Chords, claws and coffee on the road...

Author: Thane Page 1 of 40

Glitter, Hard Hats, and Grand Opening Day

The morning of the first public day at The Den dawned bright and cold, the Oklahoma wind whipping across the parking lot and tugging at the fresh banners that still smelled of ink and vinyl.

Thane stood near the main entrance with a clipboard in one hand and a travel mug of coffee in the other, watching the final preparations unfold. The building looked sharp in the daylight — black and silver angles catching the sun, the big stylized “Den” logo already glowing above the doors. Crews were making last-minute sweeps of the sidewalks while security teams ran through their checklists one more time.

Gabriel, naturally, had claimed the role of unofficial hype man. He paced the front walkway in his custom gold hard hat, bare paws slapping against the concrete as he directed traffic with dramatic gestures and way too much energy for 9 a.m.

“Left side looks better with the flags! No — more sparkle over there!” he called, waving at a pair of interns who were clearly regretting their life choices.

Mark leaned against a concrete pillar nearby, arms crossed, sipping his own coffee with the resigned expression of someone who had already accepted today would test his patience. “If he tells one more person to ‘add more chaos energy,’ I’m locking him in the lighting booth.”

Thane chuckled low. “You’d have to catch him first.”

Inside, the lobby was already buzzing. Emily had set up a welcome table with swag bags and informational flyers. Diesel was directing early arrivals toward the will-call line with the calm authority of a man who had herded far worse things than excited fans. The band members drifted in and out, checking sightlines and stealing glances at the empty arena that would soon be packed.

By mid-morning the first wave of contest winners and local press arrived for the official hard-hat tours. Gabriel immediately appointed himself tour guide, leading the group through the building with theatrical flair.

“And this,” he announced as they stepped onto the main floor, “is where the magic happens. Feel that? That’s the echo of every future howl this place is gonna hear.”

One wide-eyed teenager raised a hand. “Is it true there’s a secret rave tunnel?”

Gabriel grinned, tail flicking. “Only on Tuesdays.”

Thane, walking a few steps behind the group, pinched the bridge of his nose. “There is no tunnel,” he said flatly. “It’s a utility corridor. For cables.”

“Utility corridor full of vibes,” Gabriel corrected cheerfully.

Mark, bringing up the rear, muttered just loud enough for Thane to hear, “I give it six hours before someone tries to sneak glitter into the fog fluid.”

The tours moved on — through the green room, past the dressing rooms, up into the catwalks where the new rigging gleamed under the work lights. Gabriel kept the energy high, posing for photos and signing hard hats. Thane answered the technical questions with his usual steady patience. Mark mostly observed, occasionally correcting a detail about lighting angles with dry precision.

By early afternoon the doors opened to the general public for the pre-show mixer. Fans poured in, filling the lobby with excited chatter and the rustle of new merch. The scent of fresh popcorn and grilled food drifted from the concession stands. A local radio station had set up in one corner, interviewing anyone who would stop long enough.

Thane found a quiet moment near the sound booth, watching the growing crowd. His clawed feet flexed slightly against the cool floor as the reality settled in. This wasn’t another rented venue. This was theirs — every seat, every cable run, every beam.

Gabriel appeared at his side, hard hat slightly askew, a smudge of glitter already on one cheek.

“You good?” Gabriel asked, voice softer than his earlier chaos.

Thane nodded. “Yeah. Just… taking it in.”

Mark joined them a moment later, soda in hand. “Place is filling up faster than we projected.”

“Good problem to have,” Thane replied.

The three of them stood together for a long beat, watching fans point at the stage, take photos, and chatter excitedly about the show to come.

Gabriel bumped Thane’s shoulder lightly. “We did this.”

“We did,” Mark agreed, the faintest smile tugging at his muzzle.

As the house lights began to dim and the first notes of the pre-show playlist rolled through the new system, Thane felt the familiar pre-show hum settle into his chest. But this time it carried something extra — pride, maybe. Or just the quiet satisfaction of standing in a house they had built with their own paws.

Gabriel flashed a bright grin, already bouncing on his bare paws. “Ready to give them a night they won’t forget?”

Thane met his eyes, then Mark’s.

“Let’s howl,” he said.

Backstage in Our Own House

First night with the keys to The Den

The echo was the first thing that hit them.

Not the roar of a crowd. Not the whine of amps or the clatter of road cases. Just… empty space. Clean, massive, and theirs.

Thane stood in the middle of the main floor, staring up at the rigging grid they had spent months obsessing over. The house lights were at half, throwing long shadows across rows of empty seats that would be full in a couple of weeks. For the first time in years, there was no load-in deadline breathing down their necks. No rental venue manager telling them they had to be out by 2 a.m.

This one was theirs.

Gabriel was already gone, of course. The second they walked through the artist entrance he took off like a glitter missile, yelling back, “Dibs on the biggest couch!”

Mark snorted, arms crossed, surveying the place like he was still calculating sightlines. “He’s going to break something before we even open.”

“Probably,” Thane muttered, but he was smiling.

They split up naturally. Old habit. Mark headed straight for the lighting booth. Thane went for the sound control room first and found the console already powered up and waiting. Someone (probably Emily) had left a fresh bag of coffee beans on the counter with a sticky note that just said “You’re welcome, Dad Wolf.”

Thane almost laughed.

Down the hallway, the dressing rooms were finally done. Cassie’s door had a little black velvet tag with her name in silver script. Maya’s had a small mirror with built-in lights. Rico’s looked like a guitar store exploded — pleasantly. Jonah’s had a mini fridge labeled “For emergency grilled cheeses only.”

Gabriel’s room was already a disaster in the best way: a pile of beanbags, fairy lights strung across the ceiling, and a hand-painted sign in crooked glitter letters that read “Chaos Welcome. Thane’s Rules Optional.”

