He looked at her.
She looked at him.
The bite marks above the blanket. The dark circles. The blanket held closed with both hands around the body he had spent five hours learning at the molecular level. The body carrying his child behind the white cotton.
His mouth opened.
The words were there.
’You ca to . You kissed first, in the car, and I have the mory of which hand you used and where you placed it. ’
’You sat on my cock in the bathtub on your own and then you said ’prove it’ and then you kissed my forehead.’
’You said you hated twelve tis and none of them sounded like what they said.’
The words were there.
They did not co out.
Because her jaw was set in the specific way it was set when she had decided sothing before she arrived and was not going to be moved from it, and the dark circles under her eyes were real, and the bite marks were his, and she was holding that blanket closed like it was the only thing currently standing between her and the open air, and she would not look at him directly.
She hadn’t looked at him directly since she ca through the portal.
He looked at her for a long mont.
Then his jaw closed.
His chest rose once.
The officers moved forward.
The towel appeared. One of them holding it out with the flat professionalism of law enforcent maintaining procedure regardless of circumstance.
He took it.
Wrapped it around his waist.
Held his wrists out.
The handcuffs engaged with the specific, flat click of tal eting tal at the correct torque, and he looked down at them with the expression of a man noting a detail.
He started walking.
"Did you just—"
The words ca out quiet.
Arriving in the space between him and everyone present without volu, without accusation — just the shape of a question that had not finished forming before it needed to be said.
"Did you just betray ?"
He kept walking.
Past Sugar.
Past Thalia.
His shoulder passed three inches from hers in the space between them.
He did not look at her.
He kept walking toward the rooftop door.
The officers flanked him.
The city burned below.
The door hung in the sky above.
He shook his head once.
Small. Private. A single, minimal acknowledgnt of a situation.
The collar ca from above.
Not from the officers. Not from Sugar.
From the direction of the door in the sky — a targeted deploynt through a portal too small and too fast to track without his full sensory architecture, which was precisely the point.
It closed around his neck before his body had registered the approach vector.
The click was different from the handcuffs.
It was the sound of significant engineering applied to a problem that had never previously had a solution.
The silence.
That was the first thing.
The internal silence — the constant background hum of his own capability, the structural awareness of his power that had been present since birth with the consistency of a heartbeat, the thing he had stopped noticing because noticing requires contrast and he had never had contrast before.
Gone.
Not reduced.
Not suppressed to a threshold.
Gone.
The specific geotry of the collar engravings registered against his neck — the sa geotry as the door in the sky. The sa engravings the humans had been reverse-engineering from the fragnts for years, applied here to a suppression chanism that didn’t just block his power but addressed it at the frequency of its source.
Forty-eight hours.
His nervous system had read the collar’s full paraters in the first half-second, the way his body read everything — completely, automatically, before his conscious mind had finished processing the fact of the collar’s existence.
Forty-eight hours of total suppression.
Enough to transport him.
Enough to process him.
Enough to deposit him inside whatever facility they had built for his classification level without any aningful option for response.
His legs gave.
Both knees hit the rooftop concrete with a flat, clean impact.
His cuffed wrists caught the forward pitch on his forearms.
He knelt on the rooftop.
Naked from the waist up. Cuffed. Collared. Kneeling.
The city below him, burning in its amber persistence.
The door in the sky above him, carrying the sa engravings as the thing now locked around his neck.
Sugar stepped into his field of vision.
She looked down at him.
The complicated expression had simplified itself.
Not triumph — Sugar didn’t do triumph, had never done triumph, it had always been one of the things about her that he had found genuinely interesting. Just resolution. The specific, settled expression of a person who has completed sothing they decided to complete.
"You are going to get," she said, "what you have done to others."
He looked up at her.
"Did you betray ."
Not the second ti. The clarification. The question in its full form, addressed to her specifically.
"You were the one," she said, "who started it first."
He looked past her.
To Thalia.
Still in the doorway.
Both hands on the blanket.
Head down.
The green of her hair catching the pre-dawn light from the eastern horizon, the bite marks visible above the fabric, the dark circles and the rough voice and the specific, precise way she was looking at the rooftop concrete instead of at him.
