolf form, hands folded carefully in his lap.

His claws were clean except for a faint smear of dust from the canopy pole.

He looked out the window.

Thane watched him in the mirror when traffic allowed.

Gabriel sat in the passenger seat, coffee cup untouched in the holder.

At last, Silas said, “I wanted to go to her.”

Mark answered first.

“Yes.”

Silas looked at him.

“Not ‘but’?”

“No.”

Gabriel turned slightly.

“Wanting is allowed. Doing is where the law lives.”

Silas looked down.

“I hated you for saying no.”

Thane nodded.

“I know.”

“I hated that I stopped.”

“That is allowed too.”

Silas’s jaw tightened.

“I do not like how much of this is allowed.”

Gabriel’s smile was sad.

“Feelings are rude that way.”

Silas looked back out the window.

“She was laughing.”

No one answered.

“She looked…” He stopped.

“Normal,” Thane said.

Silas closed his eyes.

“Yes.”

Thane turned into the apartment complex.

“That is what you protected today.”

Silas opened his eyes.

Thane parked in Silas’s assigned space but did not turn off the engine immediately.

Silas looked at him through the mirror.

“I protected something?”

“Yes.”

“I did nothing.”

“You left her alone.”

Silas looked away.

“That should be the minimum.”

“It is,” Mark said.

Silas flinched slightly.

Mark continued, gentler.

“Today the minimum was hard. You did it anyway.”

Gabriel nodded.

“That counts.”

Silas was quiet for a long time.

Then he said, “When I saw her, I wanted to fix it.”

Thane turned off the engine.

“You did.”

Silas looked at him.

“By walking away?”

“By not making her carry you today.”

Silas’s face twisted.

He looked down fast.

Gabriel opened his door.

“Come on.”

They walked him to the apartment.

Silas texted Hale from the doorway.

Returned home. No contact.

The answer came:

Acknowledged. Good work. Stay home for remainder unless emergency.

Silas read it.

Then stepped inside.

The apartment was cool and quiet.

No crowd.

No music.

No dogs.

No Priya Harlan laughing over jam.

Silas stood in the living room, still wolf, still wearing Mark’s modified clothes, and looked suddenly exhausted.

Thane entered but stayed near the door.

Gabriel leaned against the wall.

Mark stood by the counter.

Silas said, “I thought being good would feel cleaner.”

Thane nodded.

“It usually does not.”

Silas looked at him.

“You know that?”

“Yes.”

“How?”

Thane thought about all the times he had not moved.

All the times strength had waited while words worked.

All the times restraint had felt like swallowing fire and calling it law.

“Because sometimes the right choice feels like losing something you wanted.”

Silas sat slowly on the sofa.

It creaked but held.

“I wanted her to know I was sorry.”

Gabriel said, “She may know.”

Silas looked at him.

Gabriel continued.

“She may not care. She may never care. That belongs to her.”

Silas looked down.

“Yeah.”

Mark stepped forward.

“There may be lawful ways later through counsel or restorative process if victims request it. Not initiated by you. Not today.”

Silas nodded.

“Not today.”

Thane crouched in front of him.

Silas looked up.

The amber eyes were wet, but steady.

Thane said, “This is what choosing right looks like.”

Silas laughed once, bitter and tired.

“Sitting on a couch wanting to crawl out of my skin?”

“Sometimes.”

“That is terrible.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel said, “But the canopy thing was good.”

Silas looked at him.

“That woman said thanks.”

“She did.”

“She did not know.”

“No.”

“She just said thanks.”

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“That can happen.”

Silas pressed his paws together, claws crossing carefully.

“I liked that.”

“Good,” Thane said.

“I did not do it so people would see.”

“I know.”

“I looked at you first.”

“Yes.”

“That felt stupid.”

“It was smart.”

Silas’s ears shifted.

“Smart.”

“You asked before using strength in public.”

Mark nodded.

“Correct action.”

Silas looked from Mark to Gabriel to Thane.

Something settled in him.

Not peace.

Not yet.

A shape of understanding.

“Pack is not just helping each other,” Silas said slowly.

Thane waited.

Silas looked at the floor.

“It is being stopped before you make yourself worse.”

Gabriel’s expression softened.

“Yeah.”

Mark said, “That is a significant part of it.”

Silas looked at Thane.

“You said no.”

“Yes.”

“And I stopped.”

“Yes.”

Silas swallowed.

“That was harder than the hallway.”

Thane believed him.

He reached out slowly.

Silas saw the movement and leaned forward enough to accept it.

Thane put one paw on his shoulder.

Not a hug.

Not this time.

Steady.

“You did good today.”

Silas closed his eyes.

The words landed.

He breathed through them.

Then nodded.

“Today.”

“Today,” Thane said.

Gabriel pushed away from the wall.

“Stay home. Eat something. Do not spiral.”

Silas opened his eyes.

“Do not spiral?”

“Technical term.”

Mark said, “It is not.”

Gabriel ignored him.

“If you need help, use the list. Probation first if required. Then Nora. Then us if approved. No dramatic brooding so intense it damages furniture.”

Silas looked around the apartment.

“I will try not to damage furniture emotionally.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Good.”

Mark set a small paper bag on the counter.

Silas looked at it.

“What is that?”

“Honey sticks,” Mark said. “Purchased at market. Permissible. Not a gift of significant value.”

Silas stared at him.

Gabriel whispered, “He likes you.”

Mark said, “It is honey.”

Silas stood and walked to the counter.

He picked up the bag carefully.

“Thank you.”

“You paid for your keychain,” Mark said. “This is communal leftover from the outing.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“Legal honey.”

Thane smiled faintly.

Silas actually laughed.

It was tired.

But it was real.

They left him there with the honey sticks, the carved wolf keychain in his pocket, and one very hard no behind him.

At the door, Silas said, “Thane.”

Thane turned.

Silas stood in the doorway, wolf form still steady.

“I did not look back.”

Thane nodded.

“I know.”

“I wanted to.”

“I know.”

Silas’s throat moved.

“Good.”

Thane held his gaze.

“Yes.”

Silas closed the door.

The lock turned from the inside.

Gabriel stood on the walkway for a moment, looking at the door.

“That was rough.”

Mark nodded.

“Yes.”

Thane looked toward the apartment window.

A shadow moved behind the blinds.

Silas pacing, maybe.

Or standing.

Or learning how to stay inside a feeling without breaking a wall.

Gabriel’s voice was quiet.

“Still think he can do it?”

Thane thought about Priya laughing at the jam booth.

Silas stopping at one word.

The text to Hale.

The canopy pole in his hands.

Thanks, man.

“I think he did it today.”

Mark nodded.

“Today is evidence.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“That is almost comforting.”

“It was intended to be.”

“Growth.”

Thane walked toward the Humvee.

The Sunday market had not fixed Silas.

It had not forgiven him.

It had not turned guilt into redemption or grief into clean purpose.

It had done something harder.

It had given him a chance to want the wrong thing and choose not to take it.

One right choice.

Then another.

Then another.

Maybe that was all a door really was.

Not one grand opening.

Just a place where the wall stopped for a moment and someone decided not to break through.

They climbed into the Humvee.

Gabriel buckled in and stared out the windshield.

“Next outing should be less emotionally loaded.”

Mark said, “All outings may be emotionally loaded.”

“Mini golf?”

“No.”

“Emotionally safe mini golf.”

“Structurally risky.”

“Farmers market had dogs, victims, wind, and legal honey. Mini golf has tiny windmills.”

Thane started the engine.

“Not today.”

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“Today.”

Mark looked out the window toward Silas’s apartment.

“Today was enough.”

Thane pulled out of the parking space.

“Yes,” he said.

And drove them home.

Chapter 88 — Four at the Table

Saturday morning began with Gabriel standing in the great room, holding a modified sleeveless shirt in both paws, and accusing the laundry of attempted murder.

Mark looked up from the kitchen island.

“That shirt is intact.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“It used to fit.”

“It still fits.”

“It fits aggressively.”

“That is not a category.”

Thane walked in from the hall wearing loose pants, an old T-shirt, and the resigned expression of someone who knew Saturday had already started without his permission. He headed for the coffee pot.

“If it has not torn, it fits.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“That is exactly the kind of leadership that destroys morale.”

Mark looked back down at the kitchen island.

“The shirt is not destroying morale.”

“No,” Gabriel said. “The emotional climate around the shirt is destroying morale.”

Thane poured coffee.

“It is too early for shirt philosophy.”

Thane took a drink of coffee and looked toward the windows.

The morning outside was bright, warm, and green. Sunlight came through the trees in long stripes. The cabin smelled like coffee, bacon, clean wood, and whatever Mark had started making before deciding Gabriel’s socks were a public problem.

Normal Saturday.

Quiet.

Pack.

That word carried differently now.

It had always meant the three of them.

Thane. Gabriel. Mark.

Home. Humvee. Night Shift. Arguments over coffee filters. Pancakes. Reports. Kaden Face photos. Rules that had become jokes and jokes that had become rules.

Now the word had a shadow near it.

Not inside.

Not yet.

But near enough that Thane kept noticing the empty space where a question stood.

Gabriel shoved the mismatched socks into his pocket and padded into the kitchen.

“What are we doing today?”

Mark looked at the skillet.

“Late breakfast seems likely, given that you delayed normal breakfast by turning laundry into a legal dispute.”

Gabriel brightened.

“IHOP.”

Mark stopped stirring the eggs.

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel smiled.

“You both heard it. It exists now.”

“IHOP will be busy,” Mark said.

“It is Saturday. That is the point. Pancakes require witnesses.”

“Pancakes do not require witnesses.”

“Mine do.”

Thane leaned against the counter.

“IHOP is fine.”

Gabriel pointed at him.

“Leadership.”

Mark looked at the skillet.

“I am already cooking.”

“Then we have pre-breakfast.”

“That is not a meal category.”

“It is now.”

Thane looked toward his phone on the counter.

A thought arrived fully formed and refused to leave.

He set down his coffee.

“We should bring Silas.”

The kitchen went still.

Gabriel’s smile softened before he could hide it.

Mark turned off the burner.

“Approved mentor contact?”

“We can ask.”

“Probation needs route, time, location, transportation, and purpose.”

“Yes.”

“Public outing in wolf form may create attention.”

Thane looked at him.

“I know.”

Gabriel’s ears lifted.

“You want him in wolf form.”

“Yes.”

Mark studied him.

“Why?”

Thane looked toward the window.

“Because he has spent most of his life hiding what he is or using it where nobody could see him. I want him to walk into a normal place with us and eat breakfast.”

Gabriel’s expression shifted.

“That is a very Thane sentence.”

Mark’s voice softened.

“And the wolf form?”

Thane’s mouth moved faintly.

“I want him to know it does not only belong to fear.”

Neither of them answered immediately.

Then Gabriel nodded.

“I am in.”

Mark took a breath.

“The outing must be probation-approved. No photographs of Silas without legal clearance. No unscheduled stops. If he becomes overwhelmed, we leave. If he shifts involuntarily or loses control, we follow the plan. If anyone recognizes him from the case, we do not discuss the case.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

“He said yes in Mark.”

Thane nodded.

“I heard it.”

Mark pointed toward the phone.

“Call Supervisor Hale.”

Thane picked up the phone.

Supervisor Hale answered on the fourth ring.

“This is Hale.”

“Supervisor, this is Thane.”

“Detective.”

Gabriel whispered, “She sounds suspicious already.”

Mark mouthed, Quiet.

Thane continued.

“We would like to request approved mentor contact for Silas today. Pick up from his apartment. IHOP on North Meridian for late breakfast. Then return him home unless you approve a short cabin visit afterward.”

There was a pause.

“Public restaurant?”

“Yes.”

“With you three?”

“Yes.”

“Is this your idea?”

“Yes.”

“I sensed that.”

Thane waited.

Hale’s voice became sharper.

“Purpose?”

“Social integration. Normal setting. Controlled contact with us. He has been following conditions. I think it would be good for him to have a normal meal as what he is without hiding.”

Another pause.

“As what he is.”

“Yes.”

“You are asking for permission for him to shift before going into public.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel whispered, “Brave.”

Mark elbowed him lightly.

Hale exhaled through her nose.

“Detective, I am going to say several things, and you are going to listen with the part of your brain that understands court orders.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Gabriel mouthed, Excellent.

Hale continued.

“One: I will approve restaurant contact only. No cabin visit today.”

Thane nodded though she could not see it.

“Understood.”

“Two: route from apartment to restaurant and back. No additional stops.”

“Yes.”

“Three: he may shift voluntarily inside his apartment before departure if he remains calm and in control. If there is any instability, outing is canceled.”

“Yes.”

“Four: he must wear appropriate clothing. I am not writing a report about a naked werewolf at IHOP.”

Gabriel silently doubled over.

Mark covered his muzzle.

Thane closed his eyes briefly.

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Five: no social media photos of him. No public statement. No discussion of the case. If patrons ask about him, you redirect.”

“Yes.”

“Six: you three are responsible for immediate de-escalation. If he becomes agitated, you leave.”

“Yes.”

“Seven: he texts me before leaving the apartment, upon arrival, upon departure from the restaurant, and upon return.”

“Yes.”

“Eight: if this turns into a circus, I will personally assign every future mentor outing to a probation office conference room with fluorescent lighting and no pancakes.”

Thane’s mouth twitched.

“Understood.”

“Good. Approved for two hours.”

“Thank you.”

“Do not make me regret breakfast.”

“No, ma’am.”

The call ended.

Gabriel immediately sat down on a kitchen stool and laughed.

Mark said, “That was serious.”

“It was deeply serious,” Gabriel said. “That is why it was beautiful.”

Thane picked up his coffee.

Mark turned back to the stove.

“I will finish the eggs.”

Gabriel looked offended.

“We are going to IHOP.”

“Pre-breakfast,” Mark said.

Gabriel stared at him.

Then pointed at Thane.

“He used my meal category.”

Thane took another drink of coffee.

“He did.”


Silas answered the apartment door barefoot, human, and cautious.

He wore jeans and a plain gray shirt. His probation phone was clipped to his belt. The ankle monitor was visible below the cuff of his left pant leg.

The apartment behind him looked almost exactly as it had on release day.

Too clean.

Too careful.

Folder on the counter.

Shoes placed neatly beside the door.

Dishes washed and drying.

Food in the pantry, though not much of it had moved.

He looked from Thane to Gabriel to Mark.

Then back to Thane.

“You are early.”

Gabriel looked at his phone.

“We are six minutes late.”

Silas blinked.

Mark said, “Relative to the time Thane told us we were leaving, we are early. Relative to the probation-approved schedule, we are late.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“Why would you say that out loud?”

“Accuracy.”

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“What is happening?”

Thane held up one paw.

“Probation approved a mentor outing.”

Silas went still.

“To where?”

“IHOP,” Gabriel said.

Silas stared at him.

“The pancake place?”

Gabriel placed one paw over his chest.

“The International House of Pancakes.”

Silas looked to Thane as if checking whether Gabriel had invented the phrase.

“It is real,” Thane said.

Silas’s expression shifted.

Not excitement.

Not yet.

Suspicion trying to protect hope from embarrassment.

“You want me to go?”

“Yes.”

“With you.”

“Yes.”

“To breakfast.”

“Late breakfast,” Mark said.

Gabriel added, “Emotionally lunch-adjacent breakfast.”

Silas looked at them for another second.

Then stepped back from the doorway.

“I do not know if that is allowed.”

“Hale approved it,” Thane said. “Two hours. Apartment to restaurant and back. Text before leaving, arrival, departure, return. No unscheduled stops. No photos of you. No case discussion.”

Silas looked down at his phone pouch.

“She approved that?”

“Yes.”

His voice lowered.

“Why?”

Thane stepped inside.

Gabriel and Mark followed.

“Because we asked.”

Silas’s eyes lifted.

That seemed to hit harder than the approval itself.

