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CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND FIVE

last update publish date: 2026-05-05 07:21:41

KNOX

The summer ended and the autumn began and the pack land moved into its second full year of established operation.

The word established mattered. In the first year everything had been building — the framework, the community center, the governance structures, the school curriculum. Building required constant attention and management and the specific energy of things being made rather than things being maintained. The second year had that quality of having arrived: the structures were in plac
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  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY SIX

    I took two weeks before returning to any active casework, the longest stretch I'd allowed myself since accepting the seat, and for most of the first week I resisted calling it rest at all, some old reflex still wanting to name it failure, recovery from failure, anything other than what it plainly was.By the second week, I'd stopped fighting the word.I spent those days slowly, deliberately, doing things that had nothing to do with the council or the work — walking the river path without rehearsing any conversation, cooking meals that took longer than they needed to simply because I had the time, sitting in the small park near my apartment and watching the same older man feed the same handful of birds, an ordinary scene I'd walked past dozens of times without ever once stopping to actually watch it.I spent the time doing what my mother had described in her kitchen — letting people in, properly, rather than the edited version I'd been offering for months. I called Hunter and gave him

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE

    My mother arrived the day after the review, unannounced, which was unlike her — she was a planner, a caller-ahead, someone who respected boundaries even with her own children. I opened the door to find her standing there with a bag over her shoulder and an expression I hadn't seen on her before, not quite worry, something steadier and more determined than worry."Hunter told me," she said, before I could ask. "Not because you didn't want me to know. Because he was right to."I let her in. I didn't have the energy to feel embarrassed about the apartment, which hadn't been properly tidied in days, or about my own appearance, which I suspected matched the apartment. There was something almost merciful about being too depleted to perform composure for her — for once, she was simply seeing the actual state of things, without the careful editing I usually applied even to my mother, even to the person who'd named the Resonance for me in the first place.She didn't comment on either. She put

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY FOUR

    The council convened a review three days later, which felt, when Sable informed me of the date, both far too soon and somehow not soon enough — too soon for me to have recovered anything resembling clarity, not soon enough to relieve the specific dread of waiting for it.I spent those three days mostly in the apartment, under instructions from Yolanda that I suspected carried more weight than she'd presented them as carrying. Rest, she'd said, the day after, when she'd come to check on me in person rather than sending Sable. Actual rest. Not the version you've apparently been doing instead of resting for the past month.I hadn't argued with her. I didn't have the capacity to argue with anyone, in those first days. The depletion that had built across weeks didn't clear in a single night's sleep, or even three nights. I slept long stretches and woke still tired in ways that frightened me a little, the particular fear of a body that has been pushed somewhere it doesn't know how to return

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY THREE

    I don't remember the next several minutes in full sequence. I've reconstructed them since, partly from what others told me afterward and partly from fragments that surfaced later, disordered, the way memory sometimes returns after something has overwhelmed the part of you that usually keeps things in order.What I remember most clearly is the sound going strange first — not quieter, not louder, just wrong, as though the room had been recorded and was now being played back through a damaged speaker. Voices arrived without their usual edges. Yolanda was saying something, and Rhen was saying something, and I understood that they were asking me questions, but the questions arrived as shapes without content, the way language sounds when you're falling asleep against your will and trying not to.The static that had been building all day stopped being background and became foreground entirely. I had spent the whole afternoon distinguishing it from the actual signal of the room, holding the l

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY TWO

    The session continued for another forty minutes, and I watched, with a growing and very specific horror, as the structure I'd helped build began to harden around the wrong foundation.Forty minutes is not a long time, in most contexts. I have sat through forty-minute stretches of ordinary work without registering them as anything more than a portion of an afternoon. This forty minutes felt different — each one passing with the particular slowness of watching something happen that you have started, that you can see clearly is wrong, and that you cannot yet find the words to stop.Rhen, working from the assessment I'd given, began directing questions toward Corwin with a different inflection than he'd used before — gentler in tone but pointed in substance, the careful pressure a moderator applies when he believes a party is managing concealed resistance rather than engaging honestly. Corwin, for his part, responded to this shift the way anyone would respond to being subtly accused of ba

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTY ONE

    The third dispute of the afternoon was the one that mattered most, structurally — the council had scheduled it deliberately for this slot, after the room had warmed into the rhythm of the day, because it was the most contentious of the four and the one most likely to benefit from whatever read I could offer.I didn't know any of that context in the moment with the clarity I'm able to give it now. In the moment, I knew only that the blur from the second dispute hadn't cleared during the brief transition, that the pressure I'd been mistaking for individual signals was, if anything, building rather than resolving, and that Rhen, moderating this session, was about to ask me directly for an assessment.He did, partway through the second representative's statement. A pause built into the structure, a moment where the room turned, by habit now, toward my corner of the table."Luna. What are you reading?"The room's attention settled on me, forty pairs of eyes finding their way to my corner o

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER THIRTEEN

    KNOXSaturday started with Hunter showing up at my door at seven-forty-five wearing a tiny leather jacket over his dinosaur pajamas.He had his helmet under his arm."Luna says she's not ready yet," he announced. "But I am ready. I have been ready."I crouched down. "You're not wearing pants."He l

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER NINE

    RILEYI was in the middle of laying down a base coat when Knox walked in.Not unusual — he'd been showing up at the shop most mornings, had started making himself useful in ways that made it hard to stay angry because you couldn't actually argue with someone who knew the difference between a torque

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER EIGHT

    KNOXI'd had the helmets made three days in advance.Getting the lettering right was the hard part. Riley's style is specific — she learned calligraphy somewhere along the line, uses it for the custom job plaques in the shop, has a way of writing people's names like each letter belongs to them spec

  • Alpha Bikers   CHAPTER SEVEN

    RILEYI made the list at two in the morning.Not because I couldn't sleep — I could've slept, probably, if I'd tried — but because making lists is what I do when the world stops making sense and I need to put things somewhere outside of my own head. I've been doing it since I was twelve. Grocery li

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