"Close your eyes for me, Harper."
She obeyed. And the sight of her trusting him enough to do it — even now, even here — cracked something in him so deep it nearly buckled his knees. Her lashes pressed tight, face tipped down, shoulders wrenched back in Onyx and Kier's fists. She looked like a sacrifice, bound and braced, waiting for the knife to fall. His chest caved under the weight of it, a collapse no one else could see.
His hand shook. He crushed the pistol grip tighter, trying to weld the tremor into his bones. The steel sweated against his palm, slick and alive, like it already knew what he was about to do and was eager for it. He could smell the oil, faint and metallic, threaded with the sour tang of fear in the air.
Onyx and Kier shifted in unison, a subtle choreography that told him this wasn't the first time they'd staged such a moment. They adjusted their stance, bracing her between them but edging their bodies just wide enough to clear his sightline. Their arms never loosened, their hold stayed iron, but the repositioning made one thing mercilessly clear: nothing stood between Brock and the shot. The space was his now, consecrated by their precision.
Knuckles moved at the edge of his sight. A lean forward. A breath dragged through teeth, rough and loud in the silence, like someone about to lunge. Brock didn't turn. He didn't dare. If he saw the plea or the fury in that face, he'd break before the trigger ever pulled.
His eyes dragged off her and locked on Vex instead. The man's grin split wide, all teeth, all predator, feeding on every second of the spectacle. His delight seeped through the air like rot, thick enough to choke, the kind that clung to your lungs and soured your tongue. He was savoring this — savoring Brock most of all. Brock let the image scorch into him, swallowed it like poison, let it flood cold through his veins until the mask settled hard across his face.
Then Harper breathed. A small, quivering exhale, too fragile for anyone else to notice. He heard it because he was listening for her. It wasn't hope. It was surrender, the sound of someone convinced no plea could reach the one holding the gun.
His eyes flicked to her for just an instant. Her body quaked against their hold, fragile as glass braced for the hammer, waiting to be shattered. He felt the fracture open inside himself in perfect symmetry, jagged and raw.
His hand shook harder. He strangled the tremor down, bones locked in defiance of his own weakness. There was no room left for weakness. Vex was right. If this was her end, better quick than in the cages below. He wouldn't—he couldn't—let her rot in the dark, dismantled piece by piece, her screams wrung out until nothing was left but silence and Vex's pleasure in it.
The thought hollowed him. But it was all he had. No fight he could win, no rescue that wouldn't doom them both. Only this.
He lifted the gun, sight leveled, squaring down the line until nothing existed except the target, the space, the inevitability. His face settled into something cold, merciless, the mask of a commander carrying out an order without hesitation. Every inch of him told the room he belonged to that role.
And in that stillness, he told himself it was mercy. Told himself again, and again, as if repetition could harden the lie into truth.
His shoulders locked. The barrel aligned with her bowed head, merciless, inevitable.
Then — the faintest shift. A correction so small it could have been nothing more than a tremor in his wrist.
The grin hadn't even slipped from Vex's face before the shot split the room open. The blast cracked like lightning in the confined space, the recoil hammering his arm. The round punched through Vex's forehead, snapping his head back in a wet spray that streaked the wall in red. The air went ringing, smoke and gunpowder sharp on the tongue, the metallic tang chased by the stench of blood.
Vex toppled where he stood, body folding awkwardly before slamming onto the tile. The pool beneath his skull spread fast, dark and obscene, swallowing the last twitch from his limbs.
Silence swallowed the office. The shot still rang in the walls, gunpowder stung the air, and no one moved.
For Harper, the world had already ended. She'd heard the crack, felt the concussion slam through her skull, smelled the burn of powder in her throat — and in the instant before she realized she was still breathing, her mind had told her she was dead. The flinch tore through her body so violently it left her shaking, ears full of static, vision tunneling black at the edges.
Onyx and Kier jolted as if the bullet had passed through them too. The spray of blood so close their skin was wet with it, the echo of the blast tearing through their bones. Their grips slackened in pure shock, hands slipping from Harper's arms as if their nerves had been severed along with their leader's life. One stumbled a half-step back, the other froze rigid, eyes wide, muscles refusing to obey.
She collapsed the instant she was free, legs giving way beneath her. Her knees smacked the tile with a hollow crack, pain lancing up her spine and ripping the air from her chest in a broken gasp. Her palms slapped flat to the floor, fingers skidding in the grit that lined the seams, blood-spray tacky against her skin.
