LOGINDutch had pulled a muscle. Nothing worse. The nurse and the former art therapist and the club president determined this together over the course of twenty minutes in the compound common room with Dutch providing a running commentary on the diagnosis that was unnecessary and mostly correct.Mira sent him to bed with ice and the specific authority of someone who was going to become this community's healthcare backbone whether it wanted her to or not. She was already looking at the clinic on the main street.The party went on without the four of them for a while and then they rejoined it and by midnight the Ironside was the thing she had loved it as from the first night: warm and earned and full of people who belonged somewhere.She stayed behind when the crowd thinned. She sat at the end of the bar with a coffee gone cold and looked at the room. Pearl was wiping down the counter. Rafe was turned sideways in his chair talking to Mira with his full attention, which was not something Rafe
Colt told the club on a Sunday.He did it the way he did everything that mattered: in person, at the Ironside, with everyone present who should be present. He had told her the night before what he was going to say, which she appreciated not because she needed to be prepared but because he had wanted her to know.She stood behind the bar with Pearl while he stood at the center of the room with Dutch beside him and the brothers arranged in the easy way of people who had been in rooms together long enough not to need to think about where they stood.He said: Dutch is stepping back from active oversight. He has held this club together for thirty years through things that would have ended most organizations. He has done it with more integrity than anyone had a right to expect and more patience than any of us deserved.He said: Iron Vow has come through something significant this past year. We have not just survived it. We have emerged with a federal case on record that protects our territo
Elena Hale pled guilty in April.The proceeding lasted four hours and involved a courtroom in Denver that was not open to the public and a judge who had been specifically selected for her record of handling cases involving national security implications. Three federal attorneys presented the terms of the cooperation agreement. Elena said the words the agreement required her to say, including a specific statement about Marco Vega.Sloane was not in the courtroom.She had been offered a seat, as a victim's family representative, and she had thought about it seriously for two days before deciding she did not need to be there. The cassette tape was there. The ledger was there. The letter was there. Her father was in the room in every way that mattered. She did not need to be present to witness it.She spent that April morning in the therapy room with a woman from Monte Vista who was learning for the first time what it felt like to put something on paper that had been inside her for years.
The hearing was on a Thursday.She dressed for it the way she dressed for things that mattered: carefully and without performance. She wore what made her feel like herself, which after six months in Crestone Falls was a different person's version of herself than the one who had driven into this town on a Tuesday evening.Colt drove her to Denver. Rafe rode separately. Cross met them at the federal building entrance with the focused energy of someone who had been working for two weeks without stopping and had also, somehow, pressed her suit.They went in.The judge was the Honorable Patricia Cane, the same judge who had taken her deposition on the night of the federal building lockdown. Judge Cane recognized her. She did not say anything but there was the briefest acknowledgment between them of a shared history in this case and then the judge put on her formal face and they began.Creel argued first. He was skilled, she noted. He had prepared thoroughly and he presented the procedural
Rafe had the evidence by morning.He had found it by pulling the compound's external communication logs, which he had been maintaining since the previous year's cartel pressure as a standard security measure. The logs showed that the compound's phone line had been routed through an internet exchange that had been compromised: a relay node that had been placed eighteen months ago and had been passively recording and forwarding communications to an IP address in Eastern Europe.Elena had been listening to their calls for a year and a half.She laid it out for Cross over the phone and Cross was quiet in the specific way she was quiet when something was falling into place.Then she said: Rafe's log documentation plus the timing analysis you described creates a strong argument for the manufactured threat theory. We can demonstrate that Elena's network monitored the call, orchestrated the breach in the specific window, and staged the cavern confrontation to create the evidentiary contaminat
His name was Davis Creel. He had been Carter Mercer's outside counsel for seven years, managing the legal architecture of acquisitions and disputes with the competence of someone who had always been well compensated and had never had cause to bite the hand.He had also, as Rafe established in four hours of digital work, been managing Elena Hale's American property holdings through a shell company since three years before Colt hired him.She got to him through the Carter identity, Colt said. She was already in reach of my infrastructure before Sloane arrived. She had Creel in place.Cross sat across from them in the Denver field office. She said: the motion Creel filed is not without merit procedurally. The second passage access happened before the scene was formally secured and the documentation was done in conditions that can be argued as irregular. A federal judge is going to look at it seriously.What happens if it is granted, Sloane said.The second passage evidence is inadmissibl
Her grandmother's name was Rosa Vega. She was eighty-three years old, five feet tall, and possessed of the specific authority of a woman who had outlived enough difficulty to have stopped being careful about anything.Sloane and Colt drove to Albuquerque in March, when the mountain passes were clea
The south garage became something in February.She had spent three months on it, in the hours between everything else, painting the walls and building the shelves and sourcing the kind of furniture that was comfortable without being institutional. She ordered supplies with the focused pleasure of s
It took six weeks to dissolve Carter Mercer.Not because it was complicated, Colt told her. Because it was thorough. He wanted every structure clean, every thread cut properly, every entity that had been Carter's reorganized into something that existed under his real name in a real place with a rea
Mira had extended her visit by three weeks, which she framed as solidarity and which Sloane understood had at least a secondary explanation.The secondary explanation was five foot eleven, dark-haired, and had been finding reasons to be in whatever room Mira was in since approximately the second da







