Victor’s rage coiled into something cold and surgical. He watched, waited, and dissected the sheriff’s life the way he’d once dismantled enemy networks—entry points, blind spots, exit routes. Each fresh bruise on Drew’s body was another reason to stop asking and start taking. He could make Gaines vanish without a trace; the town would call it tragedy, and he would call it balance.
Yet the universe kept sliding him lifelines: a deputy who slipped him evidence instead of excuses, a lawyer who spoke to him like a father instead of a weapon, federal agents who finally heard what local power had buried. Standing on the edge of an irreversible act, Victor saw that killing Gaines would only cement the version of himself war had written. By stepping back, he didn’t surrender; he rewrote the ending. The cuffs on Gaines’s wrists became proof that his son could trust something other than fear.





