The Gardener Who Called in a Code Black

My pickup truck didn’t just drive onto the Parker estate; it invaded it, tearing across the manicured lawn at a hundred miles per hour. Curtis was waiting on the porch with a baseball bat and a smug sense of “private family business,” convinced he was dealing with the broken-down gardener who trimmed his hedges. When he swung, I slipped the strike with the muscle memory of a past life and buried a fist in his solar plexus. He hit the floor gasping, a king dethroned in a single second by the man he’d spent years patronizing from his high-society pedestal.

I lifted Emily into my arms, her light, fragile frame a stark reminder of everything I had left to lose, and the “gardener” persona I’d spent years cultivating finally dissolved. I stared into Doris’s eyes with a clarity that only comes from a lifetime spent in the world’s darkest corners, and I told her the truth: that I had survived three continents and neutralized men far more terrifying than her with my bare hands. I wasn’t there to trim roses or follow the rules of her high-society games; I was there to show her the consequences of cruelty when it targets the wrong family.
I pulled out my old flip phone and issued the three words that signaled the end of the Parker dynasty: “Colonel. Code Black.” As the sky began to throb with the distant, heavy rhythm of incoming extraction teams, the power dynamic in that room shifted irrevocably from wealth to raw survival.

VA

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