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I never told my son-in-law that I was the most feared Drill Sergeant in Marine history. He forced my pregnant daughter to scrub the floors while he played video games. “Miss a spot and you don’t eat,” he sneered. I couldn’t take it anymore. I kicked the power cord, shutting off his game. He jumped up, furious. “You crazy old fool!” Before he could blink, I had him pinned against the wall by his throat, feet dangling off the floor. “Listen closely, maggot,” I growled. “Boot camp starts now.”

 I never told my son-in-law that I was the most feared Drill Sergeant in Marine history. He forced my pregnant daughter to scrub the floors while he played video games. “Miss a spot and you don’t eat,” he sneered. I couldn’t take it anymore. I kicked the power cord, shutting off his game. He jumped up, furious. “You crazy old fool!” Before he could blink, I had him pinned against the wall by his throat, feet dangling off the floor. “Listen closely, maggot,” I growled. “Boot camp starts now.”

I stood there, staring at the bruise, my mind cataloging the injury with forensic detachment. Yellow-green fade. roughly four days old. Blunt force compression.

“Sarah,” I said, my voice low. “What is that?”

She pulled her arm back, cradling it against her chest. “Nothing. I bumped into the pantry door. I’m clumsy, you know that.”

“Get me my drink!” Derek roared from the other room. “What is this, a tea party? I’m thirsty!”

Sarah flinched. It was a visceral, involuntary reaction—a dog expecting a kick. She grabbed the soda can and hurried out, her head bowed.

I followed her.

Derek had paused his game. He was pointing at a smudge near the baseboard—a tiny scuff mark from a shoe.

“I said clean, Sarah,” he sneered, looking at her with a mixture of boredom and cruelty. “Not spread dirt around. You want dinner? Earn it. Miss a spot and you don’t eat.”

Sarah stood there, holding the cold soda, tears silent on her face. She looked at the floor, then at the scrub brush sitting on the coffee table. She started to lower herself, her pregnant belly making the movement awkward and painful.

That was the moment the world stopped for Frank Vance.

The retired grandfather evaporated. The man who liked gardening and crossword puzzles ceased to exist. In his place stood Master Sergeant Vance, a man who had trained three generations of Recon Marines to kill without hesitation.

I didn’t run. Running is for panic. I moved with terrifying inevitability.

I walked past Sarah. I didn’t look at her. My eyes were locked on the target.

I reached the entertainment center. With one swift motion, I grabbed the power cord of the PlayStation.

SNAP.

I ripped it from the wall socket. The plastic casing cracked. The TV screen went black. The gunfire stopped.

Silence crashed into the room.

Derek blinked, confused. Then, rage flooded his face. He jumped up, throwing his headset onto the couch.

“You crazy old fool!” he screamed, his face flushing red. “Do you know how much that costs? That was a ranked match!”

He stepped toward me, fists clenched, posturing. He was taller than me, heavier, younger. He thought that mattered.

He swung—a wild, lazy haymaker aimed at my head. It was slow. It was pathetic.

I didn’t even blink.

I stepped inside his guard. My left hand deflected his arm. My right hand shot out, grabbing his throat with a grip like a hydraulic clamp.

I didn’t squeeze to kill. I squeezed to control.

I drove him backward. His heels caught on the rug. I slammed him against the drywall.

THUD.

The house shook. Pictures rattled on the walls.

Derek’s eyes bulged. His toes scrabbled for purchase, hovering inches off the ground. He clawed at my hand, but it was like trying to pry open a steel trap. He gasped, a wet, choking sound.

I leaned in. My face was inches from his. I let him see the eyes of a man who had stared down things much scarier than a suburban bully.

“Listen closely, maggot,” I growled, my voice a low rumble of thunder that vibrated in his chest bones. “Boot camp starts now.

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