MasukFriday was the corporate dinner.
Kieran had been tracking it in his schedule since Tuesday — a client-facing event at Alden's, one of those restaurants where the lighting was specifically designed to make everyone look richer than they were and the menu didn't have prices on it. Elliot's people had given him the guest list: eleven business partners, two board members, three investors from a development fund Sinclair Industries was courting for the Sun City project. Nothing flagged in the security sweep. Private dining room, two exits, kitchen access vetted through the restaurant's own staff protocols.
On paper, it was manageable.
In practice, it meant four hours of standing at measured distance while Elliot worked the room, and Kieran had now spent enough days in close proximity to understand the difference between Elliot performing and Elliot actually working. At the penthouse he was sharp and self-aware and occasionally more honest than Kieran knew what to do with. In a room full of people he needed something from, he became something else entirely — not fake, exactly, but compressed, every edge honed down to the specific instrument the moment required.
He watched Elliot dismantle a negotiation across the room without raising his voice or changing his expression, and thought: this is what an S-Tier alpha actually looks like when they're using it. Not pheromones, not physical dominance. Just the weight of knowing you're the most capable person in the room and being entirely comfortable with that fact.
It was impressive. Kieran found this professionally inconvenient and moved on.
The dinner broke up at half eleven. Guests filtered out through the front. Kieran coordinated with Leone — their driver — to bring the car around to the private exit through the parking garage, standard practice for high-profile clients who wanted to skip the pavement maneuvering. He walked the route himself first, checked in with Leone by earpiece, confirmed the car's position.
Something felt wrong on the way back.
He couldn't name it immediately. Twelve years of training meant the feeling arrived before the reason: a particular quality to the silence in the lower garage level, the position of a shadow that didn't match its light source, the way the air pressure changed near the concrete column at the far end. He catalogued it in the two seconds it took to return to Elliot in the stairwell and said, "Stay close. Don't get ahead of me," in a tone that didn't invite discussion.
Elliot, to his credit, didn't discuss it.
Leone was at the car. Kieran did a final sweep of the immediate ten metres — clear, or clear enough — and nodded. Leone opened the rear door.
The first shot came from the upper level. It hit the car's rear window a half-second after Elliot began to duck in, the glass exploding inward, and Kieran was already moving — grabbing the back of Elliot's jacket, hauling him down hard behind the car's rear quarter panel, covering him with his own body before the echo of the first shot had finished bouncing off the concrete.
Two more shots. Different angle, slightly to the left. Two shooters, elevated positions, which meant they'd been in place before the party arrived. This wasn't opportunistic. This was prepared.
"Leone," Kieran said into the earpiece, very level. "Northeast stairwell, upper deck. Second shooter near the service ramp."
"Copy." Leone's voice was tight. On the other side of the car, Kieran could hear him moving, low and fast.
The shots were getting closer. They were adjusting aim, using the muzzle flash to triangulate, and in thirty seconds they'd have the angle. The car was destroyed — every window gone, tyres shot out on this side. No shelter and no exit from this position.
Kieran mapped the garage in his head. Building entrance: forty feet northeast. Three concrete pillars en route, a row of parked vehicles offering partial cover for the first twenty. Not good. Not good enough to feel comfortable about. But the alternative was staying, and staying was a certainty.
He pressed close to Elliot behind the wrecked car. This close he could feel the alpha's heart hammering, could hear the controlled effort of his breathing — Elliot was frightened, genuinely frightened, and managing it through sheer will. His golden eyes were steady when they met Kieran's.
"We need to reach that building entrance. Forty feet. There's cover for most of it if we move right." Kieran kept his voice flat and even the way he'd learned to in the field — calm was contagious in both directions and right now he needed it going the right way. "When I move, you move. You don't stop. You don't look back. Whatever happens behind you, you keep going. Understood?"
"Kieran—"
"Do you trust me?"
It came out more direct than he'd intended. Elliot stared at him for one second, two, and something shifted in his face — the fear still there but underneath it something that looked almost like certainty.
"Yes."