Mark’s room was the exact opposite — blackout curtains, a single comfortable chair, and his lighting notebook already open on the desk.

Thane found him inside, adjusting the desk lamp with quiet focus.

“Looks like a cave,” Thane said.

“Good,” Mark replied. “Caves are quiet. I like quiet.”

Thane leaned against the doorframe. “You earned it, old wolf.”

Mark grunted, but his ears flicked in that way that meant he heard the affection behind it.

The green room was already starting to feel lived-in. The fridge was stocked with everyone’s usuals, big sectional couches waited invitingly, and a wall of framed tour posters from the old days lined one side. One showed the pack on a tiny club stage in 2023, Gabriel mid-howl, Thane scowling at a blown monitor.

Gabriel appeared beside Thane, somehow already holding two coffees. He handed one over without a word.

“Wild, right?” Gabriel said softly.

“Yeah.” Thane took the cup. “No more sleeping in the bus bay. No more praying the venue fog machine doesn’t die mid-set.”

They stood there in comfortable silence, the faint scent of fresh paint and new carpet mixing with the familiar backstage smell of coffee and anticipation.

Mark wandered in eventually, soda in hand, and dropped into one of the couches with a long sigh.

“Feels weird,” he admitted.

“Doesn’t feel like home yet?” Thane asked.

Mark looked around slowly, then at the two of them.

“No,” he said. “It feels better. It feels like ours.”

Gabriel’s tail gave one slow, happy flick. He bumped his shoulder against Thane’s, then Mark’s.

Thane bumped back.

Later, when the rest of the band filtered in — laughing, arguing over lockers, Diesel already claiming the loading dock as his kingdom — the energy shifted from quiet wonder to the familiar warm chaos they all knew so well.

Jonah lost three lives on the arcade cabinet in under a minute. Cassie declared the hidden snack drawer sacred. Emily set up a charging station with color-coded cables.

Thane stood back for a minute, watching his pack fill the space they had built with noise and fur and heart.

The Den still smelled like new construction.

But it already felt like home.

They weren’t renting the dream anymore.

They were living in it.

Steel, Sweat, and Showtime

The Den was nearly finished.

It stood like a monument rising from the Oklahoma prairie, hulking and beautiful in its angular black-and-silver skin. The bones of the beast were steel and glass, wrapped around a massive central arena and flanked by soaring LED towers that would soon blaze the sky with the Feral Eclipse logo. Massive fog-friendly ventilation grilles ran discreetly through the rafters. Exterior landscaping was underway—though the presence of Gabriel had stalled progress more than once when he mistook decorative stone piles for “potential wolf napping zones.”

Two weeks out, the worksite still buzzed with motion, voices, and just enough danger to make the safety officer consider early retirement.


Inside the main arena, Thane stood with his arms folded and tablet in hand, eyes sharp and posture tense as a massive rolling truss moved into final position overhead. Above him, high-speed motors whined softly as the rigging came to rest with surgical precision. Rows of VariLite VL2600s glinted from the newly mounted bars, each secured and wired with obsessive care.

Mark stood at the lighting console, checking DMX line routing for the third time that morning. A red Sharpie dangled from his clawed fingers as he double-checked his personal cue notes, muttering under his breath.

“Red wash. Center tilt. Downstage haze split. If anyone touches this, I will bite.”

Thane smirked faintly. “Noted.”

A crash echoed from backstage. Not heavy—just a metallic clatter.

“Jonah?” Thane called.

“Everything’s fine!” came the reply. “Nothing was on fire!”

Thane paused. “Was something almost on fire?”

“Technically, no!”

Technically.


The final milestones checklist had grown smaller by the day. Seating? Installed. Sound system? Tuned. Emergency lighting? Tested. Pyro safety? Certified, much to the dismay of everyone hoping for “just a little more fire.”

Even the backstage rooms were coming together. The green room now had velvet couches, a stocked fridge, a custom arcade cabinet Jonah built from scrap plywood, and a framed sign on the wall that read NO DRUM SOLOS BEFORE 10AM.

The dressing rooms were individually themed. Cassie’s was all velvet and black leather. Maya’s had incense, mirror lights, and a “NO BOYS ALLOWED (Except Rico)” sign. Rico’s was chaos incarnate, decorated with band posters, guitar strings, and a couch that somehow always had a cat on it. Gabriel’s was still just a pile of beanbags and Christmas lights.

Mark’s had blackout curtains and silence.

Thane didn’t have one. He had a server closet and a walkie.


The final load-in began that Monday morning. Production gear rolled in on trucks while sound engineers and lighting techs buzzed like bees across the floor. Diesel took over loading dock logistics with brutal efficiency, barking orders and double-checking crate manifests like he’d been born in a warehouse.

Emily ran cables with a harness around her waist and a grin on her face, swinging across catwalks like a pint-sized stage ninja.

Even Earl the kitten had a hardhat now. Gabriel fashioned it out of a soda can and duct tape. It was ridiculous. It was perfect.


Then came the Great Banner Incident.

With the clock ticking and the last media walkthrough scheduled for the next day, Gabriel insisted that the banner behind the main stage wasn’t “epic enough.” So he climbed the lift with three extra rolls of vinyl and a bucket of glow paint.

Twenty minutes later, the entire upper backdrop was coated in phosphorescent claw marks.

“It looks like a glowing bear got drunk and lost a fight with a fog machine,” Thane muttered.

Gabriel beamed. “So… it’s perfect?”

“I’m going to pretend I didn’t see it until after the press leaves.”

Mark deadpanned, “I’m not even mad. This is the exact level of chaos I expected.”


That afternoon, the city inspector returned for the final walkthrough. Same guy. Same clipboard. Slightly more dead inside.