The room tilted in the ringing aftermath of the gunshot, her lungs seizing as she fought for air that wouldn't come. She hunched low, shuddering, then dragged a breath jagged enough to scrape her throat raw. The sound jolted something in her, panic cutting through the haze.
She shoved forward off her knees in a blind surge, trying to throw herself out of their reach, anywhere but here. She barely cleared a hand's breadth before Onyx's fist tangled in her hair, the grab so fast and savage it felt like her scalp was being torn away. He ripped her back in a vicious yank, spine snapping into an arch as her knees slid and her tailbone cracked the tile. A strangled cry tore from her as her head whipped against his thigh, vision sparking white-hot.
Her hands clawed up on instinct, nails sinking into his wrists, but his grip only cinched tighter, iron biting until it felt like he could peel her apart by the roots alone. Steel flashed as his free hand ripped the pistol free, the motion practiced and furious. He crushed the barrel down against her skull, cold iron grinding through her hair, the pressure so vicious it bowed her neck against his leg. He pinned her there like a human shield, like he could staple her in place with gunmetal and rage—
and Brock was already moving.
His pistol tore off Vex's corpse in a blur, slashing sideways with lethal precision, the barrel snapping into line with Onyx's skull. The motion was pure instinct, drilled until hesitation no longer existed. His shoulders locked hard, stance gouged into the tile, arms rigid with the promise of recoil. The sight didn't drift, not a hair, his finger curled tighter on the trigger, balanced on the razor edge of release.
Onyx jerked Harper higher against him at the same instant, dragging her head back tighter to his thigh, pistol grinding harder into her crown as if daring Brock to fire. A raw, guttural sound ripped from her throat, half-panic, half-pain, her nails raking helplessly at his wrist as her body buckled under the torque.
Kier's weapon surged up in the same breath, the draw crisp and flawless, his arm cutting the air in a single practiced sweep. The barrel leveled on Brock's chest, steady as stone, his stance sinking into equilibrium. His eyes didn't blink, his breath measured and even — the terrifying calm of a man already prepared to kill his own commander.
Knuckles pivoted with them, seamless as if wired into Brock's nerves. His move was short, brutal, body sliding into Brock's flank, pistol ripping free with a snap. The barrel came up fast, locked square on Kier's temple. His jaw set, expression flat, eyes emptied of everything but resolve. No words, no bluff — just the lethal certainty of a shot waiting to fire.
The office froze in that vicious geometry: Brock sighting Onyx, Onyx crushing Harper into a human shield, Kier's muzzle locked on Brock's chest, Knuckles's on Kier's head. Four barrels strung taut in a deadly square, Harper gasping at the center, scalp twisted raw in Onyx's grip. The air reeked of blood and gunpowder, metallic and choking, every second stretched to a knife's edge, as if the whole room was waiting to shatter with a single twitch.
"Think, boys," Knuckles said, voice low and steady, carrying through the ringing air like steel dragged across stone. "He's already gone. Don't stack the bodies higher."
Onyx's lip curled, his fist wrenching tighter in Harper's hair until she choked on a gasp. His voice came rough, wild, spit flying between his teeth. "What the fuck are you doing, Brock? You aiming at me while I've got her?" He gave Harper a savage shake, jerking her like she was nothing but a pawn. "You see this gun? You see who's in my hand? You two lost your goddamn minds."
Harper winced, body rigid, fingers clawing into his wrist just to hold herself steady. For the briefest flicker, Brock's gaze cut to hers. Hard, masked — but in it, a wordless promise: I'm with you.
Then his stare snapped back to Onyx. His pistol didn't so much as twitch, his whole frame carved into a sculpture of stillness, every muscle strung tight with violence barely held in check.
"Think, Onyx," Brock said, voice low but carrying, command laced into every syllable. "Vex spun this. Harper hasn't betrayed anyone. If she'd planted that trap, she'd be laid out beside Vale — I dragged her clear myself. She was in the kill zone when it went off. You know that doesn't add up." His finger flexed on the trigger, sight locked to Onyx's skull. "Use your head."
Onyx bared his teeth, a guttural snarl ripping out of him. His fist twisted cruel in Harper's hair until her neck strained taut, scalp burning.
