Chapter One: The Anatomy of a Hero
The grand ballroom of the Oak Creek Heritage Hotel smelled of roasted tenderloin, melting ice sculptures, and the cloying, expensive perfume of women who had never known a day of actual physical danger. The annual Firefighter’s Benevolent Fundraiser was the town’s premier social event, a glittering monument to municipal pride. I sat at Table Four, swirling a glass of sparkling water I hadn’t tasted, observing the room with the detached, clinical precision my profession demanded.
I am Dr. Paige Carter. By medical training, I am a forensic pathologist. By trade, I am a Special Agent with the State Bureau of Investigation, the SBI. I spend my days analyzing the grim topography of human trauma—interpreting lividity, measuring defensive wounds, and reading the silent narratives left behind by violence. My world is governed by biology and law, two forces that cannot be charmed, bribed, or manipulated.
But tonight, I was just a sister.
On the raised stage, bathing in the golden spotlight and the adulation of two hundred local elites, stood Owen Miller. Owen was a Captain in the municipal Fire Department, the golden boy of the district. He possessed the kind of rugged, square-jawed charisma that local politicians coveted and local police officers respected. He was currently accepting a commendation for a warehouse rescue, speaking with a practiced, self-effacing humility that made the crowd applaud even louder.
Beside me sat Claire, my twin sister. We shared the same auburn hair and the same pale green eyes, but the similarities ended at the surface. Where I was sharp edges and guarded cynicism, Claire was soft, yielding, and endlessly empathetic. She was also five months pregnant with Owen’s child.
As Owen descended the stage to a standing ovation, he made a beeline for our table. He smiled brilliantly, flashing perfectly straight teeth. He reached out and enveloped Claire in a one-armed hug, pressing a kiss to her temple. The other wives at the table cooed at the display of affection.
I didn’t coo. I watched his hand.
Owen’s broad, calloused fingers wrapped around Claire’s upper left arm. To the untrained eye, it was an anchor of love. To me, it was a vice. I saw the tendons in his forearm flex beneath his tailored tuxedo jacket. I saw the momentary, involuntary flinch in Claire’s shoulders. And beneath the heavy layer of high-end foundation she had applied, my trained eyes caught the unmistakable, yellowish-green perimeter of a contusion in the late stages of healing near her collarbone.
A cold dread coiled in my gut. It wasn’t the first time I had noticed the subtle, chilling indicators. A sprained wrist blamed on a clumsy fall. A sudden isolation from our weekly coffee dates. A nervous habit of checking her phone every three minutes when he wasn’t around. The town saw a hero; I was beginning to see a predator hiding behind a badge of public trust.
“I’m going to run to the ladies’ room,” Claire murmured, her voice tight. She stood up a little too quickly, smoothing the fabric of her maternity dress.
“I’ll walk with you,” I said, immediately pushing my chair back.
The restroom corridor was heavily carpeted and mercifully quiet, muting the booming jazz band from the ballroom. I caught Claire by the elbows just as she pushed open the heavy oak door to the lounge.
“Claire, look at me,” I said, my voice dropping to a low, urgent whisper. I reached up, gently brushing the fabric of her dress aside to expose the edge of the fading bruise. “What is this? The truth. Now.”
Her eyes darted frantically toward the hallway. “Paige, stop. I bumped into the edge of the kitchen island. I’m clumsy lately, the baby throws off my center of gravity—”
“The kitchen island is waist-high. This is trauma to the clavicle. The impact angle is wrong for a fall, Claire. It’s a grip mark.”
Tears sprang to her eyes, sudden and desperate. “Please, just let it go. You don’t understand the pressure he’s under. He just gets… intense.”
“Intense is a mood, Claire. This is assault.” I reached for my purse, my fingers brushing the leather holster of my service weapon inside. “You’re coming home with me tonight.”
The heavy oak door swung open with a slow, deliberate creak.
Owen filled the doorframe. The warm, self-effacing hero from the stage was entirely gone. His face was a mask of cold, terrifying composure. He stepped into the lounge, his sheer size making the air in the room feel instantly depleted.
“My wife is a bit tired tonight, Paige,” Owen said. His voice was smooth, but his eyes were completely dead. He placed a heavy hand on the small of Claire’s back, a territorial claim. “Let’s not stress her out with your intense forensic questions. It isn’t good for the baby.”
I didn’t back up. “I’m talking to my sister, Owen. Not you.”