He closed the door slowly.

“I have never been to IHOP.”

Gabriel froze.

Mark looked at him.

Thane looked at him.

Silas frowned.

“What?”

Gabriel’s voice became solemn.

“We have arrived at a cultural emergency.”

Mark said, “Do not make this weird.”

“It is already weird. He has never had IHOP.”

“I have had pancakes,” Silas said.

Gabriel turned toward him.

“That is not the same.”

Silas looked at Thane again.

“Is he serious?”

“About pancakes, yes.”

“Very,” Mark said.

Thane looked around the apartment.

“There is one condition.”

Silas’s face closed slightly.

Good, Thane thought.

He was learning to pause at conditions instead of resenting them automatically.

“What condition?”

Thane looked at him.

“You shift before we go.”

Silas stared.

Gabriel’s smile faded into something gentler.

Mark watched Silas’s hands.

Silas did not move.

“You want me to shift.”

“Yes.”

“Before going into public.”

“Yes.”

“Why?”

Thane stepped closer.

“Because when you are with us, I want you to be seen as what you are. Not hidden. Not half waiting to run. Not using it only when you are angry or scared or breaking something.”

Silas’s throat moved.

Thane continued.

“You can say no. If you are not ready, we do breakfast another time.”

Silas looked at Gabriel.

Gabriel lifted both paws.

“This is not a trap. It is breakfast with very large emotional side dishes.”

Mark added, “And probation-approved transformation practice in a controlled initial environment.”

Gabriel pointed at him.

“See? Legal syrup.”

Silas almost laughed.

Almost.

Then he looked back at Thane.

“And you just… want to see it again.”

Thane’s mouth moved.

“Yes.”

Silas blinked.

Thane shrugged.

“It is cool as hell.”

Gabriel looked delighted.

Mark sighed.

Silas stared at Thane as if unable to decide whether to be offended, embarrassed, or pleased.

Then he laughed once.

Quiet.

Disbelieving.

“You are never going to let that go.”

“No.”

“I broke a police hallway.”

“That part was bad.”

“I tried to escape.”

“Also bad.”

Silas’s mouth curved.

“But the reveal.”

“Still cool.”

Silas shook his head.

Then he looked down at himself.

“I do not have clothes for that.”

Mark held up the duffel bag he had been carrying.

“I brought some of mine.”

Silas looked at it.

“Yours?”

“Yes. They will be slightly loose in some areas and tight in others, but they are modified for tail clearance, shoulder movement, and claws. Drawstring closures. No zippers except one side pocket. No restrictive collar.”

Gabriel leaned toward Silas.

“That means he likes you.”

Mark looked at him.

“It means I understood the practical problem.”

“Same thing.”

Silas looked at the duffel bag like it might be another kind of door.

“You brought me clothes.”

Mark’s expression softened by a fraction.

“Yes.”

Silas took the bag carefully.

For a moment, he held it in both hands.

Then he looked at Thane.

“I have not shifted for anything good in a long time.”

“Then start today.”

Silas swallowed.

He nodded.

Then walked into the bedroom and closed the door.

Gabriel’s ears lowered slightly.

Mark stood still, listening.

Thane folded his arms and waited.

Inside the room, nothing happened for several seconds.

Then came the sound of fabric moving.

A long breath.

Another.

A low, controlled growl that Silas cut off halfway through.

Thane took one step toward the door.

Mark lifted a hand.

“Wait.”

Thane stopped.

The shift began with a muffled crack of joints and a sharp exhale.

Not screaming.

Not pain exactly.

But effort.

Human shape yielding to something larger, denser, stronger.

Claws on flooring.

A shoulder brushing the wall.

Another breath.

Then another.

Gabriel whispered, “That is wild.”

Mark’s eyes had gone intensely focused.

The bedroom door opened.

Silas stood in wolf form.

For a moment, none of them spoke.

He was not as large as Thane.

Taller than Gabriel, maybe near him in height but leaner through the waist and longer through the limbs. Dark charcoal fur covered him, streaked with gray along the spine and shoulders. His eyes remained amber, brighter now, almost gold in the apartment light. His muzzle was narrow. His ears stayed half-back, uncertain.

Mark’s clothes fit better than expected and worse than ideal: loose dark pants tied securely at the waist, tail opening functional, sleeveless gray shirt stretching across Silas’s chest and shoulders, seams holding but clearly aware of their responsibilities.

Gabriel looked him up and down.

“Well.”

Silas’s ears lowered.

“What?”

Gabriel smiled.

“You look like you are about to either join us for pancakes or headline a very intense folk album.”

Silas blinked.

Then laughed.

The sound came out rougher in wolf form, lower, startling him enough that he stopped.

Thane stepped closer.

Silas held still.

Not afraid.

Waiting.

Thane looked him over openly.

The powerful limbs.

The claws.

The fur.

The body Silas had hidden, weaponized, feared, and used.

Thane smiled.

“Yeah,” he said. “Cool as hell.”

Silas looked away, but not before Thane saw the flash of joy.

Small.

Embarrassed.

Real.

Mark stepped forward and adjusted one seam at Silas’s shoulder with careful permission.

“May I?”

Silas nodded.

Mark checked the fabric.

“It will hold for walking and sitting. Do not make sudden full-extension movements.”

Silas looked at him.

“I was not planning to.”

“Good.”

Gabriel walked around him once.

Silas watched him suspiciously.

Gabriel said, “No notes.”

Mark said, “I have notes.”

Gabriel ignored him.

Thane pointed toward the phone pouch on the counter.

“Text Hale before we leave.”

Silas nodded and picked up the phone carefully between clawed fingers.

It took him two tries to type.

Then he sent:

Leaving apartment with approved mentors for IHOP.

The response came almost immediately.

Behave.

Silas stared at the phone.

Gabriel leaned over.

“Oh, she likes you.”

Silas looked horrified.

“She does not.”

“That is probation affection.”

Mark nodded.

“Possibly.”

Thane opened the door.

“Come on.”

Silas hesitated at the threshold.

For one second, he looked down the apartment walkway like the outside world had changed shape.

Then Thane stepped beside him.

Gabriel took the other side.

Mark followed behind.

Silas walked out in wolf form.

Not running.

Not hiding.

Not breaking anything.

Just walking.


The Humvee helped.

Silas stopped beside it and stared.

Gabriel opened the passenger door.

“Welcome to the only reasonable vehicle in Cross Timber.”

Mark said, “Reasonable is a strong word.”

“It fits us.”

“That is not the same.”

Silas looked at Thane.

“This is yours?”

“Yes.”

“You always drive?”

“Yes.”

Gabriel sighed.

“Always.”

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“Pack rule?”

“Safety rule,” Thane said.

“Alpha vehicular oppression,” Gabriel said.

Mark opened the rear door.

“Do not encourage him.”

Silas climbed into the back beside Mark.

He fit.

Barely.

But better than he would have in anything else.

Mark checked the seating space.

“Tail clearance adequate?”

Silas looked surprised by the question.

“Yes.”

“Seat belt?”

Silas looked down, then carefully pulled it across.

The belt clicked.

For a moment, he stared at it as though the small normal sound mattered.

Thane saw in the mirror.

He did not mention it.

Gabriel turned in the passenger seat.

“First IHOP rule.”

Silas looked at him.

“There are rules?”

“Yes. Never panic-order.”

Silas blinked.

“What is panic-ordering?”

“When the server arrives and your brain forgets every food you have ever liked.”

Silas considered this.

“That happens?”

“To Gabriel,” Mark said.

“Once,” Gabriel said.

“Six times.”

“I was exploring options.”

Thane pulled out of the complex.

Silas looked out the window as they drove.

At first, people did not notice him.

Then they did.

A man walking a dog stopped mid-step.

The dog sat down.

A woman at a crosswalk stared, then slowly lifted a hand.

Silas stiffened.

Thane returned the wave.

Gabriel turned slightly.

“That was not fear.”

Silas did not answer.

A child in the backseat of a minivan pointed with both hands as the Humvee passed.

Silas’s ears flattened.

Mark said quietly, “Children point at us regularly.”

Gabriel added, “Sometimes adults pretend not to.”

Silas looked at him.

“How do you stand it?”

Gabriel shrugged.

“Depends on the pointing.”

Thane said, “You learn the difference.”

“Between what?”

“Fear. Curiosity. Joy. Rudeness. Need.”

Silas watched the minivan turn away.

“And if it is fear?”

Thane looked at him in the mirror.

“Then you do not punish them for being afraid.”

Silas went quiet.


IHOP was busy.

Of course it was.

Saturday late morning had turned the parking lot into a negotiation between families, retirees, students, church groups, weekend workers, and people who believed pancakes fixed things.

The Humvee found a space near the back of the lot because Thane chose one near the back of every lot.

Silas stared at the building.

The blue roof.

The windows.

The people moving in and out.

The normalness of it.

Gabriel opened his door.

“Ready?”

Silas did not answer immediately.

Then he said, “No.”

Thane turned off the engine.

“That is allowed.”

Silas looked at him.

“But we are going in.”

“That is also allowed.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Excellent emotional structure.”

Mark said, “Remember: no case discussion, no photos, no unscheduled deviation, stay calm, leave if overwhelmed.”

Silas nodded.

Thane looked at him.

“And one more thing.”

Silas’s ears shifted.

“When you are with us like this, I want you wolf.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark did too.

Thane continued before either could object.

“Not as a command. Not if probation says no. Not if you say no. But when we are out together and it is allowed, I want you to know you do not have to hide what you are from us.”

Silas stared at him.

Gabriel’s expression softened.

Mark relaxed by a fraction.

Silas looked toward the restaurant.

“I think I want that too.”

Thane nodded.

“Good.”

They got out.

Four werewolves crossed the IHOP parking lot.

There was no way to make that subtle.

People noticed.

A teenager near the entrance whispered, “Holy crap.”

His mother elbowed him.

An older couple near the handicapped spaces watched them approach. The man raised his eyebrows. The woman smiled.

Silas walked close to Thane.

Not behind him.

Not exactly.

Close enough that Gabriel noticed and did not tease.

At the front door, a family coming out froze.

A little boy holding a takeout container stared up at Thane.

Then at Gabriel.

Then Mark.

Then Silas.

“Is there a new one?”

His father made a strangled sound.

“Buddy.”

Thane crouched slightly.

“Yes.”

Silas went very still.

The boy looked at Silas.

“Are you nice?”

Silas’s mouth opened.

Nothing came out.

Gabriel leaned down conspiratorially.

“He is practicing.”

The boy considered that very seriously.

“Okay.”

Then he looked at Thane.

“Can you do the face?”

Thane sighed.

Gabriel whispered, “Tradition.”

Mark said, “We are blocking the entrance.”

Thane made the quiet Kaden Face for exactly two seconds.

The boy gasped with delight.

His father mouthed, Thank you, and ushered him away.

Silas stared after them.

“He asked if I was nice.”

Gabriel opened the restaurant door.

“Excellent question.”

Silas looked at him.

Gabriel smiled gently.

“Better than asking if you are dangerous.”

Silas absorbed that.

Then followed them inside.

The hostess looked up from the stand.

Her customer-service smile froze.

Then restarted with visible effort.

“Good morning.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Good morning. Four, please. Largest booth with the strongest emotional support.”

The hostess blinked.

Then laughed before she could stop herself.

“Uh, booth or table?”

Mark said, “Table may be better for tail clearance.”

The hostess looked at him.

Then at the four tails.

“Yes. Table.”

Gabriel looked at Silas.

“See? We are a logistics event.”

The hostess led them through the dining room.

Conversations dipped.

Forks paused.

A toddler shouted, “Wolves!”

A woman near the window whispered, “That’s Night Shift.”

Someone else whispered, “Who’s the dark one?”

Silas’s ears lowered.

Thane kept walking.

Gabriel waved at a table of older women who looked delighted and terrified in equal measure.

Mark quietly adjusted his path to avoid brushing anyone’s chair with his tail.

They reached a corner table near the back, large enough for four oversized chairs once the hostess borrowed two from a neighboring table and stared at Mark as he rearranged them for structural practicality.

A server arrived within thirty seconds.

Her name tag read Charla.

She looked at Thane, Gabriel, Mark, and Silas.

Then she put four menus on the table.

“I am going to need more coffee.”

Gabriel smiled.

“For us or you?”

“Yes.”

Thane laughed.

Charla grinned, relieved that joking was allowed.

“Okay. I know you three. You are the police wolves.”

“Off duty,” Thane said.

“Good. Less paperwork. And you?”

Silas went still.

Thane said, “Silas. Our friend.”

The word friend landed gently and dangerously.

Silas looked at the menu.

Charla looked at him with quick curiosity, but no recognition beyond what stood in front of her.

“Well, Silas, welcome to IHOP. Coffee?”

Silas stared at her.

“Yes.”

“Cream?”

He hesitated.

Gabriel leaned over.

“This is not a character test.”

Silas blinked.

“Cream.”

Charla wrote it down.

“Good choice. Everyone needs a soft start.”

She took drink orders and left.

Silas looked after her.

“She did not know.”

Mark said quietly, “Not everyone follows court news.”

Gabriel added, “Some people are busy having lives.”

Silas looked around the dining room.

Several people were still looking.

Most had gone back to eating.

One older woman smiled at him when he accidentally met her eyes.

He looked down at the menu like it might offer legal guidance.

“What do I order?”

Gabriel inhaled.

Mark immediately said, “Do not.”

Gabriel pointed at the menu.

“This is important.”

“It is breakfast.”

“It is identity.”

Silas looked alarmed.

Thane leaned back.

“Order what sounds good.”

Silas scanned the menu.

“There are too many things.”

Gabriel nodded solemnly.

“That is how they get you.”

Mark turned his menu around and pointed.

“If overwhelmed, choose a basic combination: eggs, pancakes, meat, hash browns. It establishes baseline preference.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“You have a pancake onboarding process.”

“Yes.”

Silas looked at the menu.

“That actually helps.”

Gabriel looked betrayed.

Thane smiled.

Charla returned with coffee, orange juice, and water.

She set Silas’s coffee down in front of him.

He wrapped both clawed hands around the mug carefully.

Heat.

Ceramic.

Normal.

He took a cautious drink.

His ears lifted slightly.

Gabriel saw it.

“Coffee approval.”

Silas looked at him.

“It is good.”

“It is IHOP coffee,” Mark said.

Silas looked down at the mug.

“I like it.”

Mark paused.

Then nodded.

“Then it is good.”

Gabriel gave Mark a look of exaggerated pride.

“Growth.”

Mark ignored him.

They ordered.

Thane ordered steak tips and eggs with pancakes.

Gabriel ordered a breakfast sampler and added strawberry pancakes after what he described as “a brief but meaningful inner negotiation.”

Mark ordered an omelet, pancakes, and fruit.

Silas ordered the basic breakfast Mark had recommended, then added chocolate-chip pancakes in a sudden act of courage that made Gabriel slap the table once.

“Yes.”

Silas looked embarrassed.

Thane smiled.

“Good choice.”

While they waited, the restaurant settled around them.

The initial attention softened into background curiosity.

A few people came over to say hello to Thane, Gabriel, and Mark. Thane kept it brief and polite. Gabriel made one older man laugh by claiming Mark had once issued a verbal warning to a suspicious tarp. Mark corrected the details. The man laughed harder.

No one asked Silas for his story.

No one knew to.

That was a mercy.

A teenager asked for a photo with “Night Shift.”

Thane looked at Silas first.

Silas understood the question and gave a small nod.

Thane turned to the teenager.

“Not today. We are having breakfast.”

The teenager looked disappointed but nodded.

“Yes, sir.”

Gabriel softened it.

“Catch us another time. We are currently under pancake jurisdiction.”

The teenager laughed and returned to his table.

Silas stared at Gabriel.

“You said no.”

“Thane said no,” Gabriel replied. “I added flavor.”