"Explain those fucking texts, Brock," he spat. "She's been feeding the Maw, and you're blind to it. You'd put a bullet in your own men before you admit she's got her claws in you." The barrel crushed harder against her skull, steel grinding as if to drive the point home.
Harper stayed on her knees, chest heaving, her frame trembling in his grip. The air sawed in and out of her lungs, every ragged pull scraping raw. Her scalp screamed where he twisted tighter, shame and fury burning behind her eyes. But all she could do was hold herself still and choke back the sobs threatening to rip loose.
Knuckles's voice cut into the taut silence, low and measured, each word placed like he was dismantling a bomb. "Easy," he said. "Nobody twitches. I'm going to take a look."
Slow as a man stepping through glass, he edged back a pace, pistol still locked on Kier. His free hand lifted, palm open first, showing the move before making it. Then it snapped out, quick but controlled, snatching the phone off Vex's desk in a single clean motion.
He didn't look at Brock. Didn't look at Onyx. His gaze flicked only to Harper, a fleeting glance that measured something in her eyes — fear, truth, the edge of breaking — before he dropped it to the glow of the screen.
Knuckles scrolled with his thumb, the quiet swipe loud in the silence, paging through the thread Vex had paraded like evidence. Harper shifted where she sat on the tile, a small brace of her hands to ease the strain in her neck — and Onyx corrected at once, twisting her hair tighter, the barrel grinding down until a whimper slipped raw from her throat. The room seemed to hold its breath again, broken only by her ragged gasps and the faint buzz of the lights overhead. Knuckle's jaw flexed, eyes narrowing as he read, chest rising and falling with a rhythm too controlled to be calm.
Then he stilled, thumb frozen mid-scroll. The glow from the screen burned stark across his face, washing him pale. His jaw set hard, but a breath still rasped out of him, rough and uneven, the last of the chemical burn scraping down his throat.
"It's a photo," he said, voice low, almost disbelieving, as though speaking the words out loud might make them make sense.
The words dropped into the silence like a live charge. Every head snapped toward him. Onyx's fist jolted in Harper's hair, grip faltering just long enough for her to gasp against the sudden slack. Kier's pistol wavered a fraction in its line, the perfect stillness of his aim broken by the pull of doubt. Even Brock's stare cut sideways, the mask of command intact but his eyes locked now on Knuckles, sight dragging off Onyx for the first time.
Knuckles drew in a slow breath, every line of him telegraphing control. His pistol stayed leveled a moment longer, then dipped by degrees, inch by inch, until the barrel angled harmlessly toward the floor. "Easy," he muttered — not comfort, but a signal, every word a warning of what came next.
He crouched, careful, eyes never leaving Kier's. The pistol touched down on the tile with a flat, deliberate clack. His gun-hand came up empty, palm spread open for them all to see, while his off-hand still held the phone, glow painting his knuckles pale.
Rising, he stepped forward with the patience of a man walking into a minefield. Shoulders square. Gaze fixed on Onyx. The phone lifted in a slow extension, not a lunge, not a threat — just far enough to tempt, close enough to demand. "Look at it yourself."
Onyx's jaw flexed, teeth bared as his stare flicked between Knuckles's face and the glow of the screen. The barrel pressed harder into Harper's skull, her body tensing against the bite of steel, bracing for the next cruel twist. Instead, with a violent jerk, he released. Her head snapped forward under the sudden slack, sending her slumping against the tile, breath tearing ragged from her chest. Onyx's hand shot out, snatching the phone with fingers curled too hard, as if he meant to crush the proof before he'd even seen it.
Harper didn't move. She stayed crumpled on the tile at his feet, every muscle locked, trembling so hard it rattled through her frame. She didn't even dare lift her head — the muzzle still hung close, heavy with threat, and it kept her rooted where she was as surely as his grip had. Her lungs dragged shallow, broken pulls of air, each one caught in her throat before it could steady.
Onyx scrolled, the phone's glow washing his face, carving his features into hard planes of light and shadow. His jaw worked, teeth grinding, thumb jittering in uneven swipes until suddenly it stopped. His hand trembled around the phone, the silence stretching thin before his breath hitched and words slipped free, unguarded.
"Jesus Christ."