“And I’m taking my wife back to our table,” he replied. He leaned in, just a fraction of an inch, close enough that I could smell the peppermint on his breath and the dark, underlying scent of pure adrenaline. “Leave it alone, Doctor. This town looks out for its own.”
He guided Claire out of the room. She didn’t look back.
Thirty minutes later, unable to stomach another second of the charade, I walked out to my car in the chilly autumn air. The valet handed me my keys, but before I could start the engine, my phone vibrated in the cup holder.
It was a text message from Claire. It vanished from the screen exactly ten seconds after I opened it, a self-destructing feature I had taught her to use years ago for sending me secure case files.
The text read: He monitors my phone. Don’t look at me like that again. It makes him angry.
Chapter Two: The Threshold
The phone rang at 5:03 a.m.
It wasn’t a standard ringtone. It was the blaring, high-decibel alarm I had specifically assigned to Claire’s number for emergencies. I was out of bed and moving before I was entirely conscious, my feet hitting the cold hardwood floor of my apartment.
I snatched the phone from the nightstand. “Claire?”
There was no voice. Just the chaotic, terrifying sound of a violent struggle. I heard a heavy thud, the shattering of glass, and a sharp, ragged gasp. Then, a voice—Owen’s voice, low, guttural, and dripping with venom. “You think you can leave me? You think anyone in this town will help you?”
“Claire! I’m on my way! I’m tracking your phone!” I shouted, though I knew she likely couldn’t hear me.
Then came the sudden, absolute silence. The line went dead.
I didn’t bother changing out of my dark gray sweatpants and plain t-shirt. I grabbed my tactical jacket, clipped my gold SBI badge to the breast pocket, shoved my service weapon into its holster, and grabbed my trauma kit.
The drive across the county line was a blur of high-speed maneuvers and adrenaline-soaked calculations. My brain shifted into forensic overdrive, involuntarily visualizing the medical scenarios waiting for me at the end of the route. Placental abruption. Hemorrhage. Traumatic asphyxia. I pushed my unmarked state SUV to ninety miles an hour, ignoring the red lights of the sleeping suburban intersections.
When I careened into their pristine, tree-lined driveway, the house was dark, save for the sickly yellow glow of the porch light.
Owen was standing on the front porch.
He was fully dressed in his pristine, dark blue Captain’s uniform, the silver bugles on his collar gleaming. He stood with his legs planted wide, his arms crossed over his chest, blocking the front door. He looked entirely calm, a stark contrast to the violence I had heard over the phone just fifteen minutes earlier.
I slammed the SUV into park, grabbed my trauma kit, and sprinted up the walkway.
“Go back home, Paige,” Owen said, his voice flat, projecting the authoritative calm he used at fire scenes. “This is private. She had a panic attack, fell, and knocked over a lamp. I’m handling it.”
“Move,” I commanded, not slowing my stride.
“I said, I’ve got it under control,” he warned, stepping forward to intercept me. He extended a massive, heavily muscled arm, a physical barricade meant to intimidate.
I didn’t stop. I dropped my shoulder, bracing my core, and drove my momentum directly into his chest. He was larger, but he wasn’t expecting the sheer, violent velocity of my refusal to submit. He stumbled back a half-step, breaking his stance. I shoved past him, my hand turning the brass doorknob and throwing the door open.
The living room was dimly lit, but the devastation was clear. A shattered glass coffee table sparkled across the Persian rug. And there, slumped against the base of the sofa, was Claire.
She was clutching her swollen belly, her breathing a series of shallow, wet rasps. Her bottom lip was split, a dark ribbon of blood tracking down her chin, and the left side of her face was already swelling into an ugly, distorted mass.
“Claire!” I dropped to my knees beside her, my fingers instantly finding the carotid artery in her neck to check her pulse. It was erratic, racing with shock. I opened my trauma kit,
my hands moving with the practiced, mechanical efficiency of a surgeon, deliberately shutting out the blinding rage that threatened to overtake my professional training.
I pulled out a portable pulse oximeter, snapping it onto Claire’s trembling index finger. The numbers glowed a warning red—her oxygen saturation was dangerously low. I grabbed a penlight, gently peeling back her bruised eyelid. Her pupils were sluggish. Possible concussion. Hypoxia from restricted airway.
“Claire, honey, look at me,” I said, keeping my voice low and steady as I began to palpate her cervical spine, feeling for misalignments. “Squeeze my hand. Tell me where it hurts the most.”