Thane met him at the front doors with a firm handshake and a thin smile. “No tunnels this time.”

“I’m still not sure I believe you,” the inspector replied, stepping into the echoing lobby where polished concrete floors met dark metal arches. “This place looks like a Bond villain’s concert hall.”

“We consider that a compliment.”

Behind them, Gabriel passed through the hall dragging a box labeled “WOLF-FLAVORED SNACKS – NOT ACTUAL WOLF” and waved enthusiastically.

The inspector did not wave back.


By early evening, the final checks were marked green. The HVAC was humming. The box office kiosk went live. The floor crew cleaned every square inch, down to the scuffed vinyl that Jonah insisted gave “character.”

At the edge of the main floor, Thane stood beside Mark and Gabriel, watching the crew filter out through the wide doors, all of them pausing to glance back once—like they were leaving something sacred behind.

Gabriel let out a low whistle.

“Hard to believe we built this.”

Mark folded his arms, fur catching the last light from the roofline.

“We didn’t just build it,” he said quietly. “We earned it.”

Thane looked up at the towering steel above them, at the thousands of empty seats waiting to be filled, and then down at the clipboard he finally didn’t need anymore.

“No more rentals,” he said.

Gabriel grinned wide, arm slung around both of them. “No more crash couches. No more wondering if we’ll fit in someone else’s spotlight.”

Thane smiled, soft and tired. “This one’s all ours.”


The Den was finished.

And opening night was coming.

Ready to roll into the grand opening performance scene next? Because this show’s about to blow the roof off Edmond.

Rave Tunnels and Radio Tours

A month passed.

The first steel beam had risen under a gray February sky. Now, in mid-March, the entire skeleton of the Feral Eclipse Den stood proud against the prairie horizon—an angular crown of concrete, steel, and ambition. Roofing had begun, outer walls were forming, and the bones of the main hall were finally visible. The scale of it was staggering.

What had once been just a wild pack dream was now half-built and very, very real.

And of course… there had been chaos.


There was the time Rico brought his vintage Stratocaster to test the stage acoustics—on a slab that hadn’t cured yet—and sank up to his knees in semi-solid concrete while still playing the solo from “Rattlesnake Serenade.”

Or the morning Jonah installed a fog machine in the break trailer “for mood,” only to set off every smoke detector on-site while Mark was deep in a delicate lighting configuration. Mark didn’t speak to Jonah for six hours after that, a personal record.

Gabriel had used his hardhat as a cereal bowl. Twice. It was now banned from the break area entirely.

Maya had tried to paint the backstage corridor before it was finished framing. Cassie had somehow gotten into a full-blown argument with a porta-potty delivery guy over parking etiquette. Diesel rescued a feral kitten from under the bus and named it Earl. Earl now rode everywhere on his shoulder like a pirate familiar.

And through all of it, Thane tracked every detail—every blueprint revision, every invoice, every permit deadline. His tablet barely left his hand. His ears only twitched occasionally now, which the others took as a sign of emotional growth.


The fan hype hadn’t cooled, either.

Local radio stations had jumped on board within days of the groundbreaking press storm. One of the major rock stations—97.5 KZLF “The Rig”—had launched an official contest series: “Den In Progress – Win a Walkthrough With the Wolves!”

Each week, three fans were chosen for exclusive hardhat tours of the construction site… personally guided by the pack.

It had gone about as smoothly as one would expect.


That Thursday, the midday tour group stood near the south loading bay, eyes wide, jaws slack with awe.

A teenage girl with purple streaks in her hair clutched a phone in both hands, her camera set to record as Gabriel gestured grandly at the still-exposed concrete floor.

“This is where the rave tunnel will start,” he said confidently, pointing at an entirely nonexistent space behind an electrical conduit. “It’ll wind under the main stage and lead to the secret Moonlight Bunker—acoustically optimized for midnight howling and post-show parties. Thane says it’s still ‘in concept phase,’ which is code for ‘he doesn’t know how to stop me.’”

Thane, walking behind the group with his tablet in hand and his expression already beginning to darken, muttered, “That is absolutely not what that means.”

The teenage girl gasped. “There’s gonna be a rave tunnel?!”

“Shhh,” Gabriel said dramatically, holding a clawed finger to his lips. “It’s underground knowledge.”

“No, it’s not,” Thane cut in, stepping forward. “Because it’s not a thing. There is no tunnel. There will never be a tunnel. This is where the cleaning supply closet goes.”

Gabriel winked. “Yeah. That’s what we call it.”

The girl squealed.

Thane’s ears went back.

Mark sighed.

And then someone cleared their throat with great municipal authority.


The inspector had arrived.

His vest read CITY OF EDMOND – ZONING AND COMPLIANCE, and his expression suggested he’d just smelled something dead in the air. Which, to be fair, might’ve been the grilled onions Diesel was cooking on a portable burner.

He adjusted his glasses and looked directly at Thane. “We received an anonymous tip that unapproved underground structures were being built under the venue?”

Thane’s eye twitched so hard it almost counted as Morse code.

“No,” he said firmly. “There are no tunnels. No hidden bunkers. That was—” he glared back at Gabriel “—creative storytelling.”

“’Rave tunnel’ was the exact phrase used,” the inspector replied.

Gabriel raised a paw. “I’d like to clarify it’s not a rave tunnel, per se. More like a celebratory mood corridor with aggressive lighting and potential basslines.”

The inspector’s face was rapidly approaching ‘pulled muscle from frowning’ territory.

Thane stepped in fast, tablet raised, fingers already tapping through permits. “Here are our approved plans, sir. Every beam, slab, and trench—up to code, nothing subterranean except standard drainage.”

The inspector took the tablet and reviewed it carefully.