He stared at the screen another beat, chest heaving once, as if disbelief alone might erase what he was seeing. Then he shoved the phone back toward Knuckles, almost flinging it, like it burned to hold. Knuckles caught it clean, his gaze narrowing as he slid it away, the scrape of glass against fabric loud in the suffocating quiet.
Kier's gaze cut to Onyx, steady and unblinking, waiting for an answer. His pistol didn't move, breath controlled, but there was tension in the line of his shoulders, a demand without words.
Onyx's chest heaved, empty hand curling into a fist like he needed something to break. His stare dragged from Knuckles to Brock, then snapped to Vex's body sprawled behind the desk, blood still creeping into the seams of the tile. His jaw clenched, a shudder rippling through him before the words tore loose, ragged.
"It's fake," he spat, the admission raw, like it cut on the way out. "All of it. Vex set this up."
Kier's eyes never left him. He heard it — the words landing heavy in the silence, undeniable. His jaw flexed once, and only then did his pistol ease, dipping from Brock's chest until the muzzle angled down.
Brock didn't move. He stood rooted, pistol still leveled, mask carved into place, every line of him rigid as stone. Not a blink, not a breath betrayed him.
Onyx's exhale scraped out in a rasp, chest shuddering like it cost him to breathe. His wrist twitched once before the barrel began to shift, lifting slow, grudging, as if the steel itself resisted leaving her. The gun hovered a moment too long above her head, then finally pulled back, heavy and reluctant in his hand.
Harper didn't rise. She stayed crouched on the tile at his feet, her body jerking in uneven tremors, every nerve flaring now that the weight of steel was gone. The air rasped in and out of her lungs, too fast, too shallow, as if she couldn't remember how to draw a full breath. Her hands hovered useless in her lap, fingers twitching against the tile, torn between shielding her head and pushing herself up, doing neither.
Brock's pistol didn't drop right away. He held steady, eyes fixed on Onyx, reading every twitch of the man's grip, the fracture running through his stare. Only when he was sure — when the hesitation looked real enough to trust — did he ease his own muzzle down, slow and deliberate, until it hung loose at his side.
His voice cut the silence, low and controlled, carrying more weight than volume. "Come here, Harper."
She didn't move. She stayed folded on the tile at Onyx's feet, shoulders curled in tight, trembling in the shadow of where the barrel had pressed. Her head lifted a fraction, eyes finding Brock's, wide and raw, but the stare broke too quickly, dropping to the floor. She couldn't make herself believe it was safe, not yet.
Brock's stance didn't shift. His gun stayed in his hand, his mask unbroken, but his tone softened, a thread of command threaded with something quieter. "Come to me."
Her lungs seized in shallow bursts. Her palms dug into the tile, not in readiness to move but in refusal, the instinct to stay small, hidden, too strong.
Then Knuckles's voice cut across the space, low and even, carrying the weight of a command but gentler at the edges. "Come to us, Firefly."
The sound of it cracked something open in her. A breath jolted loose, caught between a sob and a gasp, and the stillness shattered. She lurched forward, crawling across the tile, fingers slipping through grit and blood-slick patches, knees knocking hard against the floor until she closed the space between them.
She didn't try to stand — her legs wouldn't hold her. She stayed kneeling there, pressed into the narrow gap between Brock and Knuckles, shoulders hunched, hands splayed flat against the floor like she needed the ground itself to anchor her.
Brock's pistol stayed lowered but ready, his body still carved into lines of tension. Only his eyes betrayed the crack — tracking every tremor of her frame, every scrape of her palms on the tile. His jaw worked once, a muscle ticking as though the restraint not to reach down and steady her cost him more than the standoff had.
Knuckles shifted minutely, his stance angling just enough to cover her with his body, one hand easing down from the gun to hover near her shoulder without touching. His presence loomed close, not crowding but guarding, like he'd marked the ground around her as untouchable.
Kier's gaze swept the room, dragging over every gun, every face, then down to the body sprawled at his feet. Vex lay on the floor, blood still pooling out beneath his skull, the stench of iron thick enough to turn the air sour. Kier's lips peeled back, more grimace than snarl. He scrubbed a hand down his face, breath rattling out like the weight of it might crush him. "Now what the fuck do we do?"
No one answered at first. The question hung, heavy, the silence punctuated only by Harper's thin breaths and the faint drip of blood seeping into the seams of the tile.