"Then go. NOW—"
Kieran was up and moving before the word was finished, pushing Elliot ahead, keeping his own body angled between the alpha and the elevated northeast position where the first shots had come from. The garage erupted — concrete dust, the flat crack of shots, Leone returning fire from somewhere behind them to suppress the second position. Kieran felt the graze across his left shoulder like a hot wire, there and gone, but his legs kept moving and his focus narrowed to the forty feet ahead.
First pillar. He shoved Elliot against it, half a second of cover. The angle had shifted — they were compensating, trying to get a clean line.
"Move," Kieran said, and they were moving again.
Second pillar. A shot hit the concrete three inches from Kieran's hand and sprayed them both with chips. Elliot stumbled on the oil-slick floor and Kieran caught him by the arm without breaking stride, practically carrying him the last stretch, and then they were through the glass doors and into the lobby and Kieran had Elliot down behind the security desk before the door had finished swinging shut behind them.
The building alarm was going. Somewhere above them, someone was screaming. Kieran held his position, weapon up, watching the glass doors for follow-through — a professional team would know better, but not all teams were professional.
Thirty seconds. No one came through.
He exhaled and turned to Elliot. His hands moved automatically, checking — collar, shoulder, ribs, face, any sign of blood that wasn't coming from the graze on Kieran's own shoulder. "Are you hit? Tell me anywhere you feel pain."
"I'm fine. I'm not—" Elliot's hands came up and gripped Kieran's arms, steadying or being steadied, it wasn't entirely clear. "You're bleeding. Your shoulder."
"Graze. Not deep." Kieran could hear the sirens now, the building's security already on comms in his earpiece. He pressed the shoulder against his side to slow it and kept his eyes on the door. "Leone, what's your status?"
A pause, then: "Clear on the northeast. Second position already gone. They pulled out fast." Leone's breathing was elevated but controlled. "I'm okay. Car is not."
"Understood. Stay out of sight until police arrive. Don't move the vehicle." Kieran switched off the tactical channel and let himself register, properly, that they were alive. That Elliot was alive and unhurt and sitting on the floor of a hotel lobby holding Kieran's arms like he was checking he was real.
"You covered me," Elliot said. His voice had lost its usual precision. "The whole way across. You kept yourself between me and them."
"That's the job."
"Kieran."
"It's the job. That's all." He said it firmly, the way he'd been saying it to himself all week whenever something Elliot did or said landed somewhere it wasn't supposed to. He believed it less every time he said it.
Elliot looked at him for a long moment in the harsh light of the lobby alarm, dust from the garage still on both of them, the shoulder of Kieran's jacket dark with blood. He didn't argue. He just held on until the first police units came through the door, and Kieran let him, because some things didn't need to be professional.
He'd add it to the list of problems to solve.
MAYAKieran called her at four that afternoon and said he'd eaten properly today.He said it the way he said most things just the fact, no performance around it. He'd had breakfast, actual breakfast, and lunch, and he was going to eat dinner. He said it because he knew she'd been worrying and he was the kind of person who took note of that even when he pretended not to.She got off the phone and stood in her kitchen for a minute.Then she opened the fridge and started cooking. Not heating something up, not assembling things out of packets. Actually cooking, from scratch, with a pan on the hob and a knife on the board and something that needed watching. She needed something to do with her hands. She'd been needing something to do with her hands for about three days.It had been a long few months.✦ ✦ ✦Dr. Chen's text came in at six.Kieran's hormone levels this morning are the best they've been since week eight. Thought you'd want to know.Maya stood at the stove and read it. Read
He stood sideways in the bathroom mirror at seven in the morning and just looked at it. the kind of feeling that needed managing. He does this about once a week now, same as checking the weather brief, informational. He'd stopped being shocked by his own reflection somewhere around week twenty-four. What replaced the shock was something he couldn't name it .Just the recognition that his body was doing something enormous and he was still in it, still standing, still getting dressed and opening laptops and doing calls and carrying all of it forward. Thirty weeks. Two small people who had been working through their own scheduling disagreements with his spine all night. He turned away from the mirror and went to make tea. ✦ ✦ ✦ Elliot had been giving him space for two weeks. He'd asked for it. That part was always the first thing he reminded himself. This was his choice. Clean distance, exactly as requested, Elliot holding to it without trying to chip at the edges. No messages excep