Mark slid up beside Thane and added helpfully, “Also, if we were gonna dig a secret tunnel, we wouldn’t have told a radio contest winner.

The girl beamed. “That’s fair.”

The inspector handed back the tablet. “Well. I’ll be filing a note about misinformation being given to guests during city-monitored construction, just for the record.”

Thane nodded. “Understood. And we’ll be having a… very serious conversation about appropriate tour content.”

Gabriel turned to the girl and whispered, “We’ll let you in the back entrance when it’s done.”

“Gabriel,” Thane warned, ears twitching again.

“I said nothing,” Gabriel said, haloed by the grin of someone absolutely planning to hide disco lights in a mop closet.


The tour ended uneventfully after that, with Gabriel moved to “support crew” and Jonah taking over the walkthrough. He somehow got them all to chant “BEAMS BEFORE DREAMS” in front of the camera.

That night, back at the den, Thane collapsed on the couch with his tablet face down and a pillow over his head.

Diesel tossed him a soda. “Tunnel plans safe?”

“For now,” Thane muttered.

Mark walked by holding a notebook and added dryly, “We’ll just hide the tunnel under the tunnel.”

Thane didn’t even move. “Mark, please.

“I’m kidding,” Mark said.

Pause.

“…Mostly.”

Thane groaned into the pillow.

Somewhere across the room, Gabriel whispered to the kitten on his shoulder, “We’re gonna need more glitter.”

Hard Hats and Howls

The sounds of construction echoed through the chilled morning air like some wild percussive remix—steel being dropped onto concrete pads, drills whining, and the rhythmic thump of boots on plywood. A portable espresso truck idled in the background, manned by a very nervous barista who had been specifically warned not to question the pack’s caffeine habits.

The Feral Eclipse venue had officially broken ground two weeks ago.

Now it was a living, howling thing.

And it was already going off the rails.


Thane stood at the center of the site in a heavy black hoodie, arms crossed over a clipboard, ice-blue eyes narrowed at a crew of stunned subcontractors. Behind him, Gabriel was actively climbing an excavator like a jungle gym while shouting into a walkie-talkie he had not been assigned.

“Gabriel, get off the bucket,” Thane called calmly, without looking.

“I’m not on the bucket,” came the muffled reply, followed by the very distinct clang of a steel shovel bouncing off something expensive.

Thane sighed.

“Yes, you are.”


The pack had insisted on being involved in every step. Not just design, but actual construction. It started with walk-throughs and planning meetings. Then Gabriel brought home a personalized hard hat. Then Mark ordered twenty industrial-grade LED site lights because “these rental things are garbage.” Then Thane installed temporary fiber so the crew could have live cloud access for their design suite.

Now the site looked less like a commercial build and more like the set of a very expensive werewolf-led reality show.


Diesel had been adopted by the site manager within the first three days. He spent most of his time hauling pallets, organizing equipment storage, and cooking meat-heavy lunches for the whole crew out of a propane griddle strapped to the back of the bus.

Emily set up a rolling documentation cart that tracked site progress, timelines, and press requests. Her label printer had already generated stickers that read: “FERAL SITE – AUTHORIZED CHAOS ONLY.”

Rico and Jonah somehow convinced a framing team to let them swing hammers for one afternoon. The results were mixed. Someone put up a support beam sideways and wrote “ART” on it in Sharpie.

Maya mostly stayed out of the dust, choosing instead to sketch stage design concepts in the portable trailer with Cassie. Every few hours, they’d come out, critique the structural flow, then disappear again into creative noise and violent bursts of laughter.


Mark stood near the back of the work zone, hood up, arms folded, studying the foundation lines as if he were preparing for battle. Every few minutes, he adjusted a placement or remeasured a distance to ensure proper symmetry for the rigging trusses he intended to hang once construction reached vertical clearance.

He didn’t trust anyone else to do it right.

He never said it out loud.

But Thane knew.


The first real chaos hit at 11:43 a.m.

Gabriel, now thoroughly caffeinated and armed with a fluorescent orange flag, declared himself “official site conductor of vibe flow and bassline energy.” Then he activated every air horn on the site simultaneously to commemorate “floor panel one.”

Several workers screamed.

Thane closed his eyes and muttered a silent apology to OSHA.

Then it got worse.

Jonah, trying to capture the moment on Instagram Live, tripped over a roll of conduit and knocked over three metal studs. The falling echo made the news crew from Channel 5 flinch so hard they hit a construction light, which tumbled off its stand and landed in a wet pile of concrete.

Emily sprinted to unplug it before it fried. Diesel ran in from the bus with a shovel and somehow redirected the entire stream of setting cement into a new mold before anything could flood.

Gabriel held up a sign he had drawn on a spare sheet of insulation:
“FIRST CHAOS SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETED”


Later that afternoon, as the sun dipped behind the leafless trees and the site slowly calmed, Thane stood at the edge of the gravel pad, watching the first true steel beam rise into place.

Despite everything—the dust, the glitter, the misfired generator, the argument over whether the snack trailer should sell churros or beignets—it was happening.

The Den was real.

He felt Mark step up beside him, arms still crossed, his expression soft but unreadable.

“It’s good,” Mark said, quietly. “Really good.”

Thane nodded. “Even with Gabriel trying to install a fog machine in the break room?”

Mark gave the faintest of smiles. “Especially with that.”


As dusk fell and the pack regrouped back on the bus, sore and dusty and full of chili Diesel had somehow conjured from nothing, Thane updated the public progress report from his tablet and clicked post.

It read simply:

“First beam up. Many more to come.
Feral Eclipse Den is officially under construction.”

He looked up just in time to see Gabriel sneak a bag of glitter into the concrete mix bin.

Gabriel.