Knuckles finally broke it. His voice came low and hard, cutting clean through the static that still clung to the air. "Vex is dead. There's no coming back from that. Once this gets found out, it's not just fallout — it's war."
He holstered his pistol with deliberate care, slow enough everyone could see it, his gaze lifting to each of them in turn. "We need to move. Now. Get clear of this place before the body's cold. If we're still standing here when the rest of them come down on us, it's over."
Brock's gaze shifted, pinning Onyx first, then sliding to Kier. His voice carried level across the room, steady as stone, no flare of threat — just command. "Are you with us? If you aren't, walk. Now. Give us a lead and we'll be gone."
The air thinned around the words, silence pressing down until even the faint hum of the lights seemed loud. No one moved.
Onyx's jaw flexed, tendons standing hard in his neck. His eyes narrowed, cutting to Kier. He didn't speak, not yet. The look held between them was its own language — a conversation without words, heavy with the weight of years and battles survived side by side.
Kier's stance stayed tight, his pistol lowered but his shoulders coiled as if the next breath might snap the room apart again. His stare locked on Onyx, steady, waiting for the cue that would decide everything.
The pause dragged, long and brutal, heavy as a trigger pull. Then Kier gave the smallest shake of his head — not refusal, but the dismissal of doubt. His voice followed, low and firm, carrying like an oath. "No. We're with you."
Only then did Onyx move. His nod was curt, decisive, like a seal pressed in wax. Whatever storm still burned behind his eyes, the answer was set. The choice was made, and it bound them all.
Brock reached down, his hand clamping firm around Harper's arm. His grip was steady, no room for argument, and he hauled her up without ceremony. Her legs faltered under her, knees buckling as if they'd forgotten their purpose. The sudden weight of him at her side kept her upright, but panic flickered across her face, raw and immediate. She stiffened hard in his hold, chest rising quick, every line of her body braced as if she still expected the muzzle to slam back against her skull.
Her breath hitched, shallow and uneven, but Brock didn't release her. His arm cinched her in, pulling her close, anchoring her against the tremor running through her frame. She kept her eyes down, lashes trembling, refusing to look at any of them — not Onyx, not Kier, not even Brock. Trust had no place left in her; she moved because he pulled her, not because she chose it.
No one spoke.
The office door swung wide, and they stepped through in grim formation. Boots struck the tile in a hollow rhythm, the sound carrying down the hall like a march. Every corner pressed close, every shadow heavy with the weight of what had been done. Harper stumbled once, her shoe scuffing against the tile, but Brock's grip tightened, dragging her steady without breaking stride.
The elevator waited at the far end, its steel doors yawning open, lit inside with a pale glow that looked no different from a cage. They moved fast, each step taut with urgency, each man's eyes scanning, waiting for the crash of discovery that hadn't yet come.
They filed in, Harper tucked between Brock and Knuckles, Onyx and Kier flanking like wolves without a pack. The doors slid shut with a hiss, sealing them in.
The elevator lurched, cables groaning, descent slow. The hum of machinery filled the box, undercut by the creak of leather, the faint rasp of fabric against armor, the stink of blood clinging in the air. No one spoke.
Brock's hand stayed locked around Harper's arm, steady, unyielding. To anyone watching, it might have looked protective. To her it was restraint. Her body trembled under it, every muscle wired, her mind still reeling — still stuck on the image of his pistol leveled at her skull.
The walls pressed close, steel and silence pressing in. It was too easy to slip back into the early days — caught between them, contained, a prisoner being moved from one cage to another, powerless, waiting for someone else to choose her fate.
Her breath staggered, uneven, and Knuckles shifted at her back. His hand came down slow, careful, resting between her shoulder blades. The weight wasn't heavy, not forcing, just there — a steadying pressure that told her she wasn't lost to the silence. She held still under it, trembling, caught between flinching away and leaning into the anchor.
The elevator jolted once, then settled. The doors slid open with a low chime that split the silence. Brock moved first, steering Harper with him, his grip never leaving her arm as he drew her into the hall. Knuckles stayed close behind, his hand still steady at her back until she was clear of the box.
The corridor funneled them straight toward the garage, the fluorescent lights overhead buzzing faintly, too bright after the press of steel walls. Their boots struck the tile in grim cadence, every step carrying the echo of what they'd left upstairs.