“My stomach,” she whimpered, curling tighter into a fetal position. “Paige… the baby.”
Heavy, black uniform boots stepped onto the Persian rug. Owen walked into the living room, casually adjusting the cuffs of his pristine shirt. He looked down at us with the detached annoyance of a man dealing with a spilled drink, rather than a battered pregnant woman.
“I told you, she fell,” Owen said, his tone dropping an octave, radiating a dark, territorial threat. “The local police are my guys, Paige. They play poker in my garage on Fridays. You have no business here. Get out of my house before I have you arrested for breaking and entering.”
I didn’t look up from Claire. I reached into my tactical jacket, unclipped my gold SBI shield, and stood up in one fluid, explosive motion. I closed the distance between us, pressing the heavy metal of the badge directly against the center of his chest.
“I am a State Special Agent and a sworn medical officer,” I said, my voice dropping to a near-whisper that resonated with absolute, lethal intent. “If you step between me and my patient, I will have you booked for obstructing a state investigation, aggravated assault, and domestic terrorism before your local friends even wake up.”
Owen looked at the badge, then down at my face. For a fraction of a second, the mask slipped, and I saw the pure, unadulterated venom beneath. He opened his mouth to reply, but the words were drowned out.
Through the shattered front window, the flashing red and blue strobes of emergency lights began to paint the living room walls. The wail of approaching sirens filled the suburban street—sirens Owen had summoned to have me forcibly removed from his property.
Chapter Three: The Blue Wall
Two patrol officers burst through the open front door, their hands resting cautiously on their duty belts. I recognized the lead officer instantly. Officer Mark Davis was a regular at the firehouse barbecues, a man who idolized the ground Owen walked on.
Davis took one look at the shattered glass, bleeding Claire, and Owen standing tall in his Captain’s uniform. Instantly, his posture relaxed. He didn’t see a crime scene. He saw his buddy having a tough night.
“Hey, Captain. Everything okay here?” Davis asked, his tone casually deferential. “Dispatch got a disturbance call. Neighbors heard some shouting.”
“It’s nothing, Mark,” Owen said smoothly, shaking his head with a perfectly executed sigh of an exhausted husband. “Claire had a bad episode. Anxiety. She tripped and fell into the table. Dr. Carter here overreacted and forced her way in. I’d appreciate it if you could escort her out so my wife can rest.”
Davis turned to me, puffing out his chest. “Ma’am, I’m going to have to ask you to step outside.”
“Officer Davis,” I snapped, pivoting to face him, the SBI badge still gleaming in my hand. “I am establishing primary jurisdiction over this scene under State Penal Code 412. This is an active felony assault investigation. Secure the perimeter. Do not allow anyone to leave. And cancel the local EMTs. I am calling in a state-monitored medevac unit.”
Davis blinked, his swagger faltering. He looked nervously at Owen, caught between the sheer gravity of a state agent and the local loyalty he owed the Fire Captain. “Agent Carter, come on. It’s an unfortunate domestic dispute between public servants. Let’s not make a federal case out of this.”
“I am not asking for your permission, Officer. I am giving you a lawful order. If you fail to secure this suspect, you will be named as an accessory in my report.”
I turned my back on them, pulling my encrypted state radio. Within ten minutes, an ambulance from the state university hospital—three counties over, far beyond Owen’s sphere of influence—arrived.
As the paramedics loaded Claire onto the stretcher, I began the meticulous, cold work of forensic documentation. While Owen watched furiously from the porch, I photographed the shattered glass, measured the blood spatter trajectory, and swabbed the edge of the table. I was preserving forensic evidence that could never be altered, “misplaced,” or deleted by the local precinct.
Thirty minutes later, I was sitting in the back of the idling ambulance with Claire. She was hooked to an IV, shivering despite the heavy thermal blankets. Officer Davis climbed into the back, holding a standard-issue clipboard.
“Hey, Claire,” Davis said softly, offering a sympathetic, highly practiced smile. “Before you go, I just need you to sign this incident report. It just states that the injury was accidental, a fall caused by dizziness. Standard liability waiver. It’ll keep the paperwork off Owen’s desk.”
Claire stared at the pen he offered, her hand trembling. The conditioning of abuse was so deep, so ingrained, that she actually reached for it.
I stepped between them. I pulled my phone from my pocket, the screen recording video and audio.