“What? It’s for sparkle integrity!”

Thane groaned.

But he let him do it anyway.

The Calm Before the Hashtag

The den was quiet—at least, on the surface.

Sunlight filtered through the tall windows, catching on stray flecks of glitter still stuck to the carpet from Gabriel’s latest craft explosion. The smell of coffee hung in the air, faintly roasted and warm, as Thane stepped back into the living room holding his favorite mug. He took a long sip, grateful for the brief moment of silence.

Then he saw his laptop screen.

His ears slowly tilted back.

Twenty-seven unread press requests. Fourteen tagged tweets from major outlets. A newly trending hashtag already climbing into the global top ten.

He set the mug down with surgical precision, leaned forward, and squinted.

#FeralFortress

“…Oh no,” he muttered.

In the corner of the room, Gabriel had built a scale model of the venue out of couch cushions, plastic figurines, and what looked suspiciously like the dog toy Mark had stepped on two nights ago. He glanced up with a proud grin.

“They love the name, huh?”

Thane didn’t answer. He refreshed the page again. The madness had multiplied.


It had started so small. Just a fan tweet—an AI-generated concept image of a stadium built like a claw mark, surrounded by flaming werewolf statues the size of cell towers. The caption read simply: “Leaked renderings of the Feral Eclipse Arena 😱🔥🐺 #FeralFortress.”

That had been this morning.

Now the Internet had exploded.

TikTok was overrun with fan videos theorizing secret tunnels beneath Edmond, moonlit rooftop spas, underwater rehearsal rooms, and at least one animated walkthrough that included a Gabriel-themed churro cannon. Reddit was debating whether “Den Prime” was code for a multiverse of Feral Eclipse venues.

Mark, standing behind the couch with a fresh mug of tea, stared blankly at his tablet. “Someone thinks it doubles as a werewolf temple that transforms into a mech.”

Thane groaned. “And here I was, hoping we’d get one full day without needing a PR response team.”

“They also think it’s powered by raw espresso and moonlight,” Jonah added from the kitchen, leaning on the counter while burning a grilled cheese.

“No,” Thane replied flatly. “That part’s true.”


Later that afternoon, the mayor called. His voice had a very particular tone Thane recognized from years of bureaucratic war—an exhausted sort of panic usually reserved for tornado drills or council meetings where someone tried to outlaw drum circles again.

“We need a press conference,” the mayor said. “Something. Anything. People are calling from LA. We’ve had emails from Dubai. Dubai!”

“Give us two hours,” Thane said. “And maybe warn the city zoning office that Gabriel’s probably bringing glitter.”


The Edmond courthouse lawn was already packed by the time they arrived.

It was supposed to be a low-key statement. Something sensible. Civil.

Instead, fans were pressed against makeshift barriers, waving flags and homemade signs. Several wore light-up wolf ears. One held a banner that read FERAL OR BUST. A middle-aged woman had brought her two poodles in tiny denim vests with “Mini Howlers” embroidered on the sides.

The mayor stood off to one side near the podium, rubbing his temples. “They brought a drone.”

Gabriel leaned in. “It’s not ours.”

The mayor gave him a long stare.

“Okay, it’s definitely ours,” Gabriel added cheerfully, then stepped back to make room as Thane took the mic.

Thane cleared his throat.

“I’d like to begin by saying… no, we are not building fifty-foot flaming werewolf statues. That image was fan art. Cool fan art. But not real.”

Gabriel leaned into the mic beside him and grinned. “Yet.

The crowd roared in approval.

Thane sighed softly but continued.

“We are building a state-of-the-art venue designed to serve both the fans and the local community. It’s soundproof. Sustainable. Safe. And no, there are no bungee trampolines in the pit area. Jonah pitched that. We said no.”

“Three times,” Mark called from the side.

A reporter near the front raised her hand. “Will the venue be tail-inclusive?”

Thane blinked. “I’m sorry—what?”

Gabriel stepped forward without missing a beat. “Absolutely. Tail freedom is a cornerstone of our design philosophy.”

Thane pinched the bridge of his snout.

Cassie, standing with crossed arms behind them, cracked a smile and whispered to Rico, “We are so getting sued.”


That night, back at the den, the chaos hadn’t stopped—but it had taken on a cozier rhythm.

Jonah and Emily sat cross-legged on the rug, reviewing the day’s best fan art. Rico was sprawled out on the couch reading comments from TikTok. Gabriel was curled up in the hoodie fort he’d rebuilt beside the fireplace, still wearing the glitter-covered hardhat from the groundbreaking.

Thane sat with his laptop, clicking through the top trending fan reactions.

One post read:

“They could’ve just kept touring. But instead they said, ‘Let’s build a music fortress with espresso fountains and fog machines.’ Absolute kings.”

Another showed a blurry screenshot from the press conference with Gabriel mid-speech, surrounded by sparkles. The caption read:

Local Werewolf Declares War on Boring Venues.

A third was a hand-drawn schematic of the arena with secret “howl chambers,” a rooftop garden for Mark, and a fan confession booth.

Thane exhaled slowly through his nose, fingers resting gently on the keyboard.

Emily looked up from her spot on the floor. “You okay?”

He nodded, a small smile creeping into the corner of his mouth.

“Yeah,” he said. “I think we’re just getting started.”

Groundbreaking and Ground-Shaking

A sharp winter wind swept across the empty lot on the outskirts of northeast Edmond, stirring up dry blades of frozen grass and the soft scent of red earth. The field had once been little more than a quiet patch of scrubland—bare, overlooked, the kind of place you’d drive past without thinking twice.

Not anymore.

