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CHAPTER ELEVEN

last update publish date: 2026-06-24 02:07:51

FIRST WEEK, FIRST CRACKS

The apartment they'd arranged was on the third floor of a building two streets from the council offices. Clean, functional, north-facing windows. Someone had put a plant on the kitchen windowsill that was probably not their business to put there, but I liked it, and I decided that was a reasonable sign.

I arrived on a Sunday and gave myself the afternoon to unpack and the evening to be still. I ate something my mother would have approved of. I looked out the north-facin
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  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY

    The second dispute of the afternoon involved a territorial disagreement between two packs whose history went back further than anyone in the room except, apparently, two elderly representatives who sat near the back, occasionally exchanging glances that suggested they remembered the original injury firsthand. I noted that detail almost automatically, the way I noted small human textures in every room, even as everything beneath the noting had started to feel less stable than it should.I tried to read the room the way I always did — distinct signatures, each state attributable to its source, the careful sorting that had been instinctive for as long as I could remember being able to do this at all.What I got instead was something closer to weather than to individual readings. A general pressure, directional but not specific, the way you can tell a storm is moving in without being able to say exactly which cloud carries the most rain.I sat with this for a moment, trying to apply more

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER TWENTY NINE

    The first morning session lasted three hours, and by the end of it I knew, with a clarity I could no longer rename, that something was wrong.Not wrong in the room. Wrong in me.The session itself was structured the way Sable had described — a series of shorter presentations from regional representatives, broader in scope than the individual disputes I usually handled, less about reading two specific parties and more about taking the temperature of an entire room's accumulated grievance. I was meant to offer, at intervals, a general assessment: where the tension was concentrated, where there was room for movement, where there wasn't.I had done versions of this before, at smaller scale. The skill itself wasn't unfamiliar. What was unfamiliar was the sensation underneath the skill — a kind of effortful straining that hadn't been there in any prior session, even the difficult ones, even the eight-hour ruling session the week before.I recognized the sensation, eventually, for what it wa

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT

    The assembly had been on the calendar since before I arrived for the season, a fixed point everyone referenced the way you'd reference a known storm on a long-range forecast: distant enough not to worry about yet, certain enough to eventually arrive.It was, Sable explained in the briefing the week before, the largest gathering the council convened — representatives from every pack within the regional jurisdiction, support staff, council members both full and advisory, gathered for two days to address the cumulative backlog of cross-pack tension that smaller sessions hadn't fully resolved. Forty-some people, by Sable's count, moving through the space across the two days, though never all at once.I had never been in a room that size. My largest prior session had been fifteen, the monthly full council meeting, and even that had required techniques I'd developed specifically to manage it. Sable walked through the agenda with her usual thoroughness — the morning sessions, the afternoon d

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN

    I knew the warning signs. I'd known them for years, the way you know the early symptoms of an illness you've had before. Tight behind the eyes. A specific flattening in how clearly I could distinguish one person's state from another's. A growing reluctance to enter rooms, not from fear exactly, but from a body-level resistance that I'd learned, over a decade, meant something specific: too much, accumulating, unaddressed.If a person I was mediating for had described these symptoms to me, I would have named them immediately and without hesitation. I would have said: this is what depletion looks like. You need rest, real rest, not just time off the calendar. You need to stop and take stock before this becomes something harder to recover from.I would have been right to say that, and I would have said it with the clear, uncomplicated confidence of someone reading a pattern they understood completely.I did not say it to myself.What I did instead, over the following days, was rename each

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER TWENTY SIX

    Hunter called on a Wednesday, which was, as it had been the first time, the sign that something had moved him to call outside the usual rhythm. I was sitting at the table with case files open in front of me, the dense calendar visible on the wall past the lamp, when the phone rang, and I noticed, picking it up, a small flicker of something that wasn't quite dread but lived in the same neighborhood as dread."You've missed two Sundays," he said, by way of greeting.I hadn't realized. The weeks had compressed into each other in a way that made individual days hard to distinguish — session, session, case review, sleep that didn't feel like enough sleep, repeat. I genuinely had not noticed the gap until he named it, and the not-noticing itself felt like a small, separate piece of evidence I hadn't asked for."I'm sorry," I said. "It's been a lot.""That's what I'm calling about." A pause, careful in a way that wasn't like him — Hunter was usually direct from the first sentence, not buildin

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE

    Yolanda asked to see me the day after the ruling session, which I assumed, walking to her office, was a continuation of the corridor praise — a more formal version of well done, perhaps some discussion of what came next for the resolved case.It was not that.Her office was smaller than Rhen's, tucked at the end of a corridor that saw less foot traffic, and the modesty of it had always struck me as deliberate — a person who could have claimed more space and chose not to, the same instinct I'd noticed in the council's choice of building all the way back in my first visit. The chair across from her desk was simple, unupholstered, the kind of seat that didn't invite you to settle in for longer than the conversation required."There's a proposal," she said, once I'd sat down, "for an expanded position. Not just additional cases — a structural addition to your seat. A standing role on the assembly steering committee, which would mean involvement in shaping the larger summit sessions, not ju

  • Alpha Bikers    CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE

    RILEYWe told Luna on a Sunday evening after dinner, the four of us at the kitchen table with the intentional arrangement that the twins had learned over the months to identify as a conversation that mattered — the cleared table, both parents present and settled rather than in transit, the quality o

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO

    KNOXThe archive hearing for Thomas Harper-Wren's cause of death reclassification was scheduled for the second week of January. In the weeks between the Vasquez call and the hearing, three things happened.Mercer's sub-committee appointment was suspended within forty-eight hours of the call, as Vas

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE

    RILEYReyes picked up on the first ring, which told me she'd been expecting the call and had been sitting with it. I was at the kitchen table at ten-seventeen in the evening, the house completely quiet, the twins deeply asleep, Knox somewhere in the building doing his late-evening work with the pra

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT

    RILEYKnox told me in the same way he told me most things that mattered: plainly, completely, without softening the edges or adding comfort-coating that would make the information easier to receive but less accurate. He told me from the beginning — the Corrigan document, the compound, the forty-eig

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