Once inside the garage, Knuckles broke from formation. His stride lengthened, fast and purposeful, the jingle of metal ringing as his hand swept down the pegboard. A set of keys glinted in his fist, and without pause he angled toward a waiting Suburban.
Onyx peeled wide, his weapon holstered but his body still taut, eyes cutting to every corner, rafters, and shadow that rimmed the garage. He swept the space with the thoroughness of a man who didn't trust quiet, then gave a curt flick of his hand. "Clear."
Knuckles swung into the driver's seat, the engine coughing alive with a guttural growl. Onyx slid into the passenger side, broad frame leaning forward as his eyes cut to the mirrors, scanning the garage in restless sweeps.
Brock kept his grip locked on Harper's arm, steering her to the rear door. He shoved it open and urged her inside. She stumbled over the threshold, knees clipping the seatback before she folded into the corner on the driver's side. She didn't fight, didn't brace — just went where he pushed her.
Brock climbed in after, planting himself in the middle seat, thigh against hers. He kept his grip on her arm until she was folded into place, then let it fall away, the absence deliberate, measured.
Kier came in last, dropping heavy into the passenger-side seat beside Brock. The suspension groaned under his weight, shoulders rigid as he buckled in. He swung the door shut behind him, the slam sealing them in with the low rumble of the engine and the faint hiss of air through the vents.
The Suburban rolled forward, Knuckles' hands locked white on the wheel as he eased them out of the row. The tires whispered across the concrete, every turn of rubber against the floor echoing too loud in the cavernous garage.
They crept toward the gate. Morning light bled pale across the compound walls, catching on coils of razor wire and the black mouths of mounted cameras. Ortiz stood at the booth, coffee steaming in his fist, his shoulders slouched with the fatigue of an overnight watch. He squinted at the SUV, eyes bleary. Knuckles lifted a hand from the wheel, a casual wave, easy and unhurried, like this was just another morning run.
Ortiz blinked, then straightened a little, returning the gesture before stepping out. The steel switch clanged under his palm. The gate shuddered, groaning on its track as iron slats dragged wide. The sound grated through the stillness, each grind a threat that someone upstairs might hear.
The Suburban edged forward, creeping through the gap. Sunlight flared across the hood, glaring white as they crossed the threshold. The gate clanged shut behind them, metal biting metal, sealing the compound from view. Ahead, the city stretched awake — traffic rumbling on distant streets, shopfronts stirring open, the ordinary world rising like nothing had changed.
Silence settled, heavy and unbroken, until the compound shrank to a shadow in the mirrors. Only then did Brock let his eyes shift.
Harper sat rigid beside him, pressed into the corner of the seat as though distance alone could shield her from the men around her. Her shoulders were cinched high, neck tight, chest rising and falling in shallow, uneven bursts he could hear more than see. Her gaze never lifted — fixed unblinking on the seatback ahead, the glassy stare of someone clinging to the smallest anchor within reach. A tremor rippled through her arms, faint but constant, her body caught in the endless loop of aftershock.
Brock's hand twitched once in his lap, instinct pulling it toward her. He stopped short, fingers curling into his thigh until the muscle ached. He knew the signs too well: rigid frame, lungs working too fast, eyes gone distant. Shock. Touching her now wouldn't ground her. It would cage her tighter.
So he held still, jaw locked, the space between them charged with everything he didn't say. Around them, the Suburban carried on like nothing had shifted — engine humming steady, tires whispering over asphalt, suspension creaking with each turn. The ordinary sounds of the city leaked in through the glass: a horn in the distance, brakes squealing, the low rumble of trucks on the main road. All of it felt foreign, too clean, clashing against the stink of blood still clinging to their clothes and the violence hanging thick in the silence.
From the front, Onyx's eyes found Brock in the rearview. His stare lingered, heavy, the muscles in his jaw tight before the words finally broke loose. His voice came low, rough, stripped of its usual command. "I was wrong. I trusted Vex blindly. I didn't question, didn't think. I let him point me and I followed." He swallowed hard, breath dragging out. "That's on me. And I'm sorry."
Brock shook his head once, slow and steady, chin dipping toward his chest. His reply carried no heat, just quiet conviction. "You don't have to apologize. I understand."
Onyx let out a long, ragged breath, the kind that sounded like it scraped his ribs on the way out. His hand twitched against his thigh before he shifted, turning partway around. The movement was small, careful, but Harper still flinched, her shoulders jerking as if bracing for another blow. She kept her head bowed, gaze fixed in her lap, trembling harder under the pull of his eyes.