Now it was ringed with temporary fences and scaffolding poles, flanked by parked news vans and construction trailers. A small crowd had gathered behind safety barriers—fans from all over, bundled in heavy jackets and Feral Eclipse merch, some holding handmade signs, others waving flags that fluttered like battle standards in the breeze. Every one of them had their phones out. This wasn’t just a photo op.

This was history.

The pack arrived just after noon in full force, riding the freshly washed tour bus with Diesel behind the wheel, and trailing an entourage of local vendors, city officials, and hired camera crews. Despite the cold, spirits were high.

Gabriel hopped out first, wearing a custom gold-plated hardhat with little holes cut out for his ears.

“This is it,” he declared dramatically, spinning in place. “This is where the legend begins.”

Thane stepped down behind him, far more measured, carrying a tablet loaded with budget sheets, timelines, and permit documentation. Mark followed with his collar turned up against the wind, clutching a folded lighting schematic like it was an heirloom.

The mayor met them at the edge of the site, all smiles, cheeks pink from the cold.

“You ready to dig?” he asked.

“Been ready,” Thane replied. “We’re just getting started.”


A temporary stage had been assembled at one end of the lot—a simple riser with a podium, a few folding chairs, and a rented speaker system already struggling with the Oklahoma wind. The press milled about nearby, gathering sound bites and livestreaming the moment to what was already an exploding global audience.

As the mayor gave his brief, supportive speech and introduced the city council representative, the pack waited off to the side, shivering and excited.

Rico paced. Maya adjusted her scarf. Jonah tried to balance a thermos on top of a ceremonial shovel and nearly took out a reporter. Emily was crouched behind a plastic crate, distributing enamel pins to a group of local fans allowed past the barrier. They read: First Fang Crew.

Finally, Thane stepped forward to the mic.

“This lot,” he said, his breath fogging in the cold, “used to be empty. Like a lot of things were for us once.”

He looked out at the fans—at the bundled families, the teens with glittery face paint, the adults clutching hot drinks and blinking away happy tears.

“But Edmond believed in us. And now, we want to return that favor. This venue isn’t just for us. It’s for everyone. It’s where dreams are going to be made.”

He paused, then added with a smirk, “And yes, the loading dock is on the correct side.”

The crowd laughed. Even Mark cracked a grin.


With the speeches done, the crew gathered around a long, shallow trench marked for the first symbolic dig. Nine shovels waited in a perfect row—engraved, polished, ceremonial. One bore Mark’s name. Another had Gabriel’s hardhat logo etched into the handle.

They lined up shoulder to shoulder—Thane, Gabriel, Mark, Rico, Maya, Cassie, Jonah, Emily, and Diesel. The cold was momentarily forgotten.

“On three,” Thane said.

Gabriel whispered, “I’ve waited my whole life for this.”

“One… two—”

“THREE!” Gabriel shouted, and leapt forward, his clawed feet kicking up red dirt as he jammed his shovel into the earth like it owed him money.

The others followed with far more composure—though Mark’s scoop of dirt was so precise it could’ve been laser-cut. The sound of clinking shovels and scattered cheers rose into the air.

Behind them, the crowd exploded.

Fans screamed. Flags waved. Someone let off a confetti cannon that absolutely hadn’t been approved. A group of middle schoolers started chanting “FERAL DEN! FERAL DEN!” until their teacher gave up and joined in.

A drone buzzed overhead, catching aerial footage of Gabriel flinging dirt into the air like a victorious puppy.

“This land is CLAIMED!” he howled. “Claimed by music, mayhem, and merch sales!”

Thane sighed with a smile. “He’s had six shots of espresso.”

“Seven,” Emily whispered.


Back on the bus that night, everything felt… different.

Warm.

The pack lounged across the couches and bunks, muddy boots and spent energy giving way to soft conversation and sleepy pride. Gabriel was snoring in his hoodie, his gold-plated hardhat still perched on his stomach like a crown. Jonah scrolled social media and laughed at fan reactions. Emily was uploading drone footage and tagging every local sponsor.

Mark stared out the window for a long time, then murmured, “It’s happening.”

Thane didn’t look up from his tablet. “Yeah. It is.”

From the back, Rico’s voice drifted out: “Can we put a slide from the green room to the crowd?”

“No,” Thane replied automatically.

“Yes,” Mark said at the same time.

Diesel muttered, “I’ll install it.”

Gabriel stirred just enough to mumble, “Only if it lands in a ball pit.”

Everyone groaned.

But no one disagreed.

Because deep down—they all knew:

The Den had officially been claimed.

Permit Me to Panic

The den smelled like coffee, printer toner, and the slow simmer of big ideas.

Blueprints were taped to every flat surface. A corkboard in the living room bore hastily pinned sketches, zoning maps, fabric swatches, and at least two childlike renderings of a backstage arcade labeled “Gabriel’s Battle Den.” One of them included a churro machine. No one had the heart to take it down.

Thane sat cross-legged on the floor, stylus in one paw, tablet resting on his knee. He was crunching numbers—real ones. Ones that included tax districts, construction loans, and projected fan growth over five years. Rico was perched nearby, rattling off venue features as fast as Maya could scribble them down. Jonah shouted ideas from the kitchen while burning a grilled cheese.

Mark, surprisingly, said very little—but Thane could see the way his eyes lingered on the lighting schematics. He was thinking.

“Okay,” Thane said finally, setting the tablet down. “With our current assets and sponsorship returns… this is actually doable.”

That silenced the room.

Cassie looked up from the couch. “Like, build-a-venue doable?”

Thane nodded. “It’ll take permits, proposals, and probably some good old-fashioned bureaucratic arm wrestling… but yeah. We could do it. Here. In Edmond.”

Gabriel’s ears perked. “Like, build build? With our own loading dock? Real backstage lounges? Claw-friendly doors?”

Emily gasped. “We could design a whole museum wing for the fans!”