“Officer Davis,” I said, my voice echoing clearly in the metal cabin of the ambulance. “You are interviewing a victim of a felony assault who is semi-conscious and under medical duress, without state investigators present. You are actively attempting to coerce a false statement to protect a personal friend.”
Davis turned pale, pulling the clipboard to his chest as if it burned him.
“This recording,” I continued relentlessly, “is going directly to the State Attorney General’s Office of Professional Standards. Step out of my ambulance. Now.”
Davis scrambled backward out of the doors. As the ambulance pulled away, I looked out the back window. Owen was standing in the driveway, watching us leave. His arrogant smirk was gone, replaced by a darkened, hollow expression of realization. The protective shell of his town was cracking.
By noon, Claire was stabilized in the secure wing of the state hospital. The baby’s heartbeat was strong, though Claire had suffered two fractured ribs and severe tracheal bruising. With her safely under state guard, I retreated to my office at the Bureau headquarters in the capital.
The adrenaline was fading, leaving a cold, calculated clarity. I logged into the central state database, bypassing the local county firewalls, and initiated a deep-dive audit of the police dispatch logs for Owen’s address over the last three years.
The screen flickered, lines of code translating into sterile police jargon. What I found made the blood freeze in my veins.
There hadn’t just been one incident. There had been three previous 911 calls from Claire’s cell phone. But every single dispatch record had been manually overridden at the local precinct level. They were systematically classified as “faulty security alarms” and purged from the county’s public safety records. The local police department wasn’t just turning a blind eye; they were an active, organized accessory to my sister’s torture.
Chapter Four: The Public Execution
The counter-attack came swiftly. Owen was not a man accustomed to losing control, and he fought like a cornered animal who believed he still owned the cage.
Two days after Claire’s hospitalization, I was summoned to the Director’s office at the SBI. Owen had used his political connections to file a formal, blistering Internal Affairs complaint against me. He alleged abuse of power, unlawful entry, and personal bias, claiming I had “weaponized state resources to settle a petty family dispute.” His local Police Chief had even co-signed the complaint, demanding my badge.
“They want you suspended, Paige,” my Director warned, sliding the thick manila folder across his desk. “They’re circling the wagons. You kicked a hornets’ nest in Oak Creek.”
I didn’t flinch. I didn’t react emotionally. I opened my briefcase and placed a far thicker binder on his desk.
“Let them circle,” I replied. “I’m bringing a wrecking ball.”
Inside the binder was the ironclad architecture of Owen’s ruin. I included the forensic medical reports confirming defensive wounds and strangulation. I included the purged dispatch logs I had extracted from the state server. And, most damning of all, I included the audio files I had forensically recovered from Claire’s phone—recordings of Owen’s abuse that he thought he had successfully deleted.
The Director read the files. The color slowly drained from his face. When he looked up, his eyes were hard as flint. “What do you need?”
“Warrants,” I said. “And a very public venue.”
The Oak Creek Municipal Hall was a towering structure of limestone and stained glass. On a Tuesday evening, it was packed to capacity for the Mayor’s Annual Public Safety Address. This was Owen’s domain. He was scheduled to receive the “Community Pillar” award, the ultimate validation of his untouchable public persona.
I stood in the heavy oak double doors at the back of the hall, flanked by four uniformed State Troopers and a senior investigator from the State Ethics Commission.
On stage, the Mayor was at the podium. “…and it is my distinct honor to present this award to a man who embodies the very best of Oak Creek. Captain Owen Miller!”
The applause was deafening. Owen stood up from the front row, buttoning his dress uniform jacket, flashing that brilliant, practiced smile. He took the plaque from the Mayor, waving modestly to the crowd.
I pushed the double doors open. They hit the back walls with a loud, echoing crack.
The applause died, tapering off into a confused, murmuring silence. I walked straight down the center aisle, the heavy, rhythmic click of my heels against the marble floor serving as a countdown. The State Troopers matched my pace perfectly.
Owen saw me. His smile fractured. As I approached the steps of the stage, he leaned over the edge, his voice dropping into a vicious, mocking whisper meant only for me. “You’re making a fool of yourself, Paige. You’re destroying your own career.”
I didn’t stop. I walked up the side stairs, crossed the stage, and stood directly in front of him. I didn’t raise my voice to shout. I simply reached out, took the microphone from the Mayor’s trembling hand, and let the full, uncompromising weight of the state speak for me.