"I'm sorry, Harper," Onyx said. The steel in his voice was gone; what came out was quieter, almost raw. "You didn't deserve any of that."
The words settled thick in the space, louder than the muted road noise beyond the glass. Harper's throat worked, a dry swallow. She didn't speak. Her hands stayed locked white together in her lap, gaze never lifting. After a long, brittle moment, she gave the smallest nod — a gesture so slight it could have been another tremor.
Onyx's stare lingered a few beats more before he turned forward again. His shoulders sagged as he faced the road, but the weight of his words, of the look he'd given her, seemed to hang in the air even after he was gone.
From beside Brock, Kier shifted, the leather creaking under his frame. His jaw worked once, but whatever sat behind his teeth stayed there, locked down tight. When he finally spoke, his voice came even, steady, practical — the soldier in him overriding everything else. "Where are we going? What's the plan?"
The question landed like a stone in the silence, blunt and necessary, dragging all of them toward what came next.
Knuckles cleared his throat from the driver's seat, the sound rough from smoke and chemicals and something heavier that had been lodged in his chest since Henderson. His eyes stayed locked on the road ahead, unblinking, but when he spoke his voice carried the weight of someone forcing steadiness into a moment on the edge.
"I've got a place," he said, low but firm. "Few miles out of town. My aunt keeps a cabin for the summers — big enough to hold us, stocked enough to keep us fed. Nobody else knows it's there."
His fingers shifted on the wheel, tightening until the leather creaked. "We hole up there until we figure out what the fuck comes next. Off the map. No Syndicate eyes, no ears. Just us."
The words settled heavy in the Suburban, louder than the hum of the engine. For the first time since the office, there was direction — not resolution, not safety, but a line to follow through the wreckage they'd just carved.
Onyx exhaled slow in the passenger seat, gaze cutting once toward the window. Kier shifted beside Brock, broad shoulders rolling back like he was bracing into the weight of what that meant. And in the narrow space between them,
Harper shifted in her seat, the movement so small it might have gone unnoticed if Brock hadn't been inches away. She folded in on herself, pulling her knees up, wrapping her arms around them like a barricade. Her forehead pressed against denim, eyes open but unfocused, staring at the weave of the fabric as if it might be enough to anchor her.
Each breath dragged raw through her chest, scraping like broken glass. The Suburban was thick with heat and bodies, the weight of men who filled every inch of space, but none of it reached her. She felt suspended, cut off, like a ghost they'd hauled along by mistake. Even Brock — solid, immovable, right beside her — felt unreachable. He was wall and silence, all command and no comfort, and the distance gutted her more than Onyx's pistol ever had. She wanted him to break it. To look at her. To say something, anything — a lie, a curse, a hand on her shoulder. But nothing came.
The thought seeped in, poisonous and cold: this was her fault. All of it. Vale dead, choking on chemical air — because of her. Vex, sprawled in his own blood — because of her. The four men now fractured, running from the Syndicate's teeth — because of her. Brothers forged by years of loyalty, now breaking apart around the weight of someone who shouldn't have survived the night she was taken. Someone who should never have been alive to begin with.
Her arms locked tighter around her legs, crushing herself smaller, breath muffled against fabric.
Beside her, Brock stayed stone-still, but his eyes cut sidelong, tracking every small collapse in her posture, the way she seemed to shrink from the air itself. Instinct clawed at him to reach across, to drag her in, to swear she wasn't alone. He didn't. Couldn't. If he cracked her open now, he'd only drive the fracture deeper, bleed her out faster.
The weight in his chest crushed down, merciless. The pistol still burned phantom-hot in his palm, recoil etched into his bones. He blinked, and Vex's head snapped back again, blood spraying the wall. Blinked, and saw Harper in that same instant — lashes pressed tight, shoulders locked, bracing for the bullet she was certain he'd put through her skull. She had been terrified, shaking, and still she obeyed him. She closed her eyes because he told her to. Because she trusted him enough to soften the blow.
He'd killed the man who made them. Who owned them. The foundation of everything they were had split in an instant — by his hand.
And the woman who had given him that trust couldn't bring herself to look at him now.
His jaw clenched hard. His hand flexed once against his thigh. He fought the urge to reach, fought the spiral tearing inside him, fought demons that left no room for words.