Silas looked at Thane.

“You did not apologize.”

“No.”

“You just said no.”

“Yes.”

Silas looked down.

“I did not know people could do that and still be liked.”

Mark said, “They cannot always.”

Gabriel added, “But they can survive it.”

Thane watched Silas absorb that too.

Breakfast arrived in waves of plates, steam, syrup, butter, eggs, potatoes, bacon, sausage, pancakes, and Charla saying, “I brought extra napkins because I have eyes.”

Gabriel looked delighted.

Silas looked overwhelmed.

Then he took his first bite of chocolate-chip pancake.

Everything stopped.

Not in the restaurant.

In Silas.

His eyes lowered to the plate.

Then closed.

Gabriel whispered, “Oh.”

Mark looked interested.

Thane watched carefully.

Silas swallowed.

Then looked at the pancake like it had betrayed his worldview.

Gabriel leaned in.

“First IHOP pancake?”

Silas nodded.

“Cultural emergency resolved,” Gabriel said.

Silas laughed under his breath.

“I understand now.”

Thane cut into his eggs.

“Told you.”

“You did not,” Silas said.

“Gabriel did enough for all of us.”

Mark applied a controlled amount of syrup to his pancakes.

Gabriel watched with disapproval.

“That is not enough syrup.”

“It is the correct amount.”

“There is no correct amount. There is only the amount your soul can carry.”

Silas looked at his own syrup.

“How much is normal?”

Thane said, “Whatever you want.”

Silas looked suspicious.

Gabriel said, “That is freedom.”

Mark added, “Within reason.”

Silas poured syrup.

Stopped.

Looked at Mark.

Mark considered.

“Acceptable.”

Gabriel shook his head.

“You two are going to be dangerous.”

They ate.

They talked about small things.

Real small things.

Coffee.

Cars.

Why Gabriel was not allowed to navigate when hungry.

Why Thane always drove.

Why Mark labeled everything.

The difference between a pancake stack and a pancake order, which Gabriel insisted mattered and Mark insisted did not.

Silas said little at first.

Then more.

He asked whether the cabin really had doors built for claws.

“Yes,” Thane said.

“Do you break things anyway?”

Gabriel said, “Thane has broken three chairs by existing with confidence.”

“One chair,” Thane said.

“Three emotional chairs.”

Mark said, “Two physical chairs. One stool.”

Thane looked at him.

Mark continued eating.

Silas laughed.

It came easier the second time.

Near the end of the meal, Charla returned with the check and four to-go cups.

“Coffee refills for the road,” she said.

Gabriel looked at her.

“You understand us.”

Charla smiled.

“I have worked Saturday breakfast for eleven years. I understand everyone eventually.”

She looked at Silas.

“How was your first visit?”

Silas froze for half a second.

Then he answered.

“Good.”

Charla nodded.

“Come back hungry.”

Silas looked down at the empty plate in front of him.

“I will.”

They paid.

Thane tipped heavily but not absurdly enough to create a scene.

Mark checked the receipt.

Gabriel accused him of auditing joy.

Silas watched Thane sign the slip.

Then looked around the restaurant once more.

People eating.

Talking.

Laughing.

Arguing over syrup.

Children coloring on paper menus.

A server refilling coffee.

No one running.

No one screaming.

No one reaching for a weapon.

No one demanding the dark werewolf leave.

A few people looked at him.

Then looked away.

Normal.

Not safe because nothing could go wrong.

Safe because nothing had.

As they stood, the little boy from the entrance appeared near the front with his father again.

He waved at Silas.

Silas froze.

Thane waited.

Gabriel waited.

Mark waited.

Slowly, Silas lifted one clawed hand and waved back.

The boy grinned.

“Bye, new wolf.”

Silas’s throat moved.

“Bye.”

Outside, the heat had risen over the parking lot.

The Humvee waited in the back row.

Silas walked beside Thane without crowding him this time.

At the passenger side, Gabriel unlocked the door, then paused.

“Well?”

Silas looked at him.

Gabriel gestured toward the restaurant.

“Review.”

Silas looked back at the blue roof.

Then at his clawed hands.

Then at the three of them.

“I did not hate it.”

Gabriel gasped.

“Five stars.”

Mark said, “For Silas, that may be a strong endorsement.”

Thane looked at Silas.

“How do you feel?”

Silas took a breath.

The air smelled like asphalt, syrup from Gabriel’s takeout container, coffee, summer heat, and the faint nervous sweat that had followed him out of the apartment but was not nearly as sharp now.

“I feel…” He stopped.

Tried again.

“I feel like I walked in as this and left as this.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

Silas looked at him.

“And nobody made it into a cage.”

“No.”

He looked back at the restaurant.

“I thought they would.”

Gabriel’s voice softened.

“Some places might.”

Mark added, “Today this one did not.”

Silas nodded.

“That matters.”

“Yes,” Thane said.

Silas climbed into the backseat beside Mark.

He texted Hale before Thane started the engine.

Departing IHOP. Returning home. No issues.

Hale replied:

Good.

Silas stared at the one word.

Then showed it to Mark.

Mark nodded.

“That is probation praise.”

Gabriel turned around.

“Told you.”

Silas smiled faintly.

The drive back to his apartment was quieter than the drive out.

Not heavy.

Just full.

At the apartment complex, Thane parked in Silas’s assigned space and waited while Silas texted Hale again.

Returned home.

The response came:

Remain inside unless otherwise approved. Good job today.

Silas read it twice.

Gabriel did not tease.

Mark did not comment.

Thane looked at him in the mirror.

“Good job today.”

Silas’s ears lowered, but not with shame.

“Thank you.”

He unbuckled, then paused.

“I should shift back before going in?”

Thane looked toward the apartment.

“You can stay wolf inside if you want.”

Silas looked at him.

“Probation allowed?”

“Inside your residence, voluntary and controlled, yes,” Mark said. “You still report any issue.”

Silas looked at his hands.

“I might stay like this for a while.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Good.”

Silas opened the rear door and climbed down.

Thane got out too.

So did Gabriel and Mark.

They walked him to the apartment door.

Silas unlocked it carefully.

No force.

No hurry.

No damage.

He opened it and stepped inside.

Then turned back.

“I thought breakfast was going to feel like a test.”

Thane stood at the threshold.

“It was a little.”

Silas’s ears shifted.

Thane continued.

“Not pass or fail. Just practice.”

Silas nodded slowly.

“Practice.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel leaned against the exterior wall.

“Pancake-based social reintegration.”

Mark said, “That phrase will not appear in any report.”

“It should.”

“It will not.”

Silas laughed.

Then looked at Thane.

“You meant what you said earlier?”

Thane knew which part.

“When it is allowed, when you choose it, when it is safe—yes. With us, you do not have to hide wolf.”

Silas looked down.

“I do not know if I know how to be wolf without being dangerous.”

Thane stepped closer.

“Then we practice.”

Silas’s eyes lifted.

“Like breakfast.”

“Like breakfast.”

Silas nodded once.

Then, in a voice rougher than usual, said, “Today.”

Thane smiled faintly.

“Today.”

Silas looked at Gabriel and Mark.

“Thank you.”

Gabriel said, “You are welcome.”

Mark nodded.

“You did well.”

Silas stood very still for a second, as if that sentence required balance.

Then he stepped back.

“I will stay inside.”

“Good,” Thane said.

“No unscheduled stops.”

Gabriel smiled.

“IHOP was enough adventure.”

Silas looked at him.

“It was.”

He closed the door.

This time, from the inside.

The lock turned.

Thane listened to it.

Not a cage.

A boundary.

He stepped back.

Gabriel looked at him.

“You okay?”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

Mark watched the apartment door.

“He stayed wolf.”

“Yeah,” Thane said.

Gabriel smiled.

“Good.”

They walked back to the Humvee.

Behind them, inside a small apartment, Silas Creed stood in borrowed wolf clothes with syrup still faintly on one claw, coffee on his breath, a probation monitor on his ankle, and a new memory his old life had never given him.

A door opening.

A table waiting.

A little boy waving.

No one running.

No one screaming.

Three wolves beside him.

Not pack.

Not yet.

But close enough to show him what the word might mean someday.

Thane climbed into the Humvee.

Gabriel got in beside him.

Mark settled into the back.

As they pulled out of the parking lot, Gabriel looked toward the apartment building.

“So.”

Thane glanced at him.

“So?”

“Next approved outing.”

Mark sighed.

“Do not say it.”

Gabriel grinned.

“Mini golf.”

“No.”

“Bowling.”

“No.”

“Farmers market.”

Mark paused.

“That may be reasonable.”

Gabriel looked triumphant.

Thane smiled.

“One thing at a time.”

Gabriel settled back in his seat.

“Fine. But eventually, four werewolves at mini golf.”

Mark said, “That is structurally risky.”

“Emotionally necessary.”

Thane drove them toward home beneath the bright Saturday sky, still smiling faintly.

Breakfast had not fixed Silas.

One outing could not undo a life of hiding, harm, fear, and bad choices.

But Silas had walked into IHOP as a wolf and walked out still a wolf.

He had been seen.

He had been fed.

He had been told no.

He had been waved at by a child and called new wolf.

And for today, he had not broken anything.

For today, that was enough.

Chapter 87 — Honest Work

By Wednesday afternoon, Silas Creed had learned three things about lawful employment.

First, probation paperwork could make a simple warehouse job look like a national security operation.

Second, Mark considered that appropriate.

Third, moving boxes for money felt different when the boxes belonged to someone who had asked.

The job was at Red Dirt ReBuild, a nonprofit warehouse on the south side of Cross Timber that collected donated building materials, furniture, appliances, cabinets, fixtures, and hardware, then resold or distributed them through partner programs for low-income repairs, shelter renovations, and community projects.

It was not glamorous.

That was one of the reasons it had been approved.

No private homes.

No wealthy clients.

No alarms.

No safes.

No keys except the ones held by staff.

No unsupervised access to valuables.

No security systems.

No locked rooms full of things rich people believed were protected by money and discretion.

Just a warehouse with concrete floors, tall shelves, a loading dock, donated cabinets, mismatched doors, old sinks, boxes of tile, and enough heavy things to make a normal person’s back hurt by lunch.

Thane had found the possibility through a city volunteer contact from the Bridge House day, then handed it immediately to Eli, Nora, and probation.

That had been the first rule.

No direct arrangement.

No private favor.

No “Thane says he is fine.”

Probation Supervisor Hale had reviewed the job description. Nora had reviewed the restrictions. Eli had reviewed the support structure. Red Dirt’s director had signed off on supervision requirements, GPS boundaries, schedule reporting, and the complete absence of security-related duties.

Only then had Silas been allowed to show up.

At 14:10 on Wednesday, Thane stood near the open roll-up door of the warehouse and watched Silas carry a damaged refrigerator across the loading bay with another worker named Cam.

Not alone.

That mattered.

Silas could have carried it alone.

Everyone watching knew that within the first ten seconds.

He did not.

He held his side of the appliance, listened when Cam said “tilt left,” waited when the supervisor told them to stop, and set it down exactly where he was told.

Not because he needed the help.

Because he had been instructed to work as part of the team.

Alejandra Suarez, the warehouse supervisor, stood beside Thane with a clipboard in one hand and a pencil tucked behind her ear.

She was short, compact, and watched the room with the calm authority of someone who had spent fifteen years convincing volunteers, donors, contractors, and retired men with opinions that the loading dock was not a democracy.

“He listens,” she said.

Thane looked at her.

“Yes.”

“I did not say that like I was surprised.”

“You sounded a little surprised.”

“I was warned he was strong.”

“He is.”

“I was warned he was complicated.”

“He is.”

“I was not warned he would ask permission before moving a pallet jack.”

Thane looked across the warehouse.

Silas stood near the appliance row, listening while Cam explained the difference between usable dented refrigerators and “parts only” refrigerators. His hands hung loose at his sides. His shoulders were still too tight. His eyes still tracked every exit in the building.

But he was listening.

Thane said, “He is trying.”

Alejandra’s expression softened by the smallest amount.

“I can work with trying.”

Silas looked different in work clothes.

Not free exactly.

The ankle monitor still sat visible above one boot. The probation phone rested in a clear pouch clipped to his belt. The restrictions were not imaginary just because he was not behind a vault door.

But in jeans, a plain work shirt, and heavy gloves, with sweat darkening his collar and dust on his forearms, Silas looked less like a man waiting to be contained and more like someone doing a job that had a beginning, middle, and end.

A donated cabinet needed moving.

He moved it.

A stack of doors needed sorting by size.

He sorted them.

A pallet needed wrapping.

He wrapped it.

A volunteer asked whether one of the sinks went in salvage or scrap.

Silas did not guess.

He asked Alejandra.

That mattered too.

At 15:25, he helped unload a truck from a church renovation. Old interior doors. A set of base cabinets. Boxes of hinges. Two toilets. A scratched but functional vanity. Twelve light fixtures from a fellowship hall that had apparently chosen a new relationship with brightness.

Gabriel, if he had been there, would have had opinions.

Mark would have categorized the fixtures.

Thane kept those thoughts to himself and carried two base cabinets when Alejandra pointed at them.

He was not there as police.

He was not there as boss.

He was there as approved support contact during the first workday transition, visible to Silas, available to probation, and useful if someone needed very heavy objects moved.

He also knew when to stand back.

That was harder.

Silas finished unloading the last cabinet with Cam and wiped sweat from his face with the back of one wrist.

Alejandra looked at the empty truck.

“Good. Take ten.”

Cam immediately walked toward the break table.

Silas remained near the loading bay, looking as if he did not know whether ten minutes was an instruction or a trap.

Alejandra saw it.

“Creed.”

Silas turned.

“Break means break.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Water. Shade. Sit if you want.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

He walked toward the cooler near the roll-up door and took a bottle of water.

Then he looked at Thane.

Not asking.

Not exactly.

Thane nodded toward the side of the loading bay, where an old picnic table sat beneath the shade of the building overhang. It was visible from the warehouse floor and the office window, but far enough from the others that the conversation would not carry.

Clean enough.

Silas came over slowly.

For a few seconds, he stood beside the table with the water bottle unopened in his hands.

Thane leaned against the wall.

“You did good.”

Silas looked down.

“I moved furniture.”

“You followed instructions.”

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“That is the new miracle?”

“For you? Maybe.”

Silas huffed.

Almost a laugh.

Then his expression changed.

He twisted the cap off the bottle, drank, and stared out across the lot where sunlight shimmered over cracked asphalt.

“I liked it.”

Thane waited.

Silas looked annoyed with the admission, as if enjoyment itself had caught him unguarded.

“I liked knowing what the task was. Move that. Stack this. Ask if unsure. Do not improvise. Do not be clever. Just do the thing.”

“That is work.”

Silas looked at him.

“I have worked before.”

“I know.”

“No.” Silas shook his head. “I have performed. Consulted. Lied politely. Stood in rooms pretending not to measure them. This is different.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

Silas looked back toward the warehouse.

“Cam told me the cabinets are going to a church shelter renovation in Blackwell.”

“Good.”

“I helped load things that are going to help someone.”

“Yes.”

The words landed slowly.

Silas looked down at the water bottle.

His fingers tightened around it.

“I do not know what to do with that.”

“Do it again tomorrow.”

Silas laughed softly, then stopped.

His face folded before he could hide it.

He looked away quickly.

Thane said nothing.

That was sometimes the kindest thing.

Silas breathed once.

Twice.

Then said, “Thank you.”

Thane looked at him.

Silas’s eyes were wet. Not dramatic. Not breaking apart. Just honest in a way he still seemed to hate.

“No one ever did this,” Silas said.

Thane stayed still.

Silas swallowed.

“Not like this. Not… serious. People gave me food sometimes. Clothes. A bed for a while. Advice. Warnings. Conditions. But no one ever looked at the worst thing I did and then tried to build a way for me to stop being that.”