His jaw tightened.
His eyes narrowed.
He looked at her.
She didn’t look up.
Her hands tightened on the blanket — just fractionally, the knuckle tension visible from where he knelt — and stayed down.
He looked at her for a long mont.
Then looked at the city.
[ HOST — DO YOU WISH TO BYPASS THE COLLAR AND RESTORE YOUR POWERS? ]
The system window opened in the space before his eyes with its characteristic clean-edged, administratively indifferent appearance.
He read it.
His eyes on the notification.
His knees on the cold rooftop concrete.
His cuffed wrists against his thighs.
The prison they were going to put him in — he knew its na, its classification rating, its architectural specifications from intelligence gathered over eighteen months of patient, careful work. Tartarus. The facility built specifically for Class A containnt, the one that had never been tested because no Class A had ever been successfully apprehended before.
The one that currently housed forty-seven individuals he had been tracking.
Forty-seven people who could not be freed from outside.
Who needed soone to walk in through the front door with the right knowledge and the right plan and forty-eight hours of apparent powerlessness as cover.
He looked at the notification.
His mouth moved.
The corner of it.
The small, private thing that his mouth did when a situation had arrived at the place he had been patient enough to wait for.
He did not smile at Sugar.
He did not smile at the officers.
He did not smile at Thalia, though so part of him noted that she would have recognised the expression if she had been looking.
She wasn’t looking.
’Oh, co on, system.’
He addressed it clearly, the internal voice carrying the tone he used for problems that had already been solved.
’Wouldn’t bypassing it just ruin all my plans to free the super villains?’
En Route — Black SUV, 5:14 AM
The city moved past the tinted windows in amber and grey.
Early enough that the roads were mostly clear — a skeleton crew of delivery vehicles and the occasional cab carrying soone from one end of their night to the other. The SUV moved through it at a pace that communicated both authority and the specific unhurry of people who have already accomplished what they ca to do.
He sat in the back.
Cuffed. Collared. The towel still around his waist, his bare chest carrying the full record of the last several hours in marks that the interior lighting was generous enough to illuminate in detail. His back against the leather. His cuffed wrists resting in his lap with the comfortable posture of a man who has decided that his current physical constraints are primarily a matter of aesthetics.
The screens were everywhere.
Not just one television — multiple. The SUV had a built-in display panel across the back of the front seats, and through the window the city’s outdoor screens cycled through their morning rotation, and at a red light the news ticker on the building to their left was carrying the sa headline the display in front of him was carrying.
// BREAKING — CRUXIUS BLAC ARRESTED ON CHARGES OF SEXUAL ASSAULT / CRIMINAL COLLUSION WITH SUPER VILLAIN NETWORK//
— Forr Blac Corporation heir apprehended at dawn. Thalia Blac confird as victim and primary witness. Sources indicate extensive evidence of forced contact. Blac family confirms Thalia as sole rightful heir effective imdiately —
// CRUXIUS BLAC: FROM HEIR TO CRIMINAL? THE PLAYBOY’S FALL — FULL COVERAGE//
— New information suggests arrested suspect had been operating covert network in cooperation with multiple classified super villain entities. FBI involvent confird. Thalia Blac statent pending —
He read the ticker.
Read it again.
The corner of his mouth moved.
Just the corner.
The small, private thing.
Sugar caught it in her peripheral vision.
She turned from the window.
"What are you laughing at?"
Her voice carried the controlled register she had been using since the rooftop — the professional containnt of a woman who has completed a job and is managing the aftermath.
But beneath it, the specific edge of soone who cannot entirely account for his expression and finds that irritating.
He turned to look at her.
Sugar, in the back seat beside him. Still in the pencil skirt and jacket. Her badge clipped at her hip. Her face carrying the careful composure of soone who went into a situation prepared and ca out of it exactly as planned and is still sohow unsatisfied with how she feels about that.
"Nothing," he said.
A pause.
"Just thinking." His eyes moved back to the ticker on the window. "About how thoroughly you’ve closed the doors."
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