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Location: Zach's Apartment • Time: Night
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As she leaned back against her seat, savoring the last of her favorite dessert, she closed her eyes to allow the cafe’s atmosphere and the dairy in her system to dull her system. Though, the combination of snow and dust in her system were fighting every single nerve ending she had. She found herself absolutely restless. Sable opened her eyes and huffed out a breath in annoyance. All she had wanted was an easy night at work, make a couple extra dollars to stuff in her pocket, and head home to her studio apartment. Well, if you could call it an apartment. It had walls and a door, a roof. Air mattress on the floor. It didn’t really matter to her- she didn’t spend much time in the place anyway.
It suddenly dawned on her: she could easily find a solution to both her abundance of energy and a place to crash for the night. Grabbing her phone to send a quick message, it dinged just as she was about to hit send. She raised an eyebrow at the text.
We need to talk in person. It’s urgent. - ZWell. That was never good. Letting out a slow breath, she deleted her previous message and pushed her now empty bowl to the end of the table. At least she’d be able to stay at Zach’s, as she had many times before. Or, better yet, maybe she would have a quick word with the guy and still have time for her hook up. She brought the contact back up and typed out the request for a booty call as she drank the last of her water. When the message cleared, she looked up her best friend’s number and gave the guy a call. The moment he answered, she rose to her feet before heading to the door.
”Got your message. You home? I can be there in fifteen.” Sable’s eyes caught sight of a blue Suzuki GSX-R600 parked at the curb. A slow smirk pulled at the corner of her mouth. ”Make that ten.”
“Step away from the motorcycle, Sable.”
Zachariah spoke into the landline without bothering to lift his eyes from the stack of documents spread across his dining table. He’d put her on speaker the moment he recognized her number, freeing his hands to continue the methodical sorting of his life into neat, organized piles.
Professional documents went to the left side of the table. Personal to the right. Things that needed shredding formed a growing mountain in the center.
He’d just finished responding to Wulde’s email—a careful, professional reply acknowledging that he understood if his colleague declined the sudden request. For now, Zachariah had explained, he wasn’t sure when he’d be available to discuss details further, so he’d be leaving power of attorney documents and office keys with his assistant. Said assistant had already received her own email with instructions that would probably have her questioning his sanity come morning.
“If you can walk here in fifteen, you don’t need to steal a ride to make it ten.” He plucked another file from the stack—one of his investigation reports he was working on for the Wardens—and dropped it onto the ‘Warden’ pile with a soft thud.
Her eyes immediately rolled at the voice on the other end of her phone. ”Who the hell died and made you the boss of me?”
She looked back at the bike in front of her and huffed out a breath in annoyance. Damn man. While Sable normally wouldn’t listen to anyone telling her no, she knew for certain that she’d get a long ass lecture if she went through with the steal. And that was absolutely the last thing she wanted to sit through right now.
As she turned and started the walk towards the man’s apartment, she kept her eyes out for nothing in particular that would be following her. ”Guess your news isn’t that damn urgent if you can wait for me to drag my perfect ass there.”
“There’s also this revolutionary concept called running. I hear it’s significantly faster than walking. If your perfect ass can’t handle that level of exertion, there’s also jogging. Or speed walking. Not as fast as running, but still quicker than a leisurely stroll.”
A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth, the familiar rhythm of their banter settling over him like a worn jacket. But the expression faded quickly, replaced by a heavier weight. This might be the last time they’d do this—trade barbs over the phone while she made her way to his apartment with whatever trouble she’d picked up that night.
His hand stilled on the next file folder.
“It is urgent... but I…” He paused, searching for the right words, something that wouldn’t sound like the goodbye it was. What came out instead was lame, inadequate. “I’m in no hurry.”
Zachariah forced himself back into motion and began moving the sorted stacks into their designated containers. Warden files went into a locked briefcase that would find its way back to headquarters. Reed Financial documents filled a banker’s box marked for his employees. A cardboard box addressed to his parents contained insurance policies, a copy of his most recent will, keys, everything they’d need when he was declared dead.
On the couch sat a duffel bag he packed for Sable—his stuff she’d been threatening to steal, crap she’d left in his apartment for some reason, the Tequila Fortaleza Blanco Still Strength she always complained he never shared.
“Were you out working?” he asked, voice carefully neutral as he sealed the parents box with tape.
She couldn’t help the small grin from stretching across her face at his retort. The man knew how to get under her skin, but he was also the only person in the world who she’d allow to speak to her in any sort of way. Well, one that wasn’t bedding her, at least. Sable never knew quite why their relationship never turned to one that didn’t require clothes. Something about the guy just resonated with her. In a world where she once felt incredibly alone, he was her only true solace.
