But have a plan to kill everyone you meet. I tightened the grip by a fraction of an inch. You forgot the plan, I murmured.
And you forgot the professionalism. His thrashing slowed. His movements became jerky, uncoordinated.
His brain was starving. The lights were flickering in the house. Corateed arteries compressed.
I counted down in my head, sinking with the fading rhythm of his struggle. Hypoxia setting in. 3 2 1 Kyle’s arms dropped.
His body went limp. All the tension leaving him in a sudden rush. He was heavy, just dead weight in my arms.
I held him for one more second to be sure. Muscle memory from ensuring a target was neutralized. Then I released the lock.
I unhooked my legs and stood up, letting him slump forward onto the grass. He lay there face down, snoring softly. the sound of his body trying to reboot.
I took a step back. I looked down at my hands, steady, not a tremor. I reached up and adjusted my glasses, which had slid slightly down my nose during the scuffle.
I smoothed the front of my cardigan. I checked my pulse mentally. 65 beats per minute, a resting rate.
Then I looked up. The scene was frozen. It was a tableau of absolute shock.
My mother stood with her hands covering her mouth. eyes wide with horror. Uncle Bob was still holding his phone, but his arm hung limp at his side.
Aunt Linda looked like she was about to faint. Even Grandpa Jim looked surprised. Not that I had won, but at the efficiency of it.
He raised his flask in a silent salute, a grim smile playing on his lips. Silence. The kind of silence that follows a gunshot.
They were looking at me, but they weren’t seeing Shiloh, the secretary, anymore. They were seeing a stranger. a stranger who had just dismantled their golden child in 6 seconds flat without breaking a sweat.
I looked at Leo. The boy was still sitting on the ground where Kyle had shoved him, staring at me with awe. He wasn’t scared of me.
He was looking at me like I was a superhero who had just taken off her disguise. I winked at him. Then I turned my gaze to my mother.
She took an involuntary step back, fear flashing in her eyes. fear of her own daughter. “He’ll wake up in a minute,” I said, my voice cutting through the quiet yard like a razor blade.
“He’ll have a headache and a bruised ego, but he’ll live.” I looked down at Kyle one last time. He looked so small now, so harmless. Just a boy who played a game he didn’t understand.
Next time, I said to the unconscious heap, “Don’t mistake silence for weakness. If you felt that justice in your bones, hit the like button right now and tell me in the comments, have you ever shocked everyone by showing your true strength? Type underestimated if you know exactly how satisfying this moment feels.
The spell broke. Aunt Linda let out a piercing shriek that shattered the stillness. He’s dead.
She killed him. Oh my god, she killed him. The chaos I had held back finally flooded in.
But I stood in the center of the storm, calm and untouched. I had crossed the line. I had revealed the monster.
And for the first time in my life, I didn’t care who saw it. Aunt Linda’s scream was still ringing in the humid air, piercing and hysterical, drawing neighbors to their windows two houses down. “Call the police,” she shrieked, dropping to her knees beside Kyle’s prone form.
She hovered over him, her hands fluttering uselessly around his face, checking for injuries that weren’t there. Bob, call 911. She’s crazy.
She tried to kill him. The patio, which had been a stage for Kyle’s arrogance just moments ago, was now a scene of utter bedum. Uncle Bob was fumbling with his phone, his face pale, looking at me with wide, terrified eyes.
He didn’t dial. He was too scared to move, too scared to provoke the woman who had just dropped a marine in 6 seconds. Kyle groaned, rolling onto his side.
He coughed, a wet hacking sound, and clutched his throat. The color was returning to his face, replacing the ghostly palar of hypoxia. “He’s alive,” I said flatly, not moving an inch.
“He’s fine. He just took a nap.” “You shut up,” Aunt Sarah yelled from the safety of the sliding glass door. You animal.
Look what you did to him. My mother Janet finally found her voice. She marched toward me, her face contorted into a mask of pure venom.
I had seen her angry before when I got a C in math. When I didn’t make the cheerleading squad, when I missed church, but this this was hatred. She stopped two feet from me and shoved my shoulder.
It was a weak, frantic push that barely rocked me back on my heels, but the intent was violent. What is wrong with you? She hissed, spit flying from her lips.
Are you insane? Are you on drugs? He was hurting, Leo, I said, my voice calm, contrasting sharply with her frenzy.
I pointed to where my nephew was still sitting on the ground, rubbing his bruised neck, looking at the adults with wide, confused eyes. Did you all miss that part? He was choking a 12-year-old.
He was playing, my mother screamed, her voice cracking. They were boys roughousing. But you, you attacked him.
You could have snapped his neck. I controlled every movement. Mom, if I wanted to snap his neck, he wouldn’t be coughing right now.
The words left my mouth before I could filter them. Cold and factual. My mother recoiled as if I had slapped her.
She looked at me with genuine horror, not at the violence, but at the capability, at the stranger standing in her daughter’s skin. “You’re jealous?” she spat, shaking her head as if trying to rearrange reality to fit her narrative. That’s what this is.
You’re jealous of Kyle. You’re jealous that he’s a hero and you’re nothing. You’re jealous that he has a life, a future, and you’re just a bitter, lonely spinster.
You wanted to humiliate him. I stared at her. The accusation was so absurd, so detached from reality that I almost laughed.
“I’m jealous,” I repeated quietly. Mom, look at him. Kyle was sitting up now, supported by Aunt Linda.
He looked disoriented, rubbing his throat, his eyes darting around with fear. He wouldn’t look at me. The bravado was gone, replaced by the shame of a bully who got checked.
He’s a drunk kid who doesn’t know the first thing about combat, I continued. And you’re all clapping for him like he’s Captain America while he abuses a child. Don’t you dare talk about him like that,” Aunt Linda yelled, cradling Kyle’s head.
“He serves this country. He protects people like you. He doesn’t protect anyone,” a grally voice cut through the noise.
Grandpa Jim stood up from his chair. He moved slowly, leaning on his cane, but his presence filled the yard. He walked over to where the family was huddled around Kyle, casting a long shadow over them.
“The girl is right,” Jim said, his voice low but thundering with authority. The boy was out of line. He was hurting the kid.
Shiloh stopped it. You should be thanking her. Dad, stay out of this.
My mother snapped, turning on her own father. You’re scenile. You don’t know what you’re seeing.
She assaulted him. I know a soldier when I see one. Jim growled, thumping his cane on the patio stones.
And I know a coward when I see one. Kyle is the coward. And you lot?
He swept his gaze over the family, his eyes filled with disappointment. You’re a bunch of blind fools. “That’s enough,” Uncle Bob shouted, finally finding his courage now that the target was an old man.
“Jim, sit down. Janet is right. Shiloh is dangerous.
Look at her. She’s standing there like like a psychopath. No remorse, no tears.” I looked around the circle of faces.
My mother, my aunts, my uncle, they were all looking at me with the same expression, fear and loathing. They didn’t care about Leo. I glanced at the boy.
He had crawled away to the edge of the grass, forgotten by his own parents in their rush to comfort the aggressor. They didn’t care about right or wrong. They cared about the narrative.
In their story, Kyle was the golden child, the hero, the future. I was the scapegoat, the failure, the background noise. By taking Kyle down, I hadn’t just hurt him physically.
I had shattered their carefully constructed fantasy. I had proven that their hero was weak and their