Diesel grunted from his usual spot in the corner. “And you’d better believe I’m parking the bus inside.”

Mark, still quiet, finally spoke. “What do we call it?”

Rico smiled slowly. “The Den.”


A City Hall Invasion

They arrived two days later like a tornado in band merch—three werewolves, six humans, and a portable projector they weren’t entirely sure they were allowed to use.

The mayor met them at the entrance to Edmond City Hall and offered a weary smile. “Let me guess. This is about that arena idea?”

Thane nodded. “It’s more than an idea. It’s a plan.”

He handed over a proposal packet so thick it required a binder clip and a sticker seal with the band logo. Gabriel may have added glitter.

They stepped into the main council chamber and were greeted with absolute mayhem.

It was standing room only. Every pew and chair filled with supporters, local business owners, curious residents—and fans. Dozens of them. Some wore light-up ears. Others had handmade signs. A couple in their sixties sat proudly with “HOWLING SINCE 2023” t-shirts.

Jonah whispered, “Did we accidentally throw a concert?”

Thane didn’t answer. He was already uploading his slideshow to the projector.


The presentation began with numbers. Employment. Economic boost. Parking plans. Acoustic design specs. Rico spoke about vision. Maya, about community outreach. Emily delivered an emotional speech about fan inclusion and the idea of building something permanent for the people who had helped lift them to this height.

Then the questions began.

“Where will all the traffic go?”

“Will the sound system disrupt neighborhoods?”

“Are mosh pits regulated by the city?”

Someone genuinely asked whether the building would be structurally rated for “werewolf-level jumping.”

Thane fielded every one with clarity and patience, occasionally deferring to Mark for technical specs. Diesel assured the council that crowd control, road use, and public safety had all been considered. Cassie smiled like a pro, wooed the media, and even managed to get a laugh out of a grumpy zoning commissioner.

But when a stern woman in a pearl necklace stood and asked, “Why Edmond? Why here of all places?”—the room went still.

Gabriel stepped forward, voice softer than usual.

“Because Edmond took us in. When we were broke. When we were busking on corners with broken gear. This town didn’t just tolerate us—it believed in us. Lifted us.”

He looked around at the crowd. “This isn’t just our home. It’s part of who we are.”

His voice cracked, just a little, but he kept going.

“We don’t want to build an empire. We want to build a gift.


The Vote

It came down to a roll call.

One by one, the council members voted—yes, yes, yes… an abstain… another yes… one more abstain.

And finally—

“The City of Edmond approves the permit for the construction of the Feral Eclipse Arena.”

The roar that followed shook the rafters.

Fans leapt from their seats. Staff hugged. Gabriel did a lap around the chamber with a miniature shovel he’d apparently been hiding in his backpack.


The Aftermath

The Internet broke. Again.

#FeralArena, #EdmondEclipse, and #PackBuildsTheDen trended across five countries within an hour. Fan art poured in. Construction memes flooded social media. TikTok users started speculative blueprints based on leaked sketches.

The band posted a single photo: all of them standing on the steps of City Hall, blueprints in one hand, grins wide and unfiltered.

Caption:

“It’s happening. We’re building a home. Thank you, Edmond. 🐺❤️”

Den Dreams and Big Blueprints

The Skirvin robes were still half-stuffed into backpacks as the tour van pulled back into familiar territory.

After the chaos of New Year’s Eve, the sudden return to the Edmond den felt surreal—like waking up from a fever dream in the best possible way. No mob. No confetti cannons. No impromptu appearances from metal legends. Just soft porch lights glowing in the dusk and the scent of pine-scented garland still lingering from the Christmas surprise.

Gabriel opened the door, stepped inside, and let out a long, content sigh.

“Home.”

Mark walked past him, dropped his bag with a heavy thud, and made a beeline for the kitchen. “If nobody stops me, I’m making grilled cheese with six kinds of cheese and a guilt complex.”

“Add bacon,” Jonah mumbled, already collapsing on the couch.

Thane followed in, tugging off his hoodie and letting his claws flex into the carpet. The quiet hum of the house welcomed them like an old friend.

Someone lit the fireplace. Someone else (probably Emily) pulled out a Bluetooth speaker and started a low playlist of acoustic Feral Eclipse covers fans had been posting all week. The den didn’t just feel cozy—it felt earned.


They were all scattered across couches and bean bags when Rico spoke up.

“Y’know…” he said, rubbing the back of his neck, “we’ve played some crazy venues now. Some gorgeous ones. Some sketchy ones. But not a single one around here is big enough for what we’ve become.”

Cassie looked over from her beanbag throne. “Not even the big civic center?”

Rico shook his head. “Too small. Not enough rigging capacity. No truck bay. Sound’s a nightmare. We’re getting too big for borrowed stages.”

Maya tilted her head. “You want to move?”

“No,” Rico said slowly. “I want to build.

That got everyone’s attention.

Even Mark paused mid-sandwich chew.

Gabriel grinned. “Wait… you mean like… our own venue?”

“Yeah,” Rico said, warming to it. “A real one. One that fits our crowd. One built with actual werewolf specs in mind. We do it right—with Thane’s specs, Mark’s lighting design, Diesel’s logistics—hell, make it a full production facility. Soundstage. Rehearsal hall. Museum hallway with Gabriel’s bass smashed into a wall behind glass, whatever. Big. Professional. Ours.

Thane leaned forward, elbows on knees, claws tapping rhythmically on his tablet. “We could do it.”

“Wait,” Emily blinked, “actually do it?”

Thane started scribbling figures—land costs, permits, build timelines. “With our current assets and ROI from merch, sponsorships, and streaming, not only is it doable… but it would pay for itself within three to five years depending on how we leverage the space.”

