My phone fell from my hand when I saw who was actually holding the weapon it was her brother, Jason.

The youngest of the Wolf Pack. The quiet one. The one who always hung back during family fights, who used to bring Brenda comic books when she had the flu. The one I thought might still have a soul.

He was the one holding the hammer.

In the footage, Brenda tries to run. He grabs her by the hair. The hammer swings once, twice—then the rest becomes a blur of horror. I feel bile rise in my throat. My hands shake as I pick up the phone, scrub through the footage, trying to make sense of it.

But there’s no mistake.

Ray is there too. Standing behind Jason, arms crossed, watching like a smug director overseeing a stage play. He lets it happen. He lets his son do it. And when Brenda finally collapses on the floor, unmoving, Ray casually steps forward and tosses a phone on her chest. Probably the one he later “found” and gave to the police with the footage wiped clean.

I know what I have to do.

This isn’t justice anymore. This is war.

I drive straight to the motel on the edge of town where I used to crash during training weekends. I know no one will recognize me now — beard longer, eyes colder. I check in under a fake name, then open my satchel. Inside: burner phones, a Glock 19, nitrile gloves, and a flash drive filled with templates. I haven’t just been in logistics. I’ve been training for missions so classified, they don’t officially exist.

And tonight, I’m deploying.

First, I send the video to three secure cloud backups and two trusted contacts — just in case I don’t make it through this. Then I wipe the phone clean.

I drive out to the edge of Ray’s property just after midnight. The house is lit up like Christmas — like they’re celebrating. I scout the perimeter. Two of the brothers are on the porch, drinking and laughing. The others are inside. Probably gloating. Probably already twisting the story for the town.

They think they’re untouchable.

I slide through the back woods. There’s an old root cellar behind the house — one I used to help Brenda clean during the summer visits. It leads to a crawlspace under the living room. I pop the rusted latch, slip inside.

The house smells like beer, sweat, and rotting wood. Through the floorboards, I hear them talking.

“She should’ve listened to Ray,” one brother says. “Marrying some soldier who thinks he’s better than us.”

Jason laughs. That laugh. It sends a chill down my spine. “She won’t be waking up anytime soon. Doc said her brain’s like scrambled eggs.”

Another brother: “And what about Cole? He’ll come looking.”

Ray answers, calm and cocky. “Let him. We’ll say she cheated on him. Say she got drunk and fell down the stairs after he hit her. Nobody questions a soldier with PTSD, right?”

They laugh again. That’s when I press the record button on my earpiece.

I crawl through the dark until I reach the vent that leads into the pantry. I climb up, slow and steady, then slip inside the kitchen. I move like I’m back in the compound — silent, invisible, methodical.

Ray is sitting in his recliner in the living room, a shotgun across his lap. He’s drunk, barely awake. Jason is on the couch, texting. Three of the brothers are playing pool in the basement. Two are asleep upstairs.

I step into the room and aim my gun.

“Hi, Ray.”

He turns — slowly. He blinks, confused, then grins like I’m a punchline. “Well, look who—”

I fire once.

The shotgun falls. His leg is bleeding, shredded below the knee. He screams.

The house erupts in chaos. Jason dives for the side table — but I’m faster. I shoot the lamp. Glass explodes. He screams as shards slice into his arms.

“Get on your knees,” I bark. “Hands behind your head.”

“Cole—man—wait! We can talk about this!”

“I don’t talk to cowards who use hammers on women.”

Footsteps thud from the basement. I grab Jason by the collar and drag him behind the kitchen island just as the back door bursts open.

Two of his brothers rush in. I shoot one in the shoulder — he drops like a sack of bricks. The other freezes, hands up.

“Cole, we didn’t know! We didn’t touch her! It was Jason!”

“Oh, I know,” I say. “And you’re going to help me prove it.”

I toss