
The gates opened at 7:14 in the morning.
No one was waiting.
Riker Vale stood at the threshold for exactly three seconds — long enough to feel the difference between the air inside and the air outside, which turned out to be no difference at all. Just air. Just a city that had kept moving for seven years without noticing the gap he'd left in it.
He walked through.
The paper bag under his arm held a wallet with forty dollars, a phone that had been dead since 2018, a watch with a cracked face that still kept perfect time, and a photograph so worn at the edges it had gone soft as cloth. He didn't need to look at the photograph. He'd memorized it the first week inside and spent the next six years and fifty weeks making sure he hadn't forgotten a single detail.
Iris. Two years old. Sitting on a yellow kitchen floor with a plastic bowl on her head, laughing at something off camera.
She was nine now.
He kept walking.
The bus into the city cost four dollars. Riker sat in the back and watched the streets unspool through rain-streaked glass. Seven years wasn't long enough for a city to become unrecognizable but it was long enough for everything familiar to feel slightly wrong — like a song played in the wrong key. Same notes. Something off.
He had a number for a halfway house in the Denton district. A social worker named Briggs had written it on a card and pressed it into his hand with the particular brand of practiced optimism Riker had learned to neither trust nor resent. Just receive.
The halfway house smelled like industrial cleaning fluid and old cooking. The man at the front desk didn't look up when Riker gave his name. Assigned him a room on the third floor. Told him meals were at six and ten and that there was a curfew at eleven that everyone ignored but nobody talked about.
The room had a single window facing a brick wall.
Riker sat on the edge of the bed and looked at the brick wall for a long time. Then he took out the cracked phone, found a charging cable coiled in the bag's bottom, and plugged it into the wall socket beside the nightstand.
While it charged he did three hundred push-ups on the bare floor.
Old habit. The only clock that had never lied to him.
He called the number on the second day.
It rang four times before she answered — Sandra's voice exactly as he remembered it, which surprised him. He'd expected seven years to change even the sound of her.
"Riker." Not a greeting. A bracing.
"I'm out."
A pause. Long enough that he could hear a television in the background and then the sound of it being muted.
"I know," she said. "I got the letter."
"I want to see her."
Another pause. This one different in texture. Not surprise — preparation.
"That's not something I can just — there's a process now, Riker. There are legal arrangements. You can't just call and—"
"I know there's a process." He kept his voice level. He'd practiced this. Three hundred mornings of practicing this exact conversation while staring at a ceiling. "I'm not asking to show up at your door. I'm asking how the process works."
Sandra told him. Supervised visits. A family court date in six weeks. A mediator. Paperwork he'd need to file that required an address, which required the halfway house to count as one. She spoke in the careful measured cadence of someone who had rehearsed this too — just from the other side.
When she finished there was a silence that held seven years of things neither of them said.
"She's okay?" Riker asked.
"She's wonderful," Sandra said. And for the first time her voice cracked — not with grief exactly. With something more complicated. "She's so wonderful, Riker."
He nodded at the brick wall.
"Okay," he said. "I'll file the paperwork."
He hung up. Sat with the phone in his hands until the screen went dark.
Then he went downstairs and asked the man at the front desk where the nearest boxing gym was.
There was no boxing gym.
There was a place called Hector's three blocks south that had a torn canvas bag hanging from a pipe and a back room where men gathered on Thursday nights to hit each other for money. Hector himself was a compact man in his sixties with a scar bisecting his left eyebrow and the particular stillness of someone who had witnessed considerable violence and stopped being impressed by it.
He looked Riker over the way a man appraises used equipment.
"You fight before?"
"Yes."
"Where?"
Riker looked at him.
Hector understood. "Thursday. Fifty if you lose. Hundred fifty if you win. Two hundred if you make it interesting."
"What does interesting mean?"
"You'll know it when the crowd does."
Riker looked around the back room. Concrete floor. Bare bulb. Four men sitting on metal folding chairs watching him with the casual assessment of people who spent their time measuring other people.
"I'll be here Thursday," Riker said.
He was.
The man they put him against was named Truck — not a nickname anyone had given him but one he'd apparently arrived with — and he outweighed Riker by forty pounds of the kind of muscle that comes from hard labor rather than training. He had a way of rolling his neck before he moved that telegraphed exactly what his right hand was about to do.
Riker broke his nose in the first thirty seconds.
Not clean. Messy, ugly, the kind of damage that looks worse than it is and bleeds spectacularly. The crowd made a sound. Truck shook his head, spraying red, and came back harder — which was what Riker expected, what he'd been counting on, because a man who leads with anger leaves his left side open every single time.
Four minutes and twenty seconds after it started, Truck was sitting against the concrete wall trying to remember what year it was.
Hector counted out a hundred and fifty dollars in tens and pressed them into Riker's hand without expression.
Then he said: "Same time next week."
Riker pocketed the money.
On the bus back to the halfway house he did the math. One fifty a week. The family court filing f*e was two hundred and thirty dollars. Lawyer's retainer — a real one, not a public defender — was fifteen hundred minimum.