CLARAThe text came in at eight on a Thursday morning.Elliot: Are you free for coffee?She looked at it. Elliot texted for logistics, not for social things. If he wanted to see someone he had his assistant call their assistant and things got arranged. A direct text at eight in the morning asking if she was free meant something was going on.She typed back: Give me an hour.✦ ✦ ✦He was already there when she arrived. In civilian clothes, which she noticed immediately because Elliot in civilian clothes meant he hadn't come from the office and wasn't going to the office and was therefore not in performance mode. He looked like a person instead of a CEO, which was rarer than it should have been.She got a coffee and sat across from him."What happened?" she said."Nothing bad." He looked at his cup. "I just needed to talk to someone who knew me before all of this.""Before all of what?""Before I knew what I was actually like," he said. He said it without self-pity, just as a fact. Cl
Three days after Sunday and the world had not ended.That was still a surprise, honestly. He'd been bracing for something to fall apart for so long that the absence of falling apart felt suspicious. He lay in bed on Wednesday morning and listened to the building and waited for the thing to go wrong.Nothing went wrong. A bus went past outside. Someone's alarm was going off two floors up and then stopped. The twins shifted, both of them, doing their usual morning check-in.He got up and made tea.It was different. He'd expected different, but this was a specific kind of different he hadn't planned for. Quieter. Like something that had been taking up a lot of space in his chest had been put down, and now there was just room where that thing used to be. He didn't know what to do with all the room yet. He kept reaching for the weight of the secret and finding it wasn't there.It was like forgetting you'd been holding something and then noticing your hands were empty.✦ ✦ ✦His phone buzz
Week 22 — Kieran POVIt was eleven-forty and he'd been staring at the same paragraph for fifteen minutes.He knew this because he'd checked the time when he started reading it and checked again just now and the only difference was that the tea beside his laptop had gone completely cold. The paragraph was about contractor liability thresholds in the phase three agreement and it had made sense the first time he read it at nine o'clock and apparently stopped making sense somewhere around the tenth reading.He was twenty-two weeks pregnant with twins and it was almost midnight and his brain had stopped cooperating.He got up.He went to the kitchen. He stood in front of the open fridge for a while. Nothing looked right. He wanted something but he couldn't name it, the kind of craving that was more like an itch than an actual appetite. He stood there long enough that the fridge started making the little alarm sound it made when you left the door open too long.He closed the fridge. He looke
ELLIOTHe had a habit he hadn't told anyone about.Every morning when he got to the office, he walked past Kieran's workstation on the way to his own. He didn't stop. He didn't slow down. He just walked past it the same way you walked past a chair where someone used to sit, without deciding to look and somehow always looking anyway.Ryan had been keeping it ready. The monitor was on, the way Kieran left it. The cable management along the back of the desk was still neat and precise, each wire exactly where it was supposed to be. The small spider plant in the corner had been there since week four and was still alive, green and completely unfussy, growing in the particular way plants grew when someone was actually looking after them.The first week Elliot assumed Ryan was watering it. The second week he walked past it and noticed the soil was damp and Ryan was in a meeting that had started forty minutes ago. He'd stood there for a second, doing the math, and then walked on without saying
Kieran called Dr. Chen's office first thing Wednesday morning."I need to see her today," he told the receptionist. "The symptoms are getting worse."There was typing on the other end. "Dr. Chen had a cancellation at eleven. Can you make that?""Yes. I'll be there."Maya drove him. She'd taken anot
Kieran sat on the couch staring at his phone's blank screen long after Elliot hung up. The silence in the apartment felt heavier than it should."That's what he called about?" Maya's voice cut through the quiet. "Work?"Kieran looked up. His sister stood in the doorway to her bedroom, arms crossed,
The morning light filtered through Kieran's bedroom window with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer. He opened his eyes at exactly 7 AM, the way he'd trained himself to do for years. No alarm needed. Military precision, even in civilian life.Except nothing about his life felt precise anymore.The n
Dr. Chen smiled at him from across the small examination room. She looked exactly like her photo professional, calm, with the kind of face that probably made people feel safe. Kieran didn't feel safe. He felt like he was about to shatter into a thousand pieces."So, Mr. Hunt," she said, settling in







