Because she owed them.
She always had.
I didn’t hesitate.
I called my FBI contact again.
We set up a plan.
I would go to
I would record everything.
If they attempted to coerce or blackmail me, I would then press a small device that would signal agents waiting outside to move in.
But I wanted something more.
I wanted them to see.
So I retrieved the brown envelope from my glove compartment.
The fifteen thousand dollars.
I took it to a friend in the explosives unit.
I didn’t want to hurt anyone.
I just wanted a controlled charge: a small flash-burn device that would ignite the cash the moment I triggered it.
A purging.
A funeral for the love
The night of the dinner, I drove back to Branton, Ohio.
This time, I didn’t sit in the car.
I walked straight up the porch, past the dead oak, into that house.
The smell hit me again.
Stale beer, fried onions, cigar smoke.
Nothing had changed.
But I had.
I was wearing my Dress Blues.
The full uniform.
Gold oak leaves glinting on my collar.
My father was in his recliner.
He turned.
His eyes narrowed.
He didn’t comment on the uniform.
He just said, ‘Sit down. We need to talk.’
My mother was at
Luke sat beside her, pale and sweating, avoiding my eyes.
I sat.
I didn’t take my coat off.
My father tapped his beer glass with a fork.
He launched into a rehearsed speech about family loyalty, about second chances, about how Luke had made a few ‘bad investments’ and now the ‘government was overreacting.’
Then he got to the point.
He said, ‘Cerise, you’re going to call the investigators tomorrow and tell them you were the mastermind behind the whole thing. Your record will carry weight. They’ll drop the charges against Luke. Do it,
Even.
The word stung.
I kept my face neutral.
‘And if I refuse?’
My father’s expression hardened.
He leaned forward.
‘Then I will leak your psychiatric files. The PTSD. The breakdowns. The therapy notes you thought were private. I’ve got copies. I’ll make sure every reporter from here to the Pentagon knows you’re mentally unstable. Your career will be ash.’
My mother didn’t meet my eyes.
She just picked at her fingernail.
I felt the cold settle into my bones.
But not the cold of the rain.
The cold of absolute clarity.
I smiled.
It was a small, quiet smile.
I stood up.
I undid the button of my dress coat, revealing the full uniform.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out a small remote detonator.
Then I reached under my chair and lifted the brown briefcase I had brought in with me.
I set it on the table.
My father watched, suddenly uneasy.
‘What’s that?’
I opened the briefcase.
Inside was the stack of cash — fifteen thousand dollars.
I looked at it one last time.
The cruise money.
The love money.
The last attempt to buy what should have been given freely.
I said, ‘Dad, you wanted me to pay for Luke’s crime. Here’s the payment.’
And then I pressed the button.
‘Execute.’
A soft whump.
A brilliant flash of light erupted from the briefcase.
The cash ignited, consumed in seconds, turning to ash as smoke billowed upward.
My father choked on his beer, sputtering, eyes wide.
My mother screamed.
Luke bolted upright, knocking his chair over.
At that exact same instant, the front door burst open with a deafening crash.
Three federal agents, vests emblazoned with FBI, filled the hallway, weapons drawn.
‘FBI! Don’t move!’
My father stared at the agents, then at the burning remnants of the money, then at me.
I stood there, calm, my hands at my sides, my uniform spotless.
He saw the insignia on my collar.
The gold oak leaf.
The uniform of a Major.
His mouth opened and closed.
He choked on his own spit.
‘Wait…’ he stammered, staring at my insignia, ‘you’re the Pentagon Major — arresting my son?!’
I looked at him.
I looked at my mother, who had gone pale as chalk.
I looked at Luke, who was being cuffed by an agent.
I stepped forward, until I was inches from my father’s face.
‘No, Dad,’ I said quietly. ‘I’m the Pentagon Major who just ended a lifetime of cleaning up his mess. And yours.’
An agent asked me if I was okay.
I nodded.
I walked out of that house for the last time.
The rain had stopped.
The night was clear.
I got into my car, and I drove east, toward Maryland, toward my real life.
In the rearview mirror, the porch light was off.
And this time, I never looked back.