At his next comment, she blinked at his hesitation. She rounded the corner before tilting her head in question. He sounded…different. What in the hell was so urgent that he could be in no hurry for? Had a job of his gone wrong and he just needed to vent? No, he would have outright told her that the moment he answered the phone. Her gut was telling her something wasn’t quite right. Something that she wouldn’t like one bit.
The drugs buzzing through her system made her body shiver. Damn, she needed to get rid of this energy. Maybe that was all this was, just her nervous system in overdrive. Besides, his voice was completely fine with his question. Nothing was wrong. ”Depends which job you mean. If it’s the one involving money? Then, uh. I need a new one of those. Boss is kind of- well, forever indisposed.”
An exasperated sigh escaped through the phone.
“Of course you do. How many jobs is that this month?” Despite the words, his tone held more resignation than real irritation. This was Sable—reckless, stubborn, allergic to authority figures and steady employment in equal measure.
His gaze drifted to the duffel bag on the couch, then to the stack of cash he’d pulled from his safe earlier. He’d been debating whether to include them in her things—two thousand in small bills, enough to keep her afloat for a few months if she was careful.
“What happened this time?”
”Let’s just say we had a difference in opinions. He thought I was psycho, I think I’m adorable.”
“Sure.”
Everything was catching up to her. She realized she really had to watch what she said- if he knew exactly what she had done, and had found the dead mutt, he would put everything together. He would find out she was the Butcher. What would he do if he realized exactly how brutal she could be? Would he look at her differently? Toss her aside, leave her to rot? She would be alone again. Her steps faltered for just a moment before she regained her composure. She wouldn’t let that happen. She needed Zach. More than she’d ever admit.
Clearing her throat, she looked both ways before crossing the street. She could see his apartment building a couple blocks down from her. She groaned and shook her head. ”You know I could be there by now if I just took the damn bike. They wouldn’t have missed it. Much.”
“That’ll hold up well in court.”
She couldn’t help a snicker in response. ”Good thing I know someone who can post my bail.”
Zachariah pushed himself up from where he’d been crouched over the boxes, stretching briefly before making his way across the apartment toward the kitchen. “Have you eaten yet?”
He pulled open the freezer door first. Some frozen vegetables, a bag of chicken breasts, ice cream that had probably been there for months.
Might as well use up what was left. After tonight, it would all go to waste anyway.
When Zachariah opened the refrigerator door next, every muscle in his body went rigid. Blood packs from Vex’s apartment stared back at him—dark plastic bags crowding the shelf like some twisted meal prep. Fire spread through his throat. His mouth flooded with saliva. That familiar, terrible hunger clawed its way up from his chest, demanding attention he refused to give it.
He swallowed hard and forced his gaze away. Bang. The refrigerator door slammed shut, bottles clinking inside from the force.
“... I can make you something.”
He was going to cook for her? She put a little bounce in her step. One thing the man definitely knew how to do was cook. It had served her well many times when she didn’t have the cash for a decent meal. ”Well, I just left the cafe, but I won’t say no to you preparing me something special.”
A smirk tugged at her mouth before she heard the obvious sound of the refrigerator door. Blinking, she raised her brow at the noise. Yeah. Something was definitely wrong with him. ”Z.” Her tone was questioning, letting him know she had heard. What the hell was going on?
It caused her to pick up the pace, transitioning into a light jog. Whatever news was urgent for him, it was causing him to act out. He never lost control. ”I’m about to turn onto your street. I’m almost there.”
“Look at that—record time without a single act of grand theft auto. I’m impressed.”
Zachariah closed his eyes and let his forehead rest against the refrigerator’s cold surface. The metal felt good against his skin. Real. Solid. Normal.
All of this would end soon.
He hadn’t explained the specifics over the phone for good reason. Phone calls were never private—not in their line of work. Even encrypted connections had weak points, and the Wardens possessed the resources to monitor communications. The last thing he wanted was his brothers-and-sisters-in-arms showing up before he could say what had to be said.
Besides, once Sable walked through that door, once she got close enough to notice what he’d become—well. He wasn’t sure she’d let him finish a sentence.
Better to get the important things said while she still saw him as the same person who’d been lecturing her about motorcycle theft.
“... Sable, you gotta take better care of yourself. I’m not always going to be around to help you.”
She wasn’t an idiot. She knew in their line of work, any day could be their last. But the way he was speaking? The tone that enveloped every word spoken? It made every single hair stand on end. Suddenly she was very, very sober. Now, she broke out in a full on sprint.
Had he been threatened? Was he in hiding? A small growl ripped from her throat. She would butcher them all. Too long had she been alone. Where once that had been completely fine with her, now it felt like a death sentence. Zach was hers, and she’d be damned if anything was going to take him from her.
”Name.” Sable knew he would understand exactly what she was asking for. And what she was going to do with it.
1x Thank

