Thane’s chest tightened.

“You have to build most of it.”

“I know.”

“No, Silas. You have to know it every day.”

Silas nodded hard once.

“I do.”

“Today you followed the rules.”

“Yes.”

“Tomorrow, you follow them again.”

“Yes.”

“Next week, same thing.”

“Yes.”

“You do not get a new life because I wanted one for you. You get a chance to earn one because the court gave you a door.”

Silas wiped at one eye with the heel of his hand and looked angry at the tear.

“I know.”

Thane watched him.

Then said, “And if you keep choosing right—if you keep following the rules, telling the truth, doing the work, making restitution, and becoming safe to stand near—then someday, when it is clean and earned and allowed…”

Silas went still.

Thane held his gaze.

“I will make you pack.”

For one second, Silas did not breathe.

The warehouse noises went on behind them.

A pallet jack squeaked.

Someone laughed near the break table.

A truck passed on the road.

Silas stared at Thane like he had heard a word in a language he had never believed anyone would speak to him.

“Do not say that if you do not mean it,” he said.

“I mean it.”

Silas’s face twisted.

“Thane.”

“Not today,” Thane said. “Not because you got a job. Not because you cried. Not because I hate that chain. Not because I feel sorry for you.”

Silas closed his eyes.

Thane continued.

“Someday. If you earn it. If Gabriel and Mark agree. If it does not hurt the case, the victims, your probation, or the people who trust us. If you become someone who can hear no and not turn it into a wall to break.”

Silas’s breath shook.

“That is a lot of if.”

“Yes.”

Silas opened his eyes.

“But not no.”

“No.”

The first tear broke loose and ran down Silas’s face.

He did not wipe it away this time.

“I do not know how to be pack.”

Thane stepped closer.

“You learn.”

Silas looked at him with a terror more fragile than anything he had shown in the interview hallway.

“What if I fail?”

“Then you tell us before failing becomes damage.”

Silas gave a broken sound that might have been a laugh if it had not hurt so much.

“I do not know how to do that either.”

“You learn that too.”

For a moment, neither moved.

Then Thane asked, “Do you want a hug?”

Silas stared at him.

The question clearly had not occurred to him as a thing a person could be offered.

His mouth opened.

Closed.

Then he nodded once.

Small.

Embarrassed.

Young.

Thane stepped in and wrapped both arms around him carefully.

Not like a takedown.

Not like restraint.

Like shelter.

Silas froze at first.

Then his hands gripped the back of Thane’s shirt with sudden, desperate force.

Thane let him.

The sound Silas made was quiet enough that no one in the warehouse heard it over the fans and forklifts and normal work.

Thane heard it.

He held tighter.

“You are not alone,” Thane said.

Silas shook against him once.

Thane lowered his voice.

“You are not pack yet. But you are not alone.”

Silas nodded against his shoulder.

For a while, that was all there was.

Dust.

Heat.

The smell of old cabinets and asphalt.

A werewolf who had once believed every door was either a threat or an invitation to steal, holding onto the first person who had offered him one that opened cleanly.

At last, Silas stepped back.

His eyes were red.

He looked mortified.

Thane did not mention it.

Neither did Alejandra, who had very obviously seen enough through the office window to know not to come outside.

Silas rubbed both hands over his face.

“I am supposed to go back in.”

“Yes.”

“Break is probably over.”

“Probably.”

Silas looked at the warehouse.

Then back at Thane.

“I will not make you regret this.”

Thane’s expression sharpened.

“Wrong promise.”

Silas stopped.

“Today,” Thane said.

Silas swallowed.

“I will follow the rules today.”

“Good.”

Silas nodded.

Then, before he could turn away, Thane added, “Also.”

Silas looked back.

Thane’s mouth moved faintly.

“I want to see you shift again sometime.”

Silas blinked.

“What?”

“Approved setting. Probation cleared. Medical aware. Controlled. All of that.”

Silas stared.

Thane shrugged.

“It was cool as hell.”

For one stunned second, Silas looked exactly like a man whose entire emotional system had overloaded and been handed a joke as a troubleshooting manual.

Then he laughed.

Hard.

Short.

Real.

“You are insane.”

Gabriel would have objected to the phrasing on principle.

Thane smiled.

“Maybe.”

“I broke cuffs and a door.”

“That part was bad.”

“I tried to escape.”

“Also bad.”

Silas wiped at his face again, still laughing.

“And you thought the shift was cool?”

“Yes.”

Silas looked at him for a long second.

Then shook his head.

“The exit plan was bad.”

“Zero out of ten.”

“The reveal?”

Thane considered it.

“Eight.”

Silas looked offended.

“Eight?”

“You were arrested immediately.”

Silas laughed again.

This time, it did not break.

It held.

“Fair.”

Alejandra called from inside.

“Creed. Break’s over.”

Silas turned.

“Yes, ma’am.”

He looked back once.

The smile was gone, but not because it had died.

Because he had put it somewhere safe.

Then he walked back into the warehouse.

Thane watched him go.

Cam pointed toward a stack of doors.

Silas nodded, picked up his end with Cam instead of alone, and moved where he was told.

Honest work.

One right choice with dust on it.

Thane stayed for another twenty minutes, then checked in with Alejandra, confirmed there had been no issues, and left without making the day larger than it needed to be.

As he drove back toward the cabin to get ready for shift, his phone buzzed.

A text from Gabriel.

Did he survive job day?

Thane dictated the reply at a stoplight.

He did good.

Gabriel responded almost immediately.

That is suspiciously emotional grammar.

A second later, Mark added to the group text.

Did he follow all approved conditions?

Thane smiled faintly.

Yes.

Mark replied:

Good.

Gabriel replied:

Also good. Emotionally good. Possibly pack-adjacent good.

Thane did not answer.

Not because Gabriel was wrong.

Because he was not.


Night Shift began at 18:02 with Voss standing in their office doorway and Rusk sitting in Thane’s chair.

Thane stopped in the hall.

Rusk looked up.

“What?”

“That is my chair.”

“You were not here.”

“It is still my chair.”

“I am conducting a chair assessment.”

Gabriel slipped past Thane and looked at Rusk.

“Do not damage it. It has been calibrated for bear-sized brooding.”

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel smiled.

“With affection.”

Mark entered behind them.

“Rusk is too short for that chair setting.”

Rusk glanced at the hydraulic lever.

“I noticed.”

Voss leaned against the doorframe.

“You all done?”

“No,” Gabriel said. “But we can pause.”

Rusk stood from the chair and adjusted his jacket with dignity he had not earned.

“Your throne is intact.”

Thane entered and sat.

The chair sank exactly as it should.

Gabriel pointed.

“See? Brooding height.”

Voss ignored him and opened the handoff folder.

“Quiet mid-week. No active detective cases requiring overnight work. Follow-up on Creed remains with DA, probation, and assigned counsel. You three are not to insert yourselves into any legal process unless contacted through proper channels.”

Thane nodded.

“Understood.”

Voss looked at him for half a second longer.

“How was his first day?”

Thane kept his voice neutral.

“Good.”

“That sounded true.”

“It was.”

Rusk looked at him.

“He lift anything inappropriate?”

“No.”

“Threaten any doors?”

“No.”

“Make anyone regret hiring him?”

“No.”

Gabriel’s ears tipped forward.

“You were waiting to ask those.”

“Yes.”

Mark opened his tablet.

“Any patrol assists?”

Voss accepted the pivot.

“Patrol is steady. Darnell has a noise complaint at Brookline Apartments. Grant may need help with a stalled box truck near the farmers market. Patel has a caller worried about an older man sitting in his car too long outside the library.”

Gabriel looked concerned.

“Medical?”

“Unknown.”

Thane nodded.

“We will be available.”

Rusk handed over the summary sheet.

“No major weirdness tonight, please.”

Gabriel accepted the page.

“Define weirdness.”

“You know it when you cause it.”

“That seems unfairly broad.”

Voss pointed toward the door.

“Go work.”


The stalled box truck near the farmers market belonged to a bakery delivery driver named Milton, who had managed to block both the alley and half the loading area while trying to reverse around a dumpster.

The truck had not technically stalled.

It had overheated.

Milton had then turned it off, panicked, restarted it, stalled it himself, and called dispatch because “the engine sounded disappointed.”

Grant stood beside the driver’s door with the calm expression of someone who had chosen patience over several other options.

Thane parked the Humvee at the alley entrance.

Gabriel stepped out and looked at the truck wedged between the dumpster and a brick wall.

“This is spatially ambitious.”

Milton leaned out the window.

“I was told there was room.”

Grant looked at him.

“By whom?”

“My cousin.”

“Was your cousin here?”

“No.”

Gabriel nodded solemnly.

“Classic cousin problem.”

Mark walked around the truck, measuring clearances with his eyes.

“You have nine inches on the left if the mirror folds.”

Milton looked horrified.

“That is not enough.”

“It is if you stop steering as though the dumpster owes you money.”

Grant pressed her lips together.

Gabriel turned away.

Thane folded the driver’s mirror carefully. Mark directed from the rear. Grant handled the front clearance. Gabriel stood where Milton could see him and said things like “slow,” “less slow,” “no, that was more,” and “the wall remains undefeated.”

After eight minutes, the truck was free.

Milton climbed out, sweating.

“I am never listening to my cousin again.”

Grant closed her notebook.

“That is probably wise.”

Milton opened the back of the truck.

“Do you all want day-old rolls?”

Mark immediately said, “We cannot accept—”

Milton held up a receipt.

“They were refused by the café because I was late and because of the dumpster incident. The bakery told me to donate them or toss them. Can I donate them to the station?”

Mark paused.

“That is different.”

Gabriel smiled.

“Rolls survived a traffic trauma.”

Thane looked at Grant.

Grant shrugged.

“I am not fighting bread.”

The rolls went into the Humvee.

Mark documented the donation.

Gabriel looked at the bags.

“Tonight has improved.”


At 21:11, the call outside the library turned out to be less medical emergency and more stubborn grandfather.

Mr. Willard Ames sat in an old blue sedan beneath a pecan tree in the library parking lot with the engine off, windows down, and a stack of library books on the passenger seat.

Patel stood near the driver’s window.

He looked annoyed.

Not confused.

Not ill.

Annoyed.

“My granddaughter works inside,” he said as Thane approached. “I am waiting for her shift to end.”

Patel nodded.

“She gets off at nine-thirty?”

“Yes.”

“It is currently nine-eleven.”

“I am early.”

“The caller said you had been here since seven.”

“I was very early.”

Gabriel looked at the library entrance.

“Sir, is there a reason you did not wait inside?”

Mr. Ames looked offended.

“I have already checked out my books.”

“That does not legally bar re-entry.”

“I did not want to look needy.”

Patel’s expression softened.

Thane crouched enough to be less towering.

“Do you need anything?”

“No.”

The answer came too quickly.

Mark looked at the passenger seat.

The books were large-print mysteries, a cookbook, and one paperback western.

There was also an empty water bottle and a pharmacy bag.

Patel said, “Mr. Ames, your granddaughter was worried when we called in.”

His face changed.

“She knows?”

“She is coming out.”

He looked toward the library doors.

“I did not want to be a bother.”

Thane said, “Waiting in a hot car for two and a half hours is more of a bother than sitting inside.”

Mr. Ames frowned.

Gabriel leaned slightly closer.

“He is right. Annoyingly direct, but right.”

Mr. Ames looked at Gabriel.

“You the funny one?”

Gabriel blinked.

“I have a reputation?”

“My granddaughter showed me the shoe commercial.”

Thane looked away.

Mark said, “It was not a shoe commercial. It included sandals and boots.”

Gabriel pointed at him.

“Not now.”

The library doors opened, and a young woman in a staff badge hurried out.

“Grandpa.”

Mr. Ames sat straighter.

“I am fine.”

“You said you would come in.”

“I did not want people fussing.”

She looked at the three werewolves, Patel, and the patrol unit.

“Great job avoiding that.”

Gabriel made a small sound and covered it by looking at the books.

The granddaughter helped Mr. Ames gather his books and pharmacy bag.

Patel gave them both information about the library’s evening seating area, senior ride program, and the emergency contact form that would let staff call family before a worried citizen called police.

As they left, Mr. Ames looked at Thane.

“You are taller in person.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Do the face.”

Thane blinked.

Gabriel’s ears lifted instantly.

The granddaughter closed her eyes.

“Grandpa.”

“What? If I am already being fussed over, I want a picture.”

Patel looked at Thane.

She was trying not to smile.

Mark took out his phone.

Thane sighed.

“One quiet one.”

Gabriel murmured, “Kaden Face, library edition.”

Thane crouched beside Mr. Ames, made the quiet version of the face, and endured the old man doing an approximation with dentures and absolute commitment.

The granddaughter laughed hard enough to wipe at her eyes.

Mr. Ames looked deeply satisfied.

“Worth it.”

Thane stood.

Gabriel nodded.

“Strong work, sir.”

Mr. Ames pointed at him.

“You are the funny one.”

“I am.”

“The gray one is the serious one.”

Mark said, “Correct.”

Mr. Ames looked at Thane.

“And you are the big one.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes, sir.”

“Good system.”

Then he let his granddaughter escort him inside to wait properly.

Patel watched them go.

“That went better than expected.”

Gabriel smiled.

“His form was good.”

Mark looked at the photo.

“Composition was acceptable.”

Thane walked back toward the Humvee.

“I am never escaping this.”

“No,” Gabriel said. “But you are changing lives one quiet snarl at a time.”


At 23:32, Darnell’s noise complaint at Brookline Apartments turned into a missing remote control, a soundbar stuck at full volume, and three neighbors who had almost formed a tenants’ association out of spite.

The apartment belonged to a young man named Trevor who worked nights, slept days, and had somehow rolled onto the soundbar remote in his sleep.

The television had turned on.

The volume had risen.

A documentary about volcanoes had begun narrating the end of the world through shared walls.

By the time Darnell arrived, two neighbors were in the hallway, one was knocking on the wrong door, and Trevor was standing in his living room in pajama pants, hair wild, saying, “I thought the mountain was in my dream.”

Gabriel stood in the doorway and looked at the television, where molten lava flowed dramatically across the screen.

“Understandable.”

Mark found the remote under the couch cushion.

Darnell looked at Trevor.

“Maybe unplug it when you sleep?”

Trevor nodded.

“Yes. Definitely. I did not know it could go that loud.”

A neighbor in a robe said, “We did.”

The soundbar was turned off.

The volcano fell silent.

Trevor apologized.

The neighbors accepted, though one did so with the grim dignity of a woman who had lost trust in geology.

Back in the hallway, Darnell looked at Thane.

“How was Creed’s job thing?”

Thane paused.

Darnell lifted both hands.

“Too much?”

“No. It was good.”

Darnell nodded.

“Good.”

He did not ask more.

Thane appreciated that.

Darnell glanced toward the apartment.

“Everybody gets one volcano mistake.”

Gabriel stared at him.

“That is beautiful.”

Mark said, “It is not a general rule.”

“It is now,” Gabriel said.


The rest of the night stayed ordinary.

A suspicious person behind a closed hardware store turned out to be the owner’s nephew looking for a dropped wallet.

A call about “screaming in the drainage ditch” turned out to be foxes, which Gabriel insisted sounded like “haunted toddlers” and Mark refused to dignify with a response.

A woman at a gas station locked her keys in her car while the engine was running, and Thane had to stand behind Gabriel while Gabriel talked her out of breaking her own window with a tire gauge.

At 03:18, dispatch sent them back to the closed nursery.

The teenagers had found Lasagna.

Gabriel treated the recovery like a major case closure.

The cat, an enormous orange creature with torn ears and the expression of a retired mob boss, sat in a pet carrier beside the nursery fence while two teenagers beamed and Grant pretended not to be charmed.

Gabriel crouched in front of the carrier.

“Lasagna.”

