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I returned from a Delta deployment and walked straight into the ICU. My wife lay there—so battered I barely recognized her. The doctor lowered his voice. “Thirty-one fractures. Severe blunt trauma. Repeated blows.” Outside her room, I saw them—her father and his seven sons—smiling like they’d just claimed a prize. The detective muttered, “It’s a family issue. Our hands are tied.” I studied the mark on her skull and answered calmly, “Perfect. Because I’m not law enforcement.” What followed would never see a courtroom.

articleUseronApril 16, 20261 Comment on I returned from a Delta deployment and walked straight into the ICU. My wife lay there—so battered I barely recognized her. The doctor lowered his voice. “Thirty-one fractures. Severe blunt trauma. Repeated blows.” Outside her room, I saw them—her father and his seven sons—smiling like they’d just claimed a prize. The detective muttered, “It’s a family issue. Our hands are tied.” I studied the mark on her skull and answered calmly, “Perfect. Because I’m not law enforcement.” What followed would never see a courtroom.

“Thank you, Eleanor. Go home. Lock your doors.”

“Where are you going?”

“I’m going to finish this. I’m going to kill them all.”

—————

The sun was bleeding into the sky—a bruised purple dawn—when I reached Victor’s estate. The “Fortress,” he called it. Twelve-foot walls, electrified wire, cameras.

I parked in the woods and moved on foot, scaling a massive oak tree that overhung the perimeter wall. I dropped onto the manicured lawn, moving like a ghost from shadow to shadow until I reached the main house.

I peered through the living room window. They were there—the remaining Wolf Pack. Victor, Dominic, Evan, Felix, Grant, Ian, Kyle. They looked exhausted, arguing.

Then, a man in a white lab coat walked into the room. Dr. Sterling. The chief of surgery at St. Jude’s. Why was he here?

I pressed my ear against the glass.

“Complications?” Sterling was saying. “But she is stable for now.”

“And the extraction?” Victor asked. “Successful?”

Sterling nodded. “The C-section was performed immediately upon arrival. The trauma induced labor, but the fetus was viable. Thirty-two weeks, not eight. The report Eleanor saw was old. She was much further along than she told anyone.”

My knees hit the grass. Thirty-two weeks. Eight months. She had been hiding it, wearing loose clothes, protecting him.

“And the child?” Victor asked.

“He is in the neonatal incubator in the basement,” Sterling said. “Healthy. Strong lungs.”

“Good,” Victor said. “My buyer arrives tomorrow. A healthy male heir with clean genetics fetches a high price.”

The world went silent. They hadn’t killed my son. They had stolen him. They beat my wife into a coma to induce labor so they could sell our child.

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Recent Posts

  • My Stepmom Laughed at the Prom Dress My Brother Sewed From Our Late Mom’s Jeans — By the End of the Night, the Whole School Knew the Truth
  • I Married a Paralyzed 20-Year-Old Millionaire I Cared for to Save My Daughter – After the Wedding, He Gave Me an Envelope with Her Name on It and Said, ‘This Was Why I Really Needed You’
  • Six Years After One of My Twin Daughters Died, My Second One Came from Her First Day at School, Saying: ‘Pack One More Lunchbox for My Sister’
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