Cuffed By Her Jealous Stepfather — Until Five Black SUVs Arrived-heuh

My stepfather, a jealous police officer, put me in handcuffs during a secure phone call with the Pentagon.

He pulled out his gun, shoved me to the ground, and yelled, “Who do you think you are?”

Five minutes later, five black SUVs stormed in.

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Because—I am a general.

The first thing I noticed was not Frank’s face.

It was the handcuffs.

They were lying on my mum’s kitchen table beside his half-finished coffee, dull silver against the worn wood, too deliberate to be forgotten and too close to me to be accidental.

The room was painfully ordinary for what was about to happen.

Rain dotted the window above the sink.

A kettle had boiled and clicked off, but nobody had made tea.

A damp tea towel hung from the oven handle, and my mum’s shopping bag sagged on the counter with a loaf of bread sticking out of it as if domestic life could carry on by pretending hard enough.

I stood near the table in black dress uniform trousers, my jacket folded neatly over the back of a chair.

My satellite phone was pressed to my ear.

On the screen, the secure connection light remained green.

On my wrist, the silver watch I had received after Kabul caught a hard white line from the window whenever I moved.

The Pentagon official on the line had just asked me to repeat a confirmation.

I opened my mouth to answer.

Then Frank Hale walked in from the hallway.

He was my mother’s second husband, and he carried himself with the kind of authority that only worked in rooms where people were too tired to challenge it.

He had a badge, a uniform, a heavy step and a lifelong habit of making every conversation smaller than himself.

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