The cat stared at him.

“I worried about you.”

Lasagna blinked once.

Mark looked at the teenagers.

“Did you notify the owner?”

“Yes, sir,” one said. “She is coming.”

Thane stood near the fence, watching the quiet street.

Grant looked at Gabriel.

“Happy?”

“Yes.”

“You know the cat does not care.”

Gabriel looked wounded.

“He cares in his own way.”

Lasagna yawned.

Mark said, “That way appears indifferent.”

“Emotionally private,” Gabriel said.

When the owner arrived, she cried, hugged both teenagers, thanked Grant, and then looked at the wolves with startled recognition.

“Did you find him?”

Gabriel pointed immediately to the teenagers.

“They did.”

The teenagers straightened.

Thane nodded.

“They did good.”

The owner hugged them again.

Lasagna complained from the carrier as if reunion itself was an inconvenience.

Gabriel watched the cat leave.

“That is closure.”

Mark entered the assist note.

“Lost cat recovered by civilians. Officers stood by.”

Gabriel leaned over.

“Add emotional support.”

“No.”

“Add Lasagna was majestic.”

“No.”

“Cold.”


Morning handoff came at 06:28.

Voss and Rusk were waiting in the case room.

Rusk had coffee.

Voss had a folder.

Neither looked surprised when Gabriel entered carrying two bags of donated rolls.

Voss looked at the bags.

“Do I want to know?”

“Bakery truck versus dumpster,” Gabriel said.

Rusk set down his coffee.

“Who won?”

“The dumpster remained undefeated,” Mark said.

Voss blinked.

Rusk slowly smiled.

“That was almost a Gabriel line.”

Mark looked briefly concerned.

Gabriel looked delighted.

“He is learning.”

“I am not.”

Thane set the patrol-assist notes on the table.

“Quiet shift. No arrests. No injuries. Bakery truck assist. Library welfare check. Noise complaint resolved. Hardware store check. Fox call. Lockout. Lost cat recovered.”

Rusk looked at the report.

“Lasagna?”

Gabriel nodded solemnly.

“Found.”

Voss looked at him.

“Good.”

Gabriel’s expression softened.

“Yes.”

Rusk glanced at Thane.

“Creed?”

Thane looked at him.

“First workday was good.”

Rusk nodded once.

No joke.

No push.

Just acknowledgment.

Voss’s eyes moved between all three of them.

“You alright?”

Thane thought about Silas at the loading dock.

The hug.

The promise.

The laugh when Thane said the shift was cool as hell.

The way he had gone back inside and picked up his end of a door instead of carrying it alone.

“Yes.”

This time, no one said mostly.

Voss closed the folder.

“Go home.”

Gabriel lifted the rolls.

“With bread?”

Rusk reached for one bag.

“With evidence.”

Mark immediately said, “It is not evidence.”

Rusk took a roll.

“Then it is breakfast.”

Gabriel handed the second bag to Voss.

Thane stood.

The shift had been ordinary.

Absurd in places.

Useful in others.

No big case.

No impossible door.

No chain.

Just people needing help in small ways and a city that kept giving them chances to show up.

In the garage, the Humvee waited under the pale morning light.

Gabriel climbed into the passenger seat with visible satisfaction.

“Lasagna is home. Bread is distributed. Volcano contained. Good night.”

Mark settled into the back.

“Technically morning.”

“Do not ruin the summary.”

Thane started the engine.

His phone buzzed before he shifted into reverse.

A message from an unknown number approved through probation contact.

I followed the rules today.

Thane stared at it for a moment.

Gabriel noticed.

“Silas?”

Thane nodded.

Mark leaned forward slightly.

Thane typed back.

Good. Do it again tomorrow.

The reply came after several seconds.

I will.

Thane put the phone down.

The garage door opened.

Morning waited.

He backed the Humvee out into it, Gabriel beside him and Mark behind him, carrying the quiet weight of one more right choice.

Not pack.

Not yet.

But not alone.

Chapter 86 — The Door Instead

The hearing was set for Friday afternoon.

That was the first sign that everyone understood the case had become something larger than a burglary prosecution.

Normal plea hearings did not require extra deputies, hospital security consultation, probation supervisors, district attorney leadership, city legal, county counsel, a medical-risk memo, a sealed supervision plan, a restitution trust agreement, and three werewolf detectives sitting in the second row like a quiet promise that the room could remain a room.

Silas Creed entered the courtroom through the side door at 13:54.

He was human.

Dressed in a dark gray suit Nora Wexler had arranged, because she had taken one look at the medical custody tear-away clothing and said no client of hers would stand for sentencing dressed like an institutional apology.

He wore no collar.

No chain.

No theatrical restraint.

A GPS ankle monitor sat beneath his left pant leg, visible only when he moved. Two deputies stood near him. Crowe stood by the side aisle. Thane, Gabriel, and Mark sat behind the prosecution table, not in uniform, not as witnesses for the moment, and not as rescuers.

Just present.

Silas saw them immediately.

His eyes found Thane first.

Then Gabriel.

Then Mark.

For one second, his face changed.

Not a smile.

Not relief exactly.

Something smaller.

Something he quickly put away.

He sat beside Nora at the defense table and placed both hands flat on the surface.

Model prisoner, Thane thought.

No tests.

No threats.

No clever comments about doors.

Silas had kept that promise through ten days of secure medical custody, four attorney visits, two medical evaluations, one controlled transformation assessment, one probation-risk interview, and an uncomfortable number of people asking him what he could break if he wanted to.

He had answered.

Honestly, according to Mark’s review of the reports.

That mattered.

It did not erase anything.

It mattered anyway.

Gabriel leaned slightly toward Thane.

“He looks terrified.”

Thane kept his eyes forward.

“Yes.”

Mark said quietly, “He is entering a room where every possible future is controlled by other people.”

Gabriel glanced at him.

“That was bleak.”

“It is also accurate.”

Thane looked at Silas again.

Silas sat very still.

Too still.

Like movement itself might be mistaken for threat.

The courtroom filled in layers.

District Attorney Kincaid sat at the prosecution table with Assistant District Attorney Tran beside her. Kincaid had agreed to recommend the plea, but she had not become gentle about it. She had made that clear in every meeting Eli had described.

The victims sat on the left side of the gallery.

Arthur and Elise Redding.

Daniel and Priya Harlan.

Magnus and Caroline Albrecht.

They did not sit together.

They did not look at Silas the same way.

Arthur looked like he wanted prison.

Elise looked tired.

Priya held a folded tissue in one hand.

Daniel’s jaw stayed tight.

Magnus Albrecht looked offended by the entire justice system.

Caroline watched Silas with a quietness Thane could not read.

Eli sat behind the defense table but one row back, because he represented the support structure, not Silas. He wore a dark suit, calm expression, and the faint air of a man who had already told everyone in the building no at least twice.

Voss and Rusk stood near the back wall.

Chief Whitaker sat beside Mercer.

Darnell, Patel, and Grant had come in plain clothes on their own time and stayed near the aisle.

No media were in the courtroom.

The judge had ordered that.

The case was public.

The spectacle was not.

At 14:02, the bailiff called the room to order.

Judge Marianne Bellamy entered.

Everyone stood.

Silas stood too, hands visible, shoulders tight.

Judge Bellamy was in her sixties, with short white hair, dark-framed glasses, and the kind of face that suggested she had heard every excuse in the county and filed most of them under weather.

She took the bench, looked over the courtroom, and let the silence settle.

Then she said, “Be seated.”

The room obeyed.

Judge Bellamy opened the file in front of her.

“We are here in State of Oklahoma versus Silas Creed. This matter is set for plea and sentencing recommendation under a negotiated agreement submitted by the state, defense counsel, probation, medical custody representatives, and the court-approved restitution administrator.”

Her eyes lifted.

“I have reviewed the agreement. I have reviewed the risk assessment. I have reviewed the medical containment report. I have reviewed the victim impact statements submitted in writing. I have reviewed the proposed restitution structure and the funding disclosures.”

She looked over her glasses.

“I have also reviewed photographs of my interview hallway looking as though a tornado learned burglary.”

A small sound moved through the room.

Not laughter exactly.

Pressure releasing.

Silas looked down.

Judge Bellamy’s expression did not soften.

“This is an unusual case. That does not make it unserious. Mr. Creed is not here because of what he is. He is here because of what he did.”

The room went still again.

Good, Thane thought.

Good.

Judge Bellamy turned to Kincaid.

“State.”

Kincaid stood.

“Your Honor, the state has reached a negotiated plea agreement with the defendant. Under that agreement, Mr. Creed will plead guilty to multiple counts, including first-degree burglary, grand larceny, unlawful computer access, attempted burglary, destruction of property, and escape-related charges arising from his conduct at Cross Timber Police Department.”

Silas did not move.

Kincaid continued.

“The state will recommend a fifteen-year deferred sentence under strict supervision, with the full prison term available upon violation. The recommendation is conditioned on full allocution, return of all recoverable property, full restitution, no contact with victims, GPS monitoring, home and work confinement, court-approved housing, court-approved employment, mandatory therapy, transformation-control compliance, regular judicial review, and restrictions on all security, alarm, estate, art-handling, locksmithing, private acquisition, and related consulting work.”

She paused.

“This recommendation is not made because Mr. Creed’s conduct was minor. It was not. It is not made because the victims were unharmed. They were harmed. Their homes were violated. Their privacy was exploited. Their sense of safety was damaged.”

Arthur Redding’s face tightened.

Kincaid did not look away from the judge.

“This recommendation is made because the state believes this structure provides the best available path to public safety, victim restitution, accountability, and lawful containment of a defendant whose physiology creates extraordinary detention problems not contemplated by ordinary correctional facilities.”

Judge Bellamy nodded slightly.

“Defense.”

Nora stood.

“Your Honor, Mr. Creed is prepared to plead guilty and accept the conditions outlined. He understands this is not leniency without consequence. He understands that any violation may result in prison. He understands that the court is giving him a door, not erasing the lock.”

Thane looked down for a second.

A door.

Nora continued.

“He is prepared to speak to the court and to the victims.”

Judge Bellamy looked at Silas.

“Mr. Creed, stand.”

Silas stood.

His hands remained at his sides.

Judge Bellamy watched him carefully.

“Do you understand the agreement presented to this court?”

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“Do you understand that I do not have to accept it?”

“Yes.”

“Do you understand that if I do accept it and you violate the conditions, you may be sentenced to prison for the full term available under the law?”

“Yes.”

“Do you understand that your ability to transform does not place you outside the law?”

Silas’s eyes flicked once toward Thane.

Then back to the judge.

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“Do you understand that your history may explain parts of your life, but it does not excuse these crimes?”

Silas swallowed.

“Yes, Your Honor.”

Judge Bellamy sat back.

“Then tell me what you did.”

Silas looked down at the table.

For a moment, Thane thought he might fail.

Not because he would refuse responsibility.

Because saying it aloud in front of the people he had harmed required a kind of strength he had never practiced.

Nora did not touch him.

She did not rescue him.

Good attorney, Thane thought.

Silas lifted his head.

“I used my work as a security consultant to learn private information about homes, safes, alarm systems, hidden rooms, and valuables.”

His voice was rough but clear.

“I used access credentials and knowledge from that work to disable or bypass security systems. I targeted the Redding home, the Harlan home, and the Albrecht home because I believed the owners were away and because I knew or suspected where they kept valuable property.”

Arthur stared at him.

Silas forced himself not to look away.

“I tore doors open. I broke safes. I entered private rooms. I stole art, jewelry, cash, watches, coins, and other property. I took items that had financial value and items that had personal value.”

Priya’s hand tightened around the tissue.

Silas saw it.

His voice changed.

“I made people afraid in their own homes. I used information they trusted professionals with against them. I told myself they had enough that it did not matter.”

He paused.

“That was a lie.”

The courtroom held its breath.

Silas continued.

“When I was arrested, I broke restraints, changed form, damaged the interview room, and tried to escape. I endangered officers and staff. I did that because I thought being stronger meant I could leave.”

His eyes found Thane again.

Then returned to the judge.

“I was wrong.”

Judge Bellamy let the silence sit.

Then she said, “Victim statements.”

Arthur Redding stood first.

He had written his statement.

He did not read much of it.

He looked at Silas and said, “You made my home feel like a display case you could open. I still check doors three times a night. My wife will not go into the gallery alone. I do not care what happened to you when you were young. You chose us because you thought we were soft targets with expensive things.”

Silas said nothing.

Arthur looked at the judge.

“I do not support this agreement. I think he should go to prison.”

He sat.

The words landed hard because they were fair.

Elise stood next.

She did read.

Her voice shook only once.

She spoke about walking into her house and knowing something was wrong before seeing the damage. About how the missing art mattered less than the hidden room being exposed. About feeling foolish for trusting locks.

Then she looked at Silas.

“I do not forgive you. But I do not know what prison means for someone like you. I do not know whether it makes anyone safer or just angrier. I want the court to make him answer. I also want him watched carefully if you let him out.”

Silas bowed his head.

Priya Harlan spoke about the bronze bird.

“My father touched that piece every time he visited,” she said. “He said it looked like something about to fly but deciding to stay. You took it because you knew it mattered. Or maybe because you did not care that it mattered.”

Silas’s eyes closed briefly.

Priya looked at Judge Bellamy.

“I support restitution. I support getting our property back. I support him having consequences. I do not know if I support this plea. But I heard he has to say what he did. I heard he has to live under rules. I heard he has to work. Maybe that is better than putting another angry person in a hole.”

Daniel Harlan did not speak.

Magnus Albrecht did.

He opposed the agreement in polished, furious language and used the phrase “outrageous public-safety experiment” twice.

Caroline Albrecht spoke last.

She said only, “If the court does this, do not do it because of the wolves in the room. Do it because it is the right sentence. If it is not the right sentence, do not let them make it feel right.”

Judge Bellamy nodded.

“Thank you.”

Thane felt that sentence settle in his chest.

Do not let them make it feel right.

That mattered too.

Judge Bellamy turned a page.

“Detective Thane.”

Thane stood.

The courtroom shifted slightly.

Not fear.

Attention.

Silas looked at him.

The victims looked at him.

So did the judge.

Judge Bellamy studied him for several seconds.

“Detective, I am aware you are not appearing as an investigator today. You are appearing because the proposed supervision plan names you, Detective Gabriel, and Detective Mark as approved support contacts and transformation-control mentors under probation oversight.”

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“I am also aware, on a less formal note, that my granddaughter believes the Kaden Face is among the highest achievements of modern law enforcement.”

A ripple of laughter moved through the room before anyone could stop it.

Gabriel covered his mouth.

Mark looked at the floor.

Thane’s ears went hot.

Judge Bellamy lifted one hand.

“That is not why you are speaking today.”

“No, Your Honor.”

“But it is why I know that public admiration can make otherwise intelligent adults forget that you are not magic.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“So I am asking you plainly. Why are you doing this?”

The room became still again.

Thane looked at Silas first.

Then the victims.

Then the judge.

“Because I helped put him in that room.”

Silas’s expression changed.

Thane continued.

“I know what he did. I worked the case. I saw the doors. The safes. The hidden rooms. I saw how carefully he chose targets. I know he hurt people.”

He looked toward Arthur and Elise.

“Not only financially. He made homes feel unsafe. He used trust like a tool. That matters.”

Arthur’s face stayed hard.

Thane accepted it.

“I also know what he is. Not completely. He shifts. We do not. His life is different from ours. But he is close enough that when I saw him chained by the neck in a concrete room, I understood something that is difficult to write in a report.”

Judge Bellamy waited.

Thane’s voice lowered.

“No wolf belongs in a cage.”

Silas looked down.

Gabriel’s eyes shone.

Mark stayed still.

Thane continued.

“That does not mean no wolf belongs under law. It does not mean no punishment. It does not mean victims matter less. It means the answer should not become cruelty because the system is scared of what he can break.”

