âIs this what weâre doing, now?â
âYou got a better plan?â Mason mumbled into his sheets. A moment later, his eyes snapped open. The room looks the same it did when he crashed out, except the street light filtering in had the frayed edges of many hours predawn. He sat up, his eyes tracking through the space until they landed on the figure sitting shadowed in the corner on a chair that generally saw more action holding laundry that any people.
âYouâre getting slow, Tin Man.â
Mason groaned at the old nickname, even as he hungrily drank in the sight of Magda sitting there, brash as ever. With her scuffed up boots and beaten to shit bomber jacker, she looked like sheâd just walked off a crime scene. He didnât know what to say.
âAre you just going to sit there staring?â
âMagda.â
The smile that cracked her face was alien to him â heâd never known her to be cold, even in her indifference.
âDonât think what youâve been doing is working out so well for you.â
âYou have any suggestions for me, then?â A curl of frustrated resentment coiled in his gut. âWho am I talking to? Of course, you do.â
Magda let out a peal of dry laughter that rasped against his skin the way faded cellulose flyers drifted through gutters on the streets below.
âI might, yeah.â She leaned forward on her knees to peer at him, her grey eyes clinical. The moment stretched on forever. Mason found his head void of thoughts as his whole being narrowed down to focus on Magda, like he could somehow etch the entirety of her into his soul.
âItâs time to move on.â
âWhat?â
âLet me go.â If he thought her smile was cold, this was so much worse.
âI canât,â he husked through a constricted throat clogged with near panic.
âWhy? Youâre hurting yourself.â
âWhat else do I have?â For the first time, Mason looked away, staring unseeingly at the sheets bunched in his fists so tight heâd probably tear holes.
âThis is all a distraction. Youâre not seeing the big picture.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should because Iâm really not the one who matters in all this.â
âYou do to me.â
âMason.â Her voice was sharp, glass breaking, squealing audio feedback on fried pickups. âSomething big is coming down the pipe. Wake up.â


