Mark narrowed his eyes. “Location?”

Thane looked up.

“Right here. Edmond. The city’s treated us like family. We’ve got infrastructure, fan support, space to grow—and frankly, the idea of someone trying to put ‘Feral Eclipse Arena’ on a highway sign in the middle of suburban Oklahoma delights me.”

Gabriel fist-pumped so hard he spilled his soda.

“I wanna help design the backstage lounges!” he shouted. “Like, real gamer chairs and claw-friendly vending machines!”

Cassie just laughed, loud and warm. “You mean you wanna put coffee makers in every corner.

“That too,” Gabriel agreed with zero shame.


The conversation exploded from there. Mark started drawing rigging layouts on the back of a takeout bag. Jonah suggested a circular stage with catwalks. Maya casually tossed out the idea of local bands getting free access during off-season. Rico proposed calling it The Den and was immediately met with a room full of approving nods.

It wasn’t just a dream anymore.

It was a blueprint.

And for the first time since their rise began, the pack wasn’t just reacting to success—they were shaping it. Crafting their next legacy not on borrowed ground, but on their own.

Champagne, Chaos, and Room Service Robes

Thane awoke to the strange sensation of silence.

Not the usual silence of a sleeping bus or backstage lounge, but the kind of plush, thick silence that only came with thick carpet, high thread-count sheets, and blackout curtains you could lose a crew member in. He sat up slowly, blinking at the ornate moldings overhead and the glint of morning sunlight trying to sneak through heavy drapes.

This wasn’t the den.

This… wasn’t even Edmond.

Across the suite, Mark was sprawled on the sofa in a white hotel robe, one paw slung over his eyes, the other clutching a paper coffee cup that had long since gone cold. Someone had tucked a souvenir Skirvin Hilton pillow under his head, and for once, he didn’t look grumpy—just quietly overwhelmed.

Thane groaned softly, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “Where the hell are we?”

“You’re in the Presidential Suite,” came a dry voice from the adjoining room. “Compliments of Ivan. And possibly the State Department.”

Diesel stepped out in full uniform—well, technically his black jeans, tour staff hoodie, and an incredibly fluffy hotel towel wrapped like a turban on his head. He sipped orange juice straight from a champagne flute.

“Ivan said we needed to rest ‘like wolves of legend.’ So he booked out the top floor.”

Thane blinked. “All of it?”

Diesel nodded. “Even the governor’s suite. Apparently the governor is a fan.”


Down the hall, chaos had already awakened.

Gabriel had commandeered a breakfast cart and was racing it down the hallway barepaw, wearing only his hotel robe and a Feral Eclipse bandana like a sash. Rico was chasing him in mismatched socks, holding a shoe in one hand and a mimosa in the other, shouting something about insurance forms.

Cassie and Emily were on the floor of the lobby bar lounge, laughing uncontrollably while trying to read fan tweets from the night before.

“I swear to Luna,” Cassie gasped between laughs, “this fan says she named her baby Gabriel Thane Eclipse.

Emily tilted her phone. “Wait, wait, here’s another — ‘THE RUSSIAN MOB KEPT US SAFE ALL NIGHT. #WolfBodyguards’

Maya emerged from a room in full glam, perfectly eyelinered and calm as ever, sipping her espresso like none of this touched her.

Jonah wandered out of the elevator in a towel and crown from New Year’s Eve. “I’m royalty now,” he declared to no one in particular.

A bellhop passed him, nodded solemnly, and whispered, “Yes, your majesty,” before disappearing into the staff hallway.


The grand ballroom-turned-breakfast suite was already laid out by the time Thane and Mark made their way downstairs.

Long tables lined with linen cloths and silver trays offered an array of everything from smoked salmon to vegan tofu scrambles. Omelets. Pastries. Whole roast duck. Yes, duck.

At the center of it all sat Ivan, pristine in a velvet blazer and sipping from a porcelain teacup with two fingers in the air like some kind of Eastern European royalty.

“You made music for the world,” he said with a pleased smile. “So now the world makes omelets for you.

Thane just stared at the table. “Is that caviar?”

Ivan nodded. “Black and red. For flavor balance.”


The entire pack, plus Trivium, Vandal Saints, and at least two Russian violinists, sat around the table in various stages of disbelief and hangover.

Mark picked at a croissant, quiet and warm-eyed. Cassie propped her head on Gabriel’s shoulder, still scrolling through viral posts.

“I think we broke TikTok,” she murmured.

Gabriel grinned sleepily. “Good.”

Jonah had stolen a room-service menu and was reading it like scripture. “Do we get everything on here?” he asked.

A server passed by with a silver tray. “Sir, you already did.


Thane caught Mark’s eye over a plate of fruit and carbs.

“All of this,” he said softly, “do you think we deserve it?”

Mark didn’t answer right away. He looked around the table—at their chaotic, half-dressed crew, the glitter still stuck to Jonah’s hair, the robe-clad Trivium members quietly eating like it was just another morning, the city skyline visible through the tall historic windows. He glanced down at the engraved room key resting on the tablecloth.

“I don’t think it matters,” he said finally. “We earned it. And that’s better.”

Thane raised his coffee mug. “To what comes next.”

Mark clinked his own against it. “To what comes next.”


They stayed for hours, lounging, laughing, telling stories.

At one point, Ivan orchestrated a toast in Russian. No one understood it, but they all stood and drank anyway. A server played piano. Rico accidentally joined in on acoustic guitar, and before long, the whole pack was harmonizing a bluesy rendition of “Auld Lang Syne” like they’d been born to it.

The Skirvin Hilton belonged to them, just for the morning.

Just for a moment.

And when the wolves eventually checked out, bleary-eyed but smiling, they left behind only memories… and a suite full of bathrobes no one intended to return.

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