The judge’s expression did not move.

Thane went on.

“He made bad choices. Criminal choices. I am not asking you to pretend otherwise. I am asking for a sentence that can hold him without destroying whatever part of him might still learn to be safe.”

He looked at Silas.

“He thought strength meant permission. He was wrong. He has to learn that strength means responsibility. Restraint. Work. Rules. Being told no and obeying it.”

Silas swallowed.

Thane looked back to the judge.

“If he violates, he should face the consequences. If he hurts someone, he should face them. If he lies, runs, shifts outside his conditions, contacts victims, touches security work, or tests the boundaries, then the door closes.”

He paused.

“But if he follows the rules, works, pays restitution, attends therapy, learns control, and lives where probation can see him, then maybe he becomes safer than a chain could ever make him.”

Judge Bellamy leaned back slightly.

“And your money?”

Thane’s ears tipped back.

“My money should not touch the scale.”

“Explain.”

“It should not buy forgiveness. It should not buy support. It should not make the victims feel like their fear has a price tag. If the court accepts money for restitution and supervision costs, it should be because those costs exist and can be paid cleanly. Not because anyone owes me anything.”

Judge Bellamy watched him.

“What do you get out of this?”

Thane answered honestly.

“I get to not walk away from a cage I helped fill.”

Silence.

Then Judge Bellamy looked at Gabriel.

“Detective Gabriel, do you agree with him?”

Gabriel stood.

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“Why?”

Gabriel looked at Silas.

Then the victims.

“Because compassion without accountability is just another way to ignore harm. But accountability without a way forward can turn into storage. I do not want him stored. I want him watched, restricted, forced to face what he did, and given a chance to make a different choice every day.”

Judge Bellamy nodded.

“Detective Mark.”

Mark stood.

“I agree with the proposed structure because it is more measurable than indefinite improvisation.”

A faint smile touched the judge’s mouth.

“Go on.”

“Prison infrastructure is not currently designed for his transformation risk. Secure medical custody is not a long-term correctional environment. The proposed conditions create known boundaries: location monitoring, employment restrictions, prohibited industries, therapy, control training, regular review, no-contact orders, financial restitution, search conditions, and revocation exposure.”

Mark glanced at Silas.

“It is not trust. It is a framework in which trust can be earned or lost with documented behavior.”

Judge Bellamy nodded slowly.

“Thank you.”

They sat.

Silas looked at the table.

Something had shifted in him.

Not absolution.

Not relief.

Recognition.

He had watched the court listen to three wolves with respect, skepticism, humor, and seriousness all at once.

He had watched them be admired without being excused from questions.

He had watched Thane speak for him and against him in the same breath.

That was a different way to be seen.

Judge Bellamy took off her glasses.

“I have spent the better part of my career telling defendants that their past does not decide their future. I have also told many victims that accountability is not the same as revenge.”

She looked at Silas.

“Mr. Creed, you are dangerous. Not because you are a werewolf. Because you are intelligent, practiced, angry, and have used strength and access to harm others.”

Silas stood straighter.

“This agreement is not mercy without teeth. It is a leash you have agreed to hold yourself. If you drop it, this court will not hesitate.”

“Yes, Your Honor.”

Judge Bellamy turned to the victims.

“To the victims: this court has heard you. I understand not all of you support this resolution. Your opposition is part of the record. Your restitution rights remain intact. Your safety matters. Your fear matters. This court is not assigning a lesser value to your homes because the defendant presents an unusual detention problem.”

Arthur looked down.

Priya wiped at her eyes.

Judge Bellamy replaced her glasses.

“After review, I will accept the plea agreement.”

The room exhaled.

Not all in relief.

Some in anger.

Some in disbelief.

Some in something too complicated to name.

Silas closed his eyes.

Judge Bellamy continued.

“Mr. Creed, I accept your guilty plea. Sentencing is deferred for fifteen years under the terms filed and modified on the record today. You will comply with GPS monitoring, home and work confinement, court-approved housing, court-approved employment, therapy, medical review, transformation-control conditions, and all restrictions stated in the agreement. You will have no contact with victims. You will return all property and identify any unrecovered property immediately through counsel. You will not work in security, alarms, safes, locksmithing, estate access, art handling, private acquisitions, or any similar field. You will not shift except under approved conditions or genuine emergency, and any involuntary shift must be reported immediately.”

Silas nodded.

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“If you violate, I can sentence you to prison. Do you understand?”

“Yes.”

“If you test this court, you will lose.”

“Yes.”

“If you test Detective Thane, I suspect you will also lose.”

The courtroom went very quiet.

Then, unexpectedly, Rusk made a sound near the back wall and covered it with a cough.

Gabriel looked down.

Thane did not move.

Judge Bellamy’s eyes flicked toward Thane.

“That was an observation, not a condition.”

“Yes, Your Honor,” Silas said.

For the first time, his mouth twitched.

Judge Bellamy closed the file.

“Then choose better, Mr. Creed. Every day. Court will review compliance in thirty days.”

The gavel came down.


The release process took six hours.

Because freedom, when constructed by lawyers, probation officers, medical staff, deputies, court clerks, and one extremely suspicious county supervisor, moved at the speed of signatures.

Silas was not released from the courthouse directly.

He was transported back to secure medical for processing, final medical clearance, removal from custody status, installation confirmation for the GPS monitor, probation intake, and review of the housing plan.

Thane, Gabriel, and Mark waited in a conference room with Eli, Nora, and Probation Supervisor Hale.

Not Sergeant Hale from CLEET.

A different Hale.

This one was shorter, human, female, and possessed the same dry stare as every effective supervision officer Thane had ever met.

She explained Silas’s conditions like she was reading weather warnings.

“Residence except approved work, therapy, medical, legal, probation, court, or pre-approved mentor contact. No alcohol. No weapons. No access devices. No unauthorized internet-capable work without monitoring. No security consulting. No client homes. No private locked spaces except his own residence. No travel outside county without approval. No contact with victims. No shifting except approved sessions or emergency. GPS tamper equals violation. Missed check-in equals violation. Unapproved absence equals violation. Aggressive conduct equals violation. Threats equal violation.”

Gabriel whispered, “She is thorough.”

Mark whispered back, “Good.”

Eli looked at both of them.

They stopped.

Supervisor Hale turned to Thane.

“You are listed as support contact. That does not make you probation.”

“I understand.”

“You do not authorize anything.”

“I understand.”

“You do not hide anything.”

“I will not.”

“You do not decide a violation is no big deal because you empathize.”

Thane met her eyes.

“I will report violations.”

She studied him.

Then nodded once.

“Good.”

Gabriel lifted one hand.

“Are we also support contacts?”

“Yes,” Hale said. “That means if he calls you at two in the morning because he wants to shift and run through a wall, you call probation.”

Gabriel nodded.

“And possibly Thane.”

“After probation.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Thane said, “After probation.”

Mark asked, “What employment categories are initially acceptable?”

Hale looked at him.

“Warehouse, supervised physical labor, municipal contractor work if no restricted access, approved restoration shop, maybe disaster cleanup if travel rules are handled. Nothing involving security systems, keys, alarms, safes, estate access, valuables, or vulnerable clients.”

Mark nodded.

“That is reasonable.”

Nora looked at Thane.

“The apartment is approved.”

Thane’s ears shifted.

Eli immediately said, “Through the court-approved housing support structure.”

“I know.”

“Say it.”

“Through the court-approved housing support structure.”

Gabriel leaned toward Mark.

“He is being trained.”

Mark said, “It is overdue.”

Eli continued.

“It is not a gift Silas can sell. It is not in your name personally. It is a one-year lease with review, paid through the support trust, disclosed to the court, conditioned on compliance, and administered independently.”

Thane nodded.

“Good.”

Nora’s expression softened slightly.

“It is a nice apartment.”

Thane looked at her.

“Good.”

“Not extravagant.”

“Good.”

“Stable.”

Thane nodded again.

“Good.”

Gabriel looked at him.

“That is three goods.”

“I heard.”

“You are having feelings.”

“Yes.”

Mark said, “Understandable.”

Eli looked at all three of them.

“When he walks out, do not overwhelm him.”

Gabriel put one paw over his chest.

“I am famously subtle.”

Eli stared.

Gabriel lowered his paw.

“I will become subtle.”


At 19:41, Silas Creed walked out of secure medical without the collar.

That was the moment Thane had been waiting for and dreading at the same time.

The safe door opened.

Not for a visit.

Not for medical staff.

Not for deputies to check restraints.

For release.

Silas stepped through wearing the same gray suit from court, though the jacket was now folded over one arm. The ankle monitor was secured. A folder of probation documents rested in Nora’s hand. Supervisor Hale stood on one side. Laird stood on the other, arms folded.

Silas stopped in the corridor when he saw Thane, Gabriel, and Mark.

For a second, his hand moved unconsciously toward his throat.

Where the collar had been.

Nothing was there.

His fingers touched skin.

His eyes closed briefly.

Thane felt something inside his own chest ease and hurt at the same time.

Laird noticed too.

Her face did not soften much.

But it softened enough.

“You come back here because you did something stupid,” she said, “and I will be extremely disappointed.”

Silas opened his eyes.

“Yes, ma’am.”

“I mean that in the professional sense.”

“I understand.”

“And the personal one.”

Silas looked at her.

Laird pointed at him.

“Do not make me build a bigger chain.”

Silas swallowed.

“I will try not to.”

“No,” Thane said.

Silas looked at him.

Thane stepped closer.

“You will not.”

Silas went still.

Then nodded.

“I will not.”

Nora handed him the folder.

“You ride with Probation to the apartment. Detectives will meet you there. That is the approved sequence.”

Silas looked at Thane.

Thane nodded.

“We will see you there.”

Silas seemed like he wanted to say something.

He did not.

Good, Thane thought.

One step at a time.


The apartment was on the ground floor of a quiet complex near the north edge of town.

Not luxury.

Not cheap.

Clean brick buildings. Good lighting. Working cameras in public areas. A small patch of grass behind the unit. A grocery store within walking distance. A bus stop near the entrance. Probation-approved routes. No wealthy estates nearby. No private security clients. No hidden vaults.

The unit had one bedroom, a small living room, a kitchen, a bathroom, and a back patio with a privacy fence just high enough to make it feel like a boundary without feeling like a cage.

The furniture was simple and sturdy.

Sofa.

Table.

Chairs.

Bed.

Dresser.

Cookware.

Towels.

Food in the pantry.

Coffee.

Not because Thane had asked.

Because Gabriel had.

Mark had added labels to the breaker panel, Wi-Fi instructions, emergency numbers, probation contacts, trash schedule, and a printed copy of Silas’s approved movement conditions in a folder on the counter.

Gabriel saw the folder and sighed.

“You labeled freedom.”

Mark said, “Freedom with conditions benefits from clarity.”

Silas stood in the doorway, holding the probation folder against his side, staring into the apartment like he did not trust it to remain real if he stepped fully inside.

Supervisor Hale stood behind him.

“This is your approved residence. GPS boundary is set. You may move within the unit, patio, and assigned parking space. Work search appointments require approval. Therapy starts Tuesday. Probation check-in Monday at 09:00. Any questions?”

Silas looked at the living room.

“No.”

Hale’s eyes narrowed.

“That was too quick.”

Silas looked at her.

“I have questions. I do not know how to ask them yet.”

That answer seemed to satisfy her more.

“Start with reading the folder.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Hale looked at Thane.

“You have thirty minutes.”

Thane nodded.

“Understood.”

She left with Nora after a final look that promised consequences in several legal dialects.

Eli remained near the door long enough to look at Thane.

“No speeches that create obligations.”

Thane sighed.

“I know.”

“No promises beyond approved support.”

“I know.”

“No saying pack in a way that makes me appear by summoning circle.”

Gabriel’s ears lifted.

“Can you do that?”

Eli looked at him.

“I already do.”

Gabriel nodded slowly.

“That explains things.”

Eli left.

The door closed.

For the first time, Silas stood in a room that was his and not locked from the outside.

He did not move.

Gabriel’s voice was gentle.

“You can come in.”

Silas looked down.

“I know.”

Mark said, “Do you?”

Silas gave a small, uneven breath.

“Not yet.”

Thane stepped into the living room first.

Gabriel followed.

Mark went to the counter and set down the small grocery bag he had insisted on bringing despite the pantry already being stocked.

Silas finally crossed the threshold.

No chain followed him.

He noticed.

Everyone noticed.

He set the folder on the table with care, as though careless movement might void the room.

“This is mine?”

“For now,” Thane said. “As long as you comply.”

Silas looked at him.

“Not a gift.”

“No.”

“Not a reward.”

“No.”

“Not pack.”

Thane held his gaze.

“Not pack.”

Silas nodded.

The words hurt him.

They also steadied him.

“Good.”

Gabriel sat on the arm of the sofa.

“You keep saying that when people tell you no.”

Silas looked at him.

“I trust no when it is honest.”

Gabriel’s face changed.

He did not make a joke.

Mark opened the folder on the counter.

“Your conditions are here. Probation contacts here. Emergency medical instructions here. If you feel an involuntary shift coming, this number first, then this number, then us if approved by probation.”

Silas looked at the papers.

“You made instructions.”

“Yes.”

“Of course you did.”

“It seemed useful.”

Silas looked at him.

“It is.”

Mark nodded once.

Thane walked to the kitchen counter.

“There is food. Coffee. Basic things. If something is missing, tell probation or Nora. Do not decide a store shelf is easier.”

Silas’s mouth twitched.

“That was almost a joke.”

“It was not.”

Gabriel smiled.

“It was a little.”

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel lifted both paws.

“Supportive observation.”

Silas walked slowly through the apartment.

Bedroom.

Bathroom.

Kitchen.

Back patio.

He opened the patio door and stepped outside.

The privacy fence enclosed a small concrete slab, a strip of grass, and a view of the complex’s rear lawn.

The sky had turned violet over the trees.

Silas stood in the doorway with one hand on the frame.

Not pushing.

Not testing.

Just touching.

Thane stayed inside.

Gabriel and Mark stayed behind him.

Silas spoke without turning.

“I thought I would die in that room.”

No one answered quickly.

Then Thane said, “So did I.”

Silas turned.

His eyes were wet again.

He did not hide it this time.

“Why?”

Thane knew what he meant.

Why the money.

Why the court.

Why the apartment.

Why the fight.

Why the door.

“No wolf belongs in a cage.”

Silas looked down.

Thane continued.

“That does not mean you are free of what you did. It means you are free enough to choose what you do next.”

Silas pressed his lips together.

“I do not know how to be this.”

Gabriel stood.

“Neither did we.”

Silas looked at him skeptically.

Gabriel shrugged.

“Different circumstances. But we had to learn what our strength meant too.”

Mark added, “And what it did not mean.”

Thane walked closer.

“I will help you find work.”

Silas blinked.

“Work.”

“Legal work. Approved work. Something that uses strength without using access. Warehouse. restoration. disaster cleanup. Whatever probation approves.”

Silas stared.

“You are serious.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel said, “You are not allowed anywhere near rich people’s safes for a while.”

Silas gave a broken little laugh.

“No.”

Mark said, “Possibly ever.”

Silas nodded.

“Fair.”

Thane looked toward the small living room.

“You can call us if you need help. Advice. Control. Company. If your conditions allow it, and if probation approves, you can come to the cabin sometimes.”

Silas went still.

Not dramatically.

Completely.

Gabriel watched him carefully.

Mark did too.

Thane continued before Silas could misunderstand.

“You call first. You do not come to hide. You do not come if you have violated. You do not come instead of calling probation when probation is required. You come because being alone with your head can be dangerous and because sometimes a wolf needs to sit in a room with other wolves and remember he has choices.”

Silas’s face folded.

Not much.

Enough that the man who had once ripped vault doors open looked like he might fall under the weight of a chair offered kindly.

