I came home from a Delta deployment to find my wife in the ICU. Her face… I couldn’t recognize her. The doctor whispered, “Thirty-one fractures. Blunt force trauma. Repeated strikes.” Then I saw them outside her room—her father and his seven sons—smiling like they’d just won something. The detective said, “It’s a family matter. The police can’t touch them.” I looked at the hammer print on her skull and replied, “Good. Because I’m not the police.” “What happened to them… no court could ever judge.” – 1

I looked at my reflection in the small mirror mounted inside the safe door. My eyes looked different. The blue was gone, replaced by a dark, dilated pupil. The husband was asleep. The Delta operator was awake.

I needed to know where they were. I needed to track the pack. And I knew exactly who the weak link was.

Mason. The youngest. The one shaking in the hospital. The one who held the coffee cup like it was a grenade. He was the one who held her legs. He was the one who watched.

And tonight, he was going to be the first one to speak.

—————
I closed the safe, grabbed a black hoodie, and walked out into the night. The silence of the house didn’t bother me anymore because I knew, very soon, the silence would be broken by the sound of Mason screaming.

I drove to a 24-hour hardware store three towns over. I walked the aisles under the buzzing fluorescent lights, looking like any other contractor fixing a leak. I bought a roll of heavy-duty plastic sheeting, a box of industrial-strength zip ties, a staple gun, and a hammer. A heavy, claw-style framing hammer. I weighed it in my hand. It felt balanced. Solid.

“Have a good night,” the sleepy teenager at the register mumbled.

“It’s going to be a long one,” I said.

I drove back toward the city. I knew where the Wolf Pack would be on a Friday night. After a big win—and to them, silencing Tessa was a win—they always went to the same place: The Velvet Lounge, a high-end private club downtown that Victor owned.

I parked my truck two blocks away in the shadows of an alley and waited.

At 02:45, the door opened. Laughter spilled out onto the street. Dominic and Grant walked out first, loud and stumbling. Then came the others. They were high on adrenaline and expensive liquor. But one was trailing behind.

Mason.

He wasn’t laughing. He looked sick. He waved off the offer of a ride in the limo.

“I’m going to walk a bit, clear my head,” I heard him say.

“Suit yourself, baby brother,” Dominic cheered. “Don’t have nightmares!”

The limo pulled away. Mason stood alone on the sidewalk. He lit a cigarette, his hand shaking so badly he dropped the lighter twice. He started walking down Fourth Street, heading toward the quieter part of town.

Perfect.

I moved out of the shadows, walking with a silent, rolling gait that made no sound on the pavement. I closed the distance. Fifty yards. Thirty. Ten.

He stopped at a corner, waiting for the light to change. There were no cars. Just him and the ghosts he was trying to drink away. I stepped up right behind him. I could smell the scotch sweating out of his pores. I leaned in close, my lips almost touching his ear.

“Thirty-one,” I whispered.

Mason froze. He went rigid as a statue. The cigarette fell from his fingers. He slowly turned his head, his eyes wide, bloodshot, filled with primal terror. He recognized me instantly.

“Hunter,” he stammered. “I… I didn’t…”

I grabbed his wrist. I didn’t squeeze hard—just enough to hit the pressure point. I twisted. He gasped, dropping to one knee.

“We need to talk about your sister,” I said softly. “And you’re going to tell me everything, or I’m going to start counting.”

I pulled him into the darkness of the alley. The hunt had officially begun.

I pushed him against the brick wall. “Please,” Mason whimpered. “Hunter, you don’t understand. I had to. He made me.”

“Who made you? Your father?”

“Yes! Victor. If I didn’t hold her legs, he would have done the same to me!”

I looked at him. He was twenty-two years old, wearing a watch that cost more than my truck. He had never worked a day in his life, never fought for anything. And he thought fear was an excuse for monstrosity.

“You held her legs,” I repeated. “You felt her fighting. You heard her begging you. ‘Mason, help me.’ That’s what she said, right?”

Mason flinched. “I… I tried to look away.”

“That doesn’t matter. You were part of the equation.”

I zip-tied his hands in front of him. “Where is the warehouse?”

“What warehouse?” He played dumb. A reflex.

I took the hammer out of my belt loop. I didn’t raise it. I just let the heavy steel head rest in my palm. Mason’s eyes locked onto it. He knew exactly what this hammer meant.

“Warehouse 4!” he blurted out. “At the docks, the South Terminal. That’s where the shipment is.”

“What’s in the shipment?”

“Guns. Modified ARs, military surplus. They’re shipping out to a buyer in Sudan on Tuesday.”

“And the others?”

“They went to Dominic’s penthouse. They’re continuing the party.”

Information acquired. I dragged him to my truck and drove him twenty miles out of town to an abandoned grain silo I knew. It was isolated, soundproof, and terrifying at night. I zip-tied him to a support beam.

“You’re leaving me here?” he cried. “I’ll freeze!”

“It’s fifty degrees,” I said. “You’ll be uncomfortable, but you’ll live. Tessa might not. So you sit here and pray she wakes up. Because if she dies, I come back. And I won’t bring water next time.”

I left him screaming into the darkness.

—————–
I returned to the city, but before I could move on the warehouse, my phone buzzed. It was a text from an unknown number.

I know what you’re doing. I can help. But you need to know the truth about Tessa.

I stared at the screen. Reply: Who is this?

Response: Someone who hates Victor as much as you do. Meet me at the diner on Route 9. Alone.

It was a trap. It had to be. But my instincts told me something else. I turned the truck around.

The diner was a greasy spoon with flickering neon. A woman sat in the back booth, wearing a trench coat and sunglasses at 04:00. She was older, maybe fifty.

“My name is Eleanor,” she said as I sat down. “I was Victor’s personal assistant for twenty years. He fired me last week because I refused to shred the files on Tessa.”

“Why did they do it, Eleanor?” I asked. “Money isn’t enough of a reason for thirty-one hammer strikes.”

Eleanor slid a manila envelope across the table. “Open it.”

Inside was a medical report. It was dated two weeks ago.
Patient: Tessa Hunter. Status: Pregnant.

My heart stopped. The world tilted on its axis.

“Pregnant?”

“She didn’t tell you yet,” Eleanor whispered. “She wanted to surprise you when you came home. She went to Victor that night to tell him she was leaving the family for good. She told him, ‘My child will not grow up around a monster like you.’“

I stared at the paper. A baby. We were having a baby.

“Victor couldn’t handle that,” Eleanor continued. “He wanted to wipe the slate clean. He wanted to kill the baby.”

“Did… did the baby survive?” I asked, my voice cracking.

Eleanor looked down. “The report from the ER said trauma to the abdomen. I don’t know, Hunter.”

I stood up. The rage I felt before was a candle flame. What I felt now was a nuclear explosion.

“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.