He looked at the dark city sliding past the window.
He was going to need more fights.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 9
The week before the first sanctioned bout had a specific texture.Riker had felt it before — the particular compression of days when something significant was approaching, the way time simultaneously slowed and accelerated, every training session carrying more weight than its technical content. He'd felt it before fights that mattered. Before the sentencing hearing. The night before he walked out of Creekmore.His body knew how to live inside that feeling. Had been doing it his whole life.What was new was the environment around it.The Iron Vow's culture revealed itself in layers — each one requiring more time and attention to read than the last. The surface layer was simple: train hard, speak with your performance, respect rank. Clean, functional, easy to understand.Below that was something more complex.Riker noticed it first on Monday — three days after the court hearing — when he arrived at the morning session to find the training floor reconfigured. The mats pushed back. The ri
Chapter 8
The court date landed on a Thursday.Riker wore the best clothes he owned — dark trousers, a collared shirt he'd pressed the night before using the iron he'd borrowed from Torres without explanation, a jacket that fit correctly across the shoulders which was the only measurement that mattered to him. He looked at himself in the bathroom mirror above the Harwick facility and made the assessment a fighter made before walking into any room — not vanity, preparation. Understanding how he would be read before he opened his mouth.He looked like a man trying hard.That was accurate. He hoped it was enough.The family court building was downtown — gray stone, high ceilings, the particular institutional weight of a place designed to remind everyone inside it that the proceedings here had consequences. Riker arrived forty minutes early and sat in the corridor outside the courtroom on a wooden bench that matched the one in the Harwick facility and thought about that briefly.His lawyer's name w
Chapter 7
He moved out of the halfway house on Wednesday.Creed had arranged it with the particular efficiency of a man for whom logistics were a language spoken fluently and without ceremony. A room above the Harwick facility — small, clean, a window facing east rather than a brick wall. A bed that didn't announce itself every time he shifted weight. A bathroom he didn't share with eleven other men.Riker stood in the middle of it with his paper bag — still the same paper bag, the contents supplemented now by three changes of clothes bought from a discount rack on Tuesday — and looked at the east-facing window for a long time.Progress had a specific feeling. Not comfort. Not safety. Just the quiet mechanical sensation of a gear catching — something that had been spinning without traction finally finding purchase.He unpacked in four minutes. Set the cracked-face watch on the windowsill. Photograph of Iris beside it.Then he went downstairs to work.The Iron Vow prospect protocol, as Creed exp
Chapter 6
Riker moved first.Not because he was impatient — because he understood instinctively that against a man like Creed, waiting was a form of surrender. Creed would read hesitation the way Riker read rooms, and anything Creed read in the first ten seconds would be used for the rest of whatever this was.So he moved.Straight line. Controlled aggression. The same forward pressure that had ended eleven fights in three weeks.Creed wasn't there.Not a step back — sideways, fractionally, with a shoulder rotation so minimal it barely registered as movement, and Riker's lead hand found nothing but air. The momentum he'd committed to — which had always been an asset, which opponents had always absorbed badly — passed through empty space and left him a half-beat exposed on his right.Creed didn't take it.He reset. Stood at the same distance as before. Waited.Riker recalibrated.Okay.The second exchange lasted longer.Riker slowed his approach — not hesitation, adjustment — and tested Creed's
Chapter 5
He didn't call for three days.Not hesitation exactly. Riker didn't experience the kind of hesitation that came from fear — he'd burned that out of himself somewhere around year two inside, when fear became a luxury the environment couldn't support. What kept the card in his pocket untouched was the particular discipline of a man who had learned that the first move in any unfamiliar situation should be stillness.Watch. Map. Understand the terrain before you commit weight to it.So he watched.He went back to Hector's Friday night — not to fight, just to be present — and paid attention to the room with everything Creed's visit had sharpened in him. Looked at the circuit he'd spent three weeks inside and tried to see it the way Creed had described it. The outermost skin of something deeper.He could see it now.The way certain men moved through the space with a different quality of ownership — not Hector's regulars, not the Thursday crowd, but men who passed through occasionally and we
Chapter 4
He saw the man for the first time in daylight.Riker was three blocks from the halfway house on a Saturday morning, coming back from the corner store with coffee and a bandage roll for his eyebrow, when he noticed him — standing at the far end of the block with his hands in the pockets of a charcoal coat, watching the street with the particular stillness Riker had catalogued in Hector's left corner two nights before.Same quality of motionlessness. Same sense of a man who had chosen his position deliberately and would remain in it until he decided otherwise.Riker didn't break stride.He walked the length of the block, turned into the halfway house entrance, took the stairs to the third floor, set the coffee on the windowsill, and looked down at the street below.The man was still there.Not hiding. Not pretending to check a phone or study a storefront. Simply present — in the open, in daylight, making no effort whatsoever to be invisible.Which meant he didn't need to be.Riker drank
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