“Owen Miller,” I announced, the amplified sound booming through the cavernous hall. “You are under arrest by warrant of the State Superior Court for felony assault, domestic abuse of a pregnant victim, and conspiracy to obstruct justice.”
The hall erupted into gasps. Flashbulbs from the local press began to pop in rapid succession.
I turned away from Owen’s stunned face and looked directly at the local Police Chief, who was sitting in the front row, his jaw unhinged in shock.
“And Chief,” I said into the microphone, my eyes locking onto his. “Your precinct is currently being locked down. Your officers, including Mark Davis, are being served with subpoenas by federal monitors as we speak, for their active role in purging public safety records and aiding a felon.”
Two State Troopers stepped forward, grabbing Owen’s arms and wrenching them behind his back. The sharp, metallic click of the handcuffs echoed through the microphone. Owen struggled, his face turning a mottled, furious purple.
As they marched him past me, the flashbulbs blinding him, he leaned his head toward my shoulder. His breath was hot with desperate malice.
“You think you won?” he whispered frantically. “I still own the house. I control the joint savings. I have the best lawyers in the county. I’ll be out on bail by midnight, Paige. And then I am taking full custody of that unborn child.”
Chapter Five: Iron and Paper
Owen’s arrogance was born of a lifetime of privilege, but it fundamentally misunderstood the nature of the machinery I had just unleashed upon him. He thought the law was a negotiation. I knew it was an algorithm.
At 11:30 p.m., Owen’s defense attorney—a slick, high-priced local shark named Vance—stood before a judge. But he wasn’t standing before the local magistrate he played golf with. I had successfully petitioned to have the bail hearing moved to the State Superior Court in the capital, citing systemic local corruption.
“Your Honor,” Vance argued, gesturing smoothly to Owen, who was sitting at the defense table in a bright orange county jumpsuit. “Captain Miller is a decorated public servant with deep, undeniable ties to his community. He is a homeowner. He is an expectant father. The allegations are exaggerated, born of a high-stress domestic misunderstanding. He poses absolutely no flight risk and no threat to the public.”
The state judge, a severe woman with silver hair and zero patience, peered over her glasses at the prosecution’s table. “Agent Carter. The state’s position?”
I stood up. I didn’t bring rhetoric; I brought science.
I carried a large tablet to the center of the courtroom and connected it to the display monitors facing the judge. “Your Honor, the state opposes bail. The defendant relies on his public reputation, but forensic evidence dictates reality.”
I tapped the screen. A high-resolution, 3D medical rendering of Claire’s neck and upper torso appeared on the monitors.
“This is a forensic scan of the victim taken four hours after the assault,” I stated clinically. “Note the deep-tissue contusions around the larynx and the hyoid bone. These are not blunt force injuries from a fall. These are sustained, directional pressure marks.” I tapped the screen again, overlaying a digital footprint of Owen’s heavy, Kevlar-lined rescue gloves, which I had seized from his gear locker. The match was physically perfect.
“Furthermore, regarding his threat to the victim,” I said, tapping the final audio file I had recovered from Claire’s phone. I hit play.
The courtroom speakers crackled with the horrifying, clear audio of the 5:03 a.m. assault. The sound of breaking glass. Claire’s muffled cries. And then, Owen’s voice, cold and terrifying: “Nobody is going to believe your sister over me. If you ever try to leave, I will make sure you don’t survive the pregnancy.”
The silence in the courtroom was absolute. Even Vance looked slightly nauseated, sliding his legal pad away from him.
The judge didn’t hesitate. She slammed her gavel down with the force of a gunshot. “Bail is denied. The defendant poses a severe, documented risk to the victim and to the integrity of the judicial process. He is remanded to state custody pending trial.”
The subsequent weeks were a systematic, legal dismantling of Owen’s empire. I secured an emergency protective order that legally barred him from setting foot in Oak Creek if he ever saw daylight again. Working with state financial regulators, we invoked domestic safety laws to immediately freeze all of their joint assets, cutting off his ability to liquidate the accounts to pay his legal fees. Claire was granted temporary, sole legal custody of her unborn child.
In Oak Creek, the fallout was apocalyptic. The Department of Justice initiated a sweeping review of the local police precinct. Officer Mark Davis was suspended without pay, pending criminal charges for evidence tampering. The Police Chief was forced into early, disgraced retirement.