“I do not know how to repay this.”

“You do not,” Thane said.

Silas shook his head.

“I have to.”

“No.”

“I do.”

Thane stepped closer.

“No debt.”

Silas looked at him through tears.

Thane’s voice was firm now.

“No favors. No special loyalty. No pretending we were right if we are wrong. No silence if you are in trouble. No gratitude that turns into a leash.”

Silas swallowed.

“What, then?”

“Compliance,” Mark said.

Silas looked at him.

Mark’s voice was steady.

“Truth. Work. Restitution. Therapy. Court appearances. No hidden devices. No testing locks. No using people’s trust against them. No confusing help with permission.”

Gabriel said, “And eat actual meals.”

Silas laughed and wiped his face with one hand.

“I thought the gray one was the strict one.”

“I am,” Mark said.

Gabriel pointed at himself.

“I contain nutritional concern.”

Thane looked at Silas.

“You promised not to let us down.”

Silas’s expression tightened.

“I do.”

“That is too much pressure,” Thane said.

Silas blinked.

Thane continued.

“Promise to follow the rules today. Then tomorrow, promise again.”

Silas stared at him.

Then nodded slowly.

“Today,” he said.

“Good.”

“And tomorrow.”

“When tomorrow comes.”

Silas looked around the apartment again.

Sofa.

Table.

Kitchen.

Folder.

Food.

Door.

A door that opened.

A door that locked from the inside.

A door he did not have to rip apart.

“I promise today,” Silas said.

Thane nodded.

“That is enough.”


They left at 20:16.

Silas stood inside the apartment doorway as they walked out.

He did not follow them.

He did not test the boundary.

He did not make a joke about locks.

He simply stood there with one hand on the doorframe, watching three wolves walk away from the first room that had ever been given to him with rules instead of chains.

At the Humvee, Gabriel stopped and looked back.

Silas was still there.

Gabriel lifted one paw.

Silas hesitated.

Then lifted his hand.

Mark got into the backseat.

Gabriel climbed into the passenger seat.

Thane stood beside the driver’s door for one more second.

Across the lot, Silas slowly closed his apartment door.

From the outside, it looked like any other door.

Plain.

Painted.

Numbered.

Ordinary.

But Thane knew better.

Some doors were built of steel and fear.

Some were built of law and conditions.

Some were built by lawyers, judges, victims, probation officers, medical staff, and people willing to be told no until the yes was clean enough to hold.

This one had a lock.

It also had a way out.

Thane climbed into the Humvee.

Gabriel looked at him.

“You okay?”

Thane started the engine.

“Yes.”

Mark leaned forward from the back.

“That sounded true.”

“It is.”

Gabriel looked toward the apartment.

“You think he can do it?”

Thane watched the closed door.

“I think he can do today.”

Mark nodded.

“Today is measurable.”

Gabriel smiled faintly.

“Of course you like that.”

Thane put the Humvee in gear.

They pulled out of the complex and turned toward home.

Behind them, Silas Creed stood in a quiet apartment with food in the pantry, rules on the counter, a monitor on his ankle, a suspended sentence over his head, victims he could not contact, debts he could only repay through obedience and restitution, and a future narrow enough to frighten him.

But it was not a cage.

Not anymore.

And for tonight, that was enough.

Chapter 85 — No Wolf Belongs in a Cage

By Saturday evening, the cabin had gone quiet in a way that usually meant everyone was thinking too loudly.

Gabriel sat on the great-room sofa with one leg stretched out and the other folded beneath him, pretending to watch a movie neither Thane nor Mark had agreed to. The volume was low enough that the dialogue blurred into noise.

Mark sat at the dining table with his laptop open, a legal pad beside it, and three pens arranged parallel to the edge of the paper. He had not written anything for several minutes.

Thane stood near the windows, looking out into the trees.

The secure medical unit had stayed with him.

Not the building.

Not the deputies.

Not Laird’s dry voice or the absurd safe door with its bolts and locking wheel.

The chain.

The huge steel chain running from Silas’s collar to the wall anchor.

It had been necessary.

Thane knew that.

Silas had broken standard cuffs. He had ripped an interview-room door out of its frame. He had tried to run through a police station. He had hurt people with fear, violation, theft, and the deliberate use of his strength to make other people’s walls meaningless.

The chain had been necessary.

That did not make it bearable.

Gabriel paused the movie.

The screen froze on a man holding a flashlight in what appeared to be a basement no reasonable person should have entered.

“Thane.”

Thane did not turn.

“Yeah?”

“You have been staring at the trees for twenty-two minutes.”

Mark looked up.

“Twenty-four.”

Gabriel glanced at him.

“I was giving him emotional privacy.”

“You were giving him inaccurate privacy.”

Thane’s mouth moved slightly.

Not quite a smile.

Gabriel set the remote down.

“Say it.”

Thane turned from the window.

“I want him out of that room.”

The words landed.

Neither Gabriel nor Mark looked surprised.

That almost made it harder.

Mark closed the laptop.

Gabriel leaned forward, elbows on his knees.

“The secure room.”

“Yes.”

“The concrete room with the giant chain.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

“Me too.”

Mark did not answer quickly.

Thane looked at him.

Mark’s face was calm, but the calm had weight behind it.

“He cannot simply be released.”

“I know.”

“He committed planned burglaries.”

“I know.”

“He violated homes.”

“I know.”

“He used private information against people who trusted him professionally.”

“I know.”

“He escaped custody.”

“Attempted.”

“After breaking restraints and a police interview-room door.”

Thane’s ears tipped back.

“Yes.”

Mark’s voice stayed level.

“He terrified victims. He endangered officers. He is dangerous.”

Thane looked down.

“Yes.”

Gabriel stood and crossed the room slowly.

His expression was different now.

Less humor.

More pack.

“I want him out of that room too,” Gabriel said. “But I do not want Elise Redding or Priya Harlan hearing that our money matters more than their fear.”

Thane closed his eyes for half a second.

That struck where it was supposed to.

“I do not want that either.”

Mark stood from the table.

“You participated in the investigation. You physically subdued him. You are a witness. Any attempt by you to pay restitution, court costs, attorney fees, housing, or supervision creates conflicts.”

“I know.”

“Do you?”

Thane looked at him.

Mark’s voice sharpened.

“Because wanting something good does not make the route good. Paying his restitution directly could look like buying leniency. Asking the district attorney for release into your custody could look like an arresting detective influencing prosecution. Offering him pack, housing, money, and work could look like reward after harm.”

Gabriel said quietly, “Mark.”

“No.” Thane lifted one paw. “He is right.”

Mark’s expression shifted, but he did not soften the next words.

“And ‘no wolf belongs in a cage’ cannot become ‘victims matter less when the defendant is like us.’”

Silence filled the room.

The words were brutal.

They were also true.

Thane looked back toward the trees.

“I know.”

Gabriel walked closer.

“But.”

Thane turned back.

Gabriel’s voice softened.

“But no wolf belongs in a cage.”

Mark looked away first.

That said enough.

Thane stepped toward them.

“He did wrong. I know that. He made choices. Criminal choices. Cruel choices. He has to answer for them.”

His voice stayed even, but the heat beneath it rose.

“But I saw that chain. I saw him sitting there with a collar around his neck like something out of a monster movie. I saw the first honest relief on his face when we walked in because we were the only people in the building who knew what he was without needing a containment briefing.”

Gabriel’s eyes lowered.

Thane continued.

“He is not innocent. I am not saying that. I am saying the room will not make him better. The chain will not make him safer. Not inside. It will teach him that every bad thing he believed about humans was true.”

Mark’s jaw tightened.

Thane looked at him.

“Tell me the clean way.”

Mark looked back.

“What?”

“Tell me the clean way,” Thane said. “I do not want to buy him out. I do not want to erase what he did. I do not want to hurt the victims twice. I want a way to get him out of the cage without pretending he does not belong in court.”

Gabriel nodded slowly.

“That is the right question.”

Mark was quiet.

Then he looked toward the dining table.

“We call Eli.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

“And we accept whatever ethical limits he gives us.”

“Yes.”

“And if the clean answer is no?”

Thane did not answer immediately.

That was the problem.

Gabriel watched him.

Mark did too.

Finally Thane said, “Then we keep looking for a clean answer that is not no.”

Mark sighed.

“That is not reassuring.”

“It is honest.”

Gabriel nodded.

“Also very Thane.”

Mark looked at him.

Gabriel shrugged.

“He asked for the clean way. Not the easy way.”

Mark picked up his phone from the table and slid it toward Thane.

“Call Eli.”


Elias Carroway answered on the third ring.

“Thane.”

“Eli.”

“It is Saturday evening. That means one of three things. You are in trouble, you have found trouble, or you are attempting to solve trouble in a way that will create a new legal category.”

Gabriel murmured, “He knows us too well.”

Thane put the call on speaker.

“It is Silas Creed.”

Eli was quiet for half a second.

Then his voice changed.

The amusement drained away, replaced by the precise calm of a lawyer sitting forward in his chair.

“Start at the beginning you are allowed to tell me.”

Thane did.

Not the evidence.

Not privileged case details beyond what was already in public filings or what Eli would learn soon enough through formal channels.

He described the medical lockup.

The room.

The chain.

The visit.

Silas’s history in broad terms as Silas had shared it.

The conversation about better choices.

The fact that Silas remained dangerous.

The fact that Thane could not stop seeing the collar.

When he finished, Eli did not speak for several seconds.

Then he said, “You want him released.”

“I want him out of a cage.”

“That is not the same legal sentence, but it is close enough to be dangerous.”

“I know.”

“Do you?”

Mark’s eyes flicked toward Thane.

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

Thane said, “Mark already said that.”

“Good. Then I can say it again with billable punctuation.”

“Eli.”

“You are an arresting officer, a detective involved in the investigation, a use-of-force witness, a wealthy potential benefactor, and someone with personal species-related identification with the defendant.”

Thane’s ears tipped back.

Eli continued.

“That combination is a conflict bonfire.”

“I know.”

“You cannot buy a sentence.”

“I do not want to.”

“You cannot buy forgiveness.”

“I know.”

“You cannot make victims whole by making them feel purchased.”

“I know.”

“You cannot offer Silas a soft landing so attractive that it appears crime led him to a better life than accountability would have.”

Thane closed his eyes.

“I know.”

“Good,” Eli said. “Now tell me what you actually want.”

Thane opened his eyes.

“I want a deferred sentence or structured probation if the DA will consider it. Long term. Strict. Ankle monitor. Home and work confinement. Therapy. Control training. No security work. No access to alarms, safes, estates, art handling, high-value clients. Full restitution. Full allocution. Court reviews. Prison time hanging over him if he violates.”

Mark looked faintly surprised.

Gabriel did too.

Thane continued.

“I want all stolen property returned. I want any damages not covered by recovered property or insurance paid. Repair costs, deductibles, uncovered loss, counseling if victims need it, court costs. I want to cover it, but cleanly. Through the court, or victim compensation, or whatever structure does not make it look like I am handing people money to feel better.”

Eli’s voice was quieter when he answered.

“That is better than I expected.”

Gabriel whispered, “That is Eli praise.”

Mark nodded once.

Thane said, “I want you to be his attorney.”

“No.”

The answer came instantly.

Thane went still.

Eli continued before he could respond.

“I cannot represent Silas as his criminal attorney.”

“Why?”

“Because I represent you. I represent Gabriel and Mark. I represent your financial structures, your philanthropic structures, and your interests. You are witnesses. You are involved in his arrest. You used force against him. Your interests and his interests may diverge sharply.”

Thane looked down.

“Okay.”

“What I can do,” Eli said, “is arrange independent criminal counsel for him. Someone excellent. Someone who answers to Silas, not to you. I can pay that attorney through a clean structure you fund, provided Silas consents and the court is aware. I can represent you in making a lawful support offer. I can negotiate with the DA on your behalf regarding restitution funding, housing support, supervision resources, and expert assistance.”

Thane absorbed that.

“Who?”

“Nora Wexler.”

Gabriel’s eyebrows lifted.

Mark’s did too.

Thane knew the name.

Carroway & Wexler.

Eli’s partner.

Former federal public defender, according to the brief biography Eli had once grudgingly allowed them to read when Gabriel accused him of being “suspiciously lawyer-shaped.”

Eli said, “Nora handles criminal defense and complex sentencing. If she agrees and if conflict review clears, she represents Silas. I do not. And if she represents Silas, she represents Silas. Not you. Not your guilt. Not your hope. Him.”

Thane nodded slowly.

“Good.”

“You do not get privileged updates.”

“I understand.”

“You do not steer the defense.”

“I understand.”

“You do not tell her what Silas should accept.”

“I understand.”

“You do not ask Silas to accept a deal because you want him out of that room.”

Thane’s jaw tightened.

“I understand.”

Eli’s voice softened by one degree.

“And, Thane, if Silas wants to plead guilty and accept prison rather than live under supervision connected to you, that is his choice.”

Thane had not expected that to hurt.

It did.

“Yes.”

Gabriel looked at him.

Mark looked down at the legal pad.

Eli continued.

“Now, as for restitution. We can offer a court-administered restitution fund. Not direct payments from you to victims. We can cover repair costs, insurance deductibles, uncovered losses, security repairs, appraisal gaps, and documented emotional-harm services if the court allows. The offer cannot be contingent on victims supporting the plea.”

“Good.”

“It must be available whether they support it or not.”

“Yes.”

“It cannot buy their silence.”

“No.”

“It cannot buy their forgiveness.”

“No.”

“It cannot buy Silas a door.”

Thane’s ears shifted.

Eli let that sit.

Then said, “It can help build one if the court decides a door is lawful.”

Gabriel exhaled softly.

Thane looked toward the dark windows.

“Can you talk to Silas?”

“I can ask Nora to meet him tonight. I can join for the portion involving your proposed support only if Nora approves and Silas consents. But he needs his own lawyer before anyone discusses plea possibilities.”

“I want to see him too.”

“No.”

“Eli.”

“No. Not until counsel is assigned and present. You have already had one welfare visit. Anything from here forward touches legal strategy, sentencing, restitution, supervision, and custody. You do not walk into that room again because your heart is loud.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark’s mouth tightened, approving despite himself.

Thane said, “Fine.”

“Say that like it is true.”

“It is true.”

“No, it is not. But you will obey it.”

Thane’s mouth twitched despite everything.

“Yes.”

Eli sighed.

“I will make calls. Do not contact the DA directly. Do not contact victims. Do not contact Silas. Do not write checks. Do not lease apartments. Do not set up employment. Do not solve anything until I tell you what shape the solution can legally have.”

Gabriel whispered, “He is taking away all your hobbies.”

Thane ignored him.

“Thank you, Eli.”

“Do not thank me yet. This is going to be ugly.”

“I know.”

“No,” Eli said. “You do not. But you will.”

The call ended.

For a moment, the cabin remained silent.

Then Gabriel said, “Well.”

Mark looked at the phone.

“That was the correct answer.”

“It was a lot of no.”

“Yes.”

Thane sat down slowly in the nearest chair.

Gabriel sat across from him.

Mark stayed standing.

Thane looked at both of them.

“He was right.”

“Yes,” Mark said.

Gabriel nodded.

“Annoyingly.”

Thane leaned forward, elbows on his knees.

“I still want to help.”

Gabriel’s expression softened.

“We know.”

Mark sat at last.

“We do too.”

Thane looked up.

Mark held his gaze.

“I do not want him in that room either.”

Gabriel’s voice went quieter.

“No wolf belongs in a cage.”

Mark nodded once.

“No.”

Thane closed his eyes.

For the first time all day, the words did not feel like a reason to run.

They felt like a reason to build carefully.


Nora Wexler met Silas Creed at 20:18.

Thane did not go.

Gabriel did not go.

Mark did not go.

That was the first hard part.

The second hard part was waiting.

Eli called at 22:06.