The silence between them wasn't empty. It was a living thing, thick and suffocating, pressing closer with every mile the Suburban carried them away.
The city bled away fast — warehouses thinning to scrub lots, scrub lots surrendering to frost-bitten fields where rusted tractors hunched like carcasses. The Suburban ate the miles in a steady drone, its tires humming over asphalt until Knuckles swung them off onto a gravel track. The shift rattled through the cabin, stone crunching under the weight as the trees rose tall around them.
The forest swallowed the world quick. Branches arched overhead, bare and rattling, muting the sky to slivers of pale light. The hush pressed down, heavy and close, broken only by the crack of gravel under the tires and the occasional snap of a limb retreating from the truck's flank. The road bent and bent again, narrower with each turn, long enough that it felt like it might coil forever.
At last the trees split wide, spilling into a clearing where the cabin stood.
It sat firm in the hollow, built of thick timber darkened by weather, roof pitched neat under shingles the color of slate. A stone chimney climbed the side, cutting a straight line into the air. The porch stretched across the front, broad and sturdy, boards worn but unbowed. A bench sat pressed beneath one of the windows, and a neat stack of firewood filled the space under the eaves. The glass panes threw back the morning light, clean and unclouded, a small defiance against the wilderness pressing on all sides.
It wasn't new, but it carried weight — cared for, lived in, the kind of place meant to outlast storms. Hidden this deep in the forest, it looked less like a refuge found than one that had been waiting.
Knuckles swung the Suburban wide into the clearing, gravel crackling until the nose of the truck lined square with the porch. He dropped it into park, the engine rumbling low before he cut it off. Silence pressed in, almost foreign after miles of road noise. His hands stayed tight on the wheel a second longer than needed before he let out a breath that fogged faint against the windshield.
"We're here."
He pushed his door open and stepped down first, gravel crunching under his weight. His gaze swept the treeline as he adjusted the hang of his jacket, shoulders rolling with the ease of a man who knew the ground under his feet.
Onyx followed, the passenger door swinging wide. He climbed out heavy, landing solid, his eyes cutting across the clearing like he expected something to stir in the shadows. He came to stand near the hood, arms folding once across his chest, a restless edge still tight in his frame.
From the back, Kier slipped out next. His movements were measured, deliberate, as he shut the door and moved up beside Onyx. The two of them squared to opposite arcs of the clearing, silent, scanning the trees.
Brock slid out after Kier, shutting the door behind him with a muted click. He moved around the Suburban's flank, gravel shifting under his weight as he came to the rear on the driver's side.
He pulled the handle and eased the door open. Cold air spilled into the cabin, stirring Harper where she sat curled tight in the corner. Her knees were drawn to her chest, arms locked around them, her forehead pressed to denim. At the rush of air she flinched, head jerking up, eyes glassy and rimmed red as they fixed on him.
Brock lowered himself into the doorway, blocking the spill of light, making the world smaller. His voice came soft, careful, carrying none of the iron it had held in the office. "Harper. Come with me." The words were quiet, steady, shaped to reach her without crowding.
She stayed folded for a long moment, trembling in the seat, her gaze flicking from his face to the hand he offered. The air caught in her throat, her breath stuttering.
Brock didn't push. He kept his arm extended, palm open, his presence steady as stone but tempered with a patience she hadn't seen from him before.
Her fingers moved at last, trembling as they unlatched from her knees. She reached for him, hesitant, the motion shaky as though her own body doubted it. Her hand slipped into his, smaller, clammy against his palm.
Brock closed his grip around hers, steady, anchoring. He guided her out of the seat with care, easing her down until her boots found the gravel. She swayed once, knees weak, and he steadied her without a word, his hand firm at her side.
"You okay?" he asked quietly, his head tilting toward hers.
She nodded fast, eyes fixed low, but the tremor in her shoulders gave her away. He knew better — knew she wasn't okay, not even close. Still, he let her keep the shield of the nod.
In front of them, the others were already moving. Knuckles led, steps long and certain as he crossed toward the porch. Onyx and Kier fanned with him, their frames cutting across the clearing, scanning the treeline even now. The weight of what had just been left behind trailed them, but their focus was already on what lay ahead.
Brock stayed a half-step behind with Harper, her hand still clutched in his, guiding her toward the cabin.