Claire spent a month in a state-run rehabilitation facility, healing far away from the town that had betrayed her. Slowly, the haunted, hunted look in her eyes began to fade. The bruises yellowed and vanished. She began to smile again, small, fragile smiles that grew stronger every time I visited.
Two months into Owen’s pre-trial detention, while sitting in my office reviewing toxicology reports, my phone rang. It was Claire’s lead divorce attorney.
“Paige, we just received an unsolicited settlement offer from Vance,” the lawyer said, his tone thick with suspicion. “It’s highly irregular. Owen is offering a quiet, uncontested divorce. He’s willing to sign over full custody of the baby, the house, the pension—everything. Complete surrender.”
I frowned, staring at the autopsy photos on my desk. Men like Owen didn’t surrender. “What’s the catch?”
“The catch,” the lawyer read slowly, “is that he will only sign the decree if you, specifically, sign an ironclad Non-Disclosure Agreement regarding his fire department’s municipal financial records. He wants you to stop digging into the benevolent fund.”
I sat back in my chair, the leather creaking in the silent office. The domestic abuser was dead in the water, but I had just stumbled over the tripwire of a massive municipal embezzlement ring. He was terrified of what else I was going to find.
Chapter Six: The Long Shadow
A year is enough time for the earth to complete a full rotation around the sun, and enough time for a life to be completely reborn.
The sprawling, sunlit porch of Claire’s new farmhouse smelled of fresh pine and blooming lavender. It was located in a quiet, rural county three hours north of Oak Creek, surrounded by rolling green hills and absolute silence.
I sat in a woven wicker chair, holding a steaming mug of black coffee, watching my sister. Claire was glowing. Her hair was pulled back in a messy bun, and she was gently rocking a healthy, fiercely observant six-month-old baby girl named Lily in her arms. The constant, vibrating tension that had once defined Claire’s posture—the hunched shoulders of a woman anticipating the next blow—was completely gone. She moved with a quiet, serene confidence.
The trial had concluded four months ago. Owen’s settlement offer had been a desperate bluff, one I happily called. I handed the financial discrepancies over to the FBI, which triggered a federal audit of Oak Creek. Owen hadn’t just been beating his wife; he had been systematically siphoning hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Firefighter’s Benevolent Fund to feed a crippling offshore gambling habit. The local cops had covered for his violence because he was paying them off with stolen charity money.
Owen Miller was stripped of his captain’s rank, dishonorably discharged, and sentenced to eight years in a maximum-security state correctional facility. The glittering hero was nothing but a number in an orange jumpsuit.
Claire stopped rocking and looked out over the green hills, a soft smile playing on her lips.
“I used to think his uniform made him a giant, Paige,” she said quietly, her voice carrying over the gentle breeze. “I thought because everyone loved him, because he had the badge and the title, that he was untouchable. That I was just a crazy, clumsy woman making a big deal out of nothing.”
She looked down at baby Lily, who was reaching up to grab a strand of Claire’s hair.
“But when you stood in that doorway,” Claire continued, looking back at me with eyes full of tears that she no longer needed to hide, “when you pushed past him like he was nothing… I realized he was just a small, weak man hiding behind a big title.”
I reached over and squeezed her hand. It was warm and steady.
“Titles don’t grant authority, Claire,” I told her. “Truth does. He had the illusion of power. We had the facts.”
Later that afternoon, I drove my unmarked state SUV back toward the capital. My gold SBI badge rested heavily in my breast pocket, right over my heart. For years, I had viewed it simply as a tool of the trade—a piece of metal that granted me access to crime scenes and autopsy suites. But holding my sister’s hand in that hospital room, and watching her rock her daughter in the sunlight, my perspective had irreversibly deepened.
True authority is not a shield for the powerful to hide behind. It is a sword forged to protect the defenseless.
As I merged onto the interstate, the setting sun painting the sky in brilliant streaks of orange and violet, the encrypted state radio mounted on my dashboard crackled to life.
“Dispatch to Agent Carter. We have a Code 3 request from the Attorney General’s office. High-profile case involving municipal corruption and witness intimidation in the 4th District. They’re asking for a forensic specialist to take point.”
I reached out, picked up the radio microphone, and pressed the transmission button.
“Agent Carter, copying dispatch. I’m en route.”
The job is never truly finished. There are always monsters hiding behind polite smiles and shiny badges, leveraging their power in the dark. But as I pressed the accelerator down, feeling the heavy surge of the engine beneath me, I knew exactly what I was capable of bringing to the light.
If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.
