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.
Inside the mansion, the air was thick with the sound of Emily’s muffled sobs and the rhythmic snip of heavy shears. I kicked the bedroom door off its hinges to find Doris pinning my daughter down, cold-bloodedly hacking away her hair as a “lesson in obedience.” Emily was burning with fever and trembling under the weight of her mother-in-law’s knee, a sight that turned my blood to ice. Doris looked up at me, spitting threats of lawsuits and calling me a “broke old man,” completely unaware that the person standing in her doorway was the most dangerous variable in her carefully curated world.
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.