“Nora has agreed to represent him, pending written conflict disclosures, which she believes are manageable because her representation is independent and adverse where necessary. Silas accepted.”

Thane stood so quickly Gabriel looked up from the sofa.

“He accepted?”

“Yes.”

“How is he?”

“I am not his attorney.”

Thane stopped.

Eli continued.

“But Nora authorized me to tell you one thing because Silas asked her to communicate it.”

Thane’s throat tightened.

“What?”

“He said, ‘Tell him I will not test the chain.’”

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

Mark looked away.

Thane sat back down.

“Okay.”

Eli’s voice softened.

“That matters.”

“Yes.”

“Nora also says Silas is willing to consider a plea if it gets him out of secure medical custody and into a lawful supervised structure. She has not advised him to accept anything yet. She needs discovery. She needs charging decisions. She needs to evaluate exposure. But he is willing to listen.”

Thane let out a slow breath.

“Good.”

“Tomorrow morning, Nora and I will request a meeting with District Attorney Kincaid. Not an ambush. Formal. Clean. The DA will know Nora represents Silas, and I represent your support proposal.”

“Okay.”

“You will not attend.”

Thane’s ears flattened.

Eli continued, “Not the first negotiation. You are a witness. Your presence would distort the room.”

“I understand.”

“Eventually, the DA may want to hear from you. That will be controlled.”

“Yes.”

“And Thane?”

“Yeah?”

“This may fail.”

Thane closed his eyes.

“I know.”

“Do not promise Silas anything.”

“I will not.”

“Good.”


District Attorney Rachel Kincaid agreed to meet at 09:30 Sunday morning because the case had already become impossible enough to ignore normal hours.

She was waiting in the conference room at the DA’s office when Eli arrived with Nora Wexler.

Kincaid was in her early fifties, with silver-streaked black hair pulled into a low knot and the kind of calm that did not invite people to mistake it for softness. She had prosecuted murders, public corruption, child abuse, violent assaults, and enough wealthy defendants to know that money usually entered a criminal case wearing good shoes and a wounded expression.

She did not rise when Eli entered.

“Nora,” she said.

“Rachel.”

“Eli.”

“District Attorney.”

Kincaid looked at the folders in their hands.

“I assume this is not a social call.”

“No,” Nora said.

“You represent Silas Creed.”

“I do.”

Kincaid looked at Eli.

“And you?”

“I represent Thane, Gabriel, and Mark regarding a proposed support and restitution structure. I do not represent Silas.”

“Good,” Kincaid said. “Because for half a second I thought this was going to become professionally absurd before I had coffee.”

Eli sat.

“It may still become professionally absurd, but not for that reason.”

Kincaid did not smile.

Nora opened her folder.

“My client is prepared to discuss a global plea resolution after discovery review. This meeting is preliminary.”

“Your client committed multiple planned residential burglaries, used professional security access to target victims, stole high-value property, attempted another burglary, broke police restraints, transformed into a werewolf in an interview room, and attempted to escape custody.”

Nora nodded.

“Correct.”

Kincaid looked at Eli.

“And your clients would like to spend their way around prison.”

“No,” Eli said.

Kincaid’s eyes sharpened.

“Convince me.”

Eli did not rush.

“Thane, Gabriel, and Mark are not asking that the charges be dismissed, reduced beyond legal justification, or minimized. They are not asking you to ignore the victims. They are not offering money in exchange for victim support. They are not asking for control over prosecution.”

Kincaid leaned back.

“What are they asking?”

“A sentence with a door.”

Kincaid stared at him.

“That sounds like Thane.”

“It is.”

“I do not sentence metaphors.”

“No. But judges sometimes do.”

Nora glanced at him.

Eli took the warning and continued more plainly.

“We are asking you to consider a deferred sentence or structured probationary resolution with a long suspended prison term, strict supervision, GPS monitoring, home and work restrictions, no-contact orders, employment restrictions, mandatory treatment, transformation-control compliance, court reviews, and immediate revocation exposure.”

Kincaid’s face did not change.

“That is a large ask.”

“Yes.”

“Why should I even consider this?”

“Because long-term incarceration of a shifter is not a normal correctional problem,” Eli said. “County cannot hold him in a regular cell. The state currently has no werewolf-rated detention infrastructure. Secure medical custody is expensive, ethically fragile, and not designed as punishment. Sedating him indefinitely is not lawful punishment. Chaining him indefinitely is not rehabilitation. Building a custom prison solution may cost enormous public resources and still produce a worse version of the same man.”

Kincaid folded her hands.

“That sounds like a public-budget argument.”

“It is partly one.”

“I do not decide justice by spreadsheet.”

“No,” Eli said. “But you do decide whether a proposed sentence protects the public. A structure designed around what he is may protect the public better than a cage designed around what he is not.”

Kincaid looked at Nora.

“Your client’s history?”

Nora opened a second folder.

“Abandonment after first manifestation at thirteen. Multiple foster placements. Documented behavioral reports involving property damage, fear responses from caregivers, and placement disruption. Juvenile property offenses. No documented assaults causing serious injury. Adult record is limited and scattered across jurisdictions, mostly suspected but uncharged property crimes. We are still verifying.”

Kincaid’s expression hardened.

“Tragic past does not excuse present harm.”

“No,” Nora said. “But it may inform supervision, treatment, and sentencing.”

Kincaid looked at Eli again.

“And the wolves?”

Eli knew which wolves she meant.

“Thane’s position is emotional but not irrational.”

“That is generous.”

“It is also true,” Eli said. “He knows Silas caused harm. He knows Silas must plead, allocute, return property, pay restitution, and submit to supervision. But he saw the chain.”

Kincaid looked down briefly.

She had seen the photographs.

Everyone necessary had.

The steel collar.

The absurd chain.

The concrete room.

The secure door.

She said nothing.

Eli continued.

“Thane’s exact words to me were that no wolf belongs in a cage. That does not mean no wolf belongs under law. It means the structure should not become cruelty simply because the system was surprised by biology.”

Kincaid’s eyes lifted.

“That is also Thane.”

“Yes.”

“And the money?”

“Court-administered restitution fund. No direct victim contact from Thane. No requirement that victims support the plea. Full coverage of repair costs, uncovered losses, deductibles, appraisal gaps where property cannot be returned, and court-approved services related to the crime impact. Funds available regardless of victim position. My clients will also offer to cover extraordinary public costs related to safe supervised placement if the court and county accept through a transparent agreement.”

Kincaid tapped one finger on the table.

“So they pay for the damage, pay for the supervision, pay for the problem, and the defendant avoids prison.”

Nora answered this time.

“He avoids a cage that may make him more dangerous. He does not avoid conviction if he pleads. He does not avoid a suspended sentence. He does not avoid supervision. He does not avoid conditions. He does not avoid public accountability.”

Kincaid’s eyes narrowed slightly.

“And if he violates?”

“Revocation,” Nora said. “Full exposure.”

“Full?”

Nora did not hesitate.

“Full.”

Eli added, “Thane will not shield him.”

Kincaid looked at him.

“Can you promise that?”

“No. Thane can.”

“He is not here.”

“Because I thought you would appreciate the room being less emotionally large.”

For the first time, Kincaid almost smiled.

Almost.

Then she looked back at the file.

“Victims.”

“Yes,” Eli said.

“The Reddings, Harlans, and Albrechts get a voice.”

“Absolutely.”

“They may hate this.”

“Yes.”

“They may see it as the werewolf detectives protecting one of their own.”

“Yes.”

“They may go to the press.”

“Yes.”

Kincaid leaned forward.

“And they may be right.”

Eli’s expression did not move.

“No,” he said. “They may reasonably fear that. They may reasonably resent the proposal. They may reasonably reject forgiveness. But if the structure is transparent, court-approved, victim-centered, and available without buying support, then they are not right that the process was corrupt.”

Kincaid watched him.

Nora said, “My client would be required to stand in court and say what he did. Not generally. Specifically. He would have to acknowledge that he studied homes, used trust, violated private spaces, damaged property, stole items, and caused fear. If he cannot do that, there is no deal.”

Kincaid looked at Nora.

“Can he?”

Nora paused.

“I believe he can.”

“You believe.”

“I have been his attorney for thirteen hours.”

“Fair.”

Eli slid a proposed framework across the table.

Kincaid did not pick it up immediately.

“What does Thane want personally?”

Eli took a breath.

“Silas out of the concrete room.”

“That is it?”

“No,” Eli said. “He wants him given a chance to become something other than a monster in a story people tell themselves later.”

Kincaid’s face shifted.

Small.

Enough.

Eli continued.

“He also wants to help pay for an apartment, employment placement, therapy, monitoring, restitution, and safe supervision. I have already told him all of that must be structured through court and counsel, not personal rescue.”

“Will he listen?”

“Yes.”

Kincaid looked skeptical.

Eli said, “Eventually.”

Nora’s mouth twitched.

Kincaid picked up the framework at last.

She read for several minutes.

Neither lawyer interrupted.

When she reached the proposed conditions, she slowed.

Long deferred sentence.

GPS ankle monitor.

Home, work, court, medical, therapy, legal appointments only.

No contact with victims.

No access to alarm systems, security consulting, safes, locksmithing, estate services, art handling, private acquisitions, high-value residential clients, or related technology.

Mandatory employment approved by probation.

Mandatory therapy.

Mandatory transformation-control training with approved specialists.

Regular court reviews.

No shifting except in approved medical, training, or emergency circumstances.

Immediate reporting of any involuntary shift.

No possession of burglary tools, security bypass devices, or unauthorized access equipment.

Full restitution.

Full allocution.

Search conditions for devices and residence.

Travel restriction.

Revocation for violation.

Kincaid set the pages down.

“This is not nothing.”

“No,” Eli said.

“It is also not prison.”

“No.”

She looked at Nora.

“Would your client accept a long deferred term?”

“Subject to review, yes.”

“How long?”

Nora said, “We would discuss ten.”

Kincaid said, “Fifteen.”

Nora did not react.

“We would discuss fifteen.”

“Full restitution before release.”

Eli said, “Funds can be placed with the court in advance.”

“Recovered property returned first.”

“Yes.”

“Victim statements before final agreement.”

“Of course.”

“No direct contact between Thane and victims.”

“Agreed.”

“No press.”

“Agreed.”

“No hero narrative.”

Eli nodded.

“Agreed.”

Kincaid looked at him.

“And Thane understands this is not adoption.”

Eli’s face stayed calm.

“Yes.”

Nora added, “Silas understands that too.”

Kincaid looked at her.

“Does he?”

“He asked whether this meant pack.”

Eli looked at Nora.

He had not known that.

Nora continued.

“I told him no. Not legally. Not socially. Not now. He understood.”

Kincaid’s expression softened and hardened at the same time.

“Good.”

The room went quiet.

Finally Kincaid closed the folder.

“I am not agreeing today.”

Eli nodded.

“I did not expect you to.”

“I need victim consultation. I need to speak with the judge’s clerk about whether the court will even entertain this structure. I need county, probation, medical, and state input. I need cost estimates. I need risk assessment. I need to know whether your clients’ money can be accepted without poisoning the case.”

“Yes.”

“And I want to hear from Thane.”

Eli nodded slowly.

“Controlled setting.”

“Yes. Not as detective. Not as donor. As the person asking me to consider a door.”

Nora looked at Eli.

Kincaid stood.

“Bring me proof this protects the public, respects the victims, and does not let money touch the scale. Then I will decide whether to take it to the court.”

Eli stood.

“Thank you for considering it.”

Kincaid looked at him.

“I have not considered it kindly yet.”

“No.”

“But I am considering it.”

“That is enough for today.”

Kincaid’s expression turned dry.

“For you, maybe.”


Eli called the cabin at 11:14.

Thane answered before the first ring finished.

Gabriel looked up from the kitchen island.

Mark turned from the stove, where he had been making lunch because waiting apparently required sandwiches.

Eli did not bother with greeting.

“She did not say yes.”

Thane’s shoulders lowered slightly.

“But?”

“She did not say no.”

Gabriel closed his eyes.

Mark exhaled.

Thane gripped the phone.

“What does she want?”

“Everything.”

“That sounds fair.”

“It is,” Eli said. “Victim consultation. Court input. Probation and medical plans. County detention analysis. Cost estimates. A clean restitution mechanism. Risk assessment. Proof that money does not buy the outcome. Proof that public safety is better served by structure than by improvising a werewolf cage.”

Thane nodded even though Eli could not see him.

“Okay.”

“She also wants to hear from you.”

Gabriel looked at Thane.

Mark went still.

Eli continued.

“Not today. Not casually. I will prepare you, and you will not improvise in a way that makes me consider early retirement.”

Thane’s mouth moved faintly.

“I will try.”

“That was not the sentence I requested.”

“I will not improvise.”

“Better.”

Thane looked toward the window.

“How is Silas?”

“I am not his attorney.”

Thane closed his eyes.

“Eli.”

“Nora says he remains compliant. He ate breakfast. He has not tested the restraints. He asked whether the court would require him to speak to the victims.”

Gabriel’s ears lowered.

“What did Nora say?”

Eli answered, “She said court may require allocution and victim impact, but no private contact. He said good.”

Thane looked down.

“Good.”

“Do not read too much into one word.”

“I know.”

“You do not.”

“No,” Thane admitted. “I do.”

Eli was quiet for a moment.

Then said, “Thane.”

“Yeah?”

“You are doing the right thing by trying to do this cleanly.”

Thane swallowed.

“Thank you.”

“But clean does not mean painless.”

“I know.”

“Good. Because the victims may hate you for this.”

Thane’s ears lowered.

“I know.”

“They may see your compassion for Silas as betrayal.”

“I know.”

“The DA may still say no.”

“I know.”

“The judge may say no.”

“I know.”

“Silas may fail.”

Thane closed his eyes.

The kitchen was silent.

Gabriel’s face had gone tight.

Mark looked down at the counter.

Thane said, “I know.”

Eli’s voice softened.

“Then we keep going.”

Thane opened his eyes.

“Yes.”

The call ended.

For a while, none of them spoke.

Then Gabriel said, “Sandwiches?”

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel’s smile was small and tired.

“We still have to eat.”

Mark turned back to the stove.

“He is correct.”

Thane sat at the island.

The chair creaked under him.

Gabriel slid a plate toward him a few minutes later.

Turkey sandwich.

Chips.

Pickle.

Ordinary food on an ordinary Saturday while somewhere across town a werewolf sat in a concrete room waiting to find out whether the world had any answer for him except steel.

Thane picked up the sandwich.

His appetite was not there.

He ate anyway.

Because Gabriel was watching.

Because Mark had made it.

Because trying to build a door required staying steady long enough to lift the frame.

Gabriel sat beside him.

“You know Mark was right.”

Thane nodded.

“Yes.”

“You know Eli was right.”

“Yes.”

“You know the DA is right to be hard.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel bumped his shoulder lightly against Thane’s arm.

“And you are still right to ask.”

Thane looked at him.

Gabriel’s eyes were bright.

“No wolf belongs in a cage,” he said.

Mark placed his own plate on the island and sat across from them.

“No,” he said. “But if we build a door, it has to lock from the outside until he earns it.”

Thane nodded slowly.

“That is fair.”

“And victims get to say what the lock costs,” Mark added.

“Yes.”

Gabriel picked up a chip.

“And Silas has to stop trying to rip doors off hinges.”

Thane’s mouth curved faintly.

“Yes.”

The three of them sat together in the kitchen, eating lunch they barely tasted, while the house settled around them.

No victory.

No promise.

No easy mercy.

Only the shape of a possible path, narrow and difficult and clean enough that it might hold.

Thane looked toward the trees beyond the window.

He could still see the chain.

He suspected he always would.

But for the first time since he had stood in that concrete corridor, he could see something else too.

Not freedom.

Not forgiveness.

Not pack.

A door.

And that was enough to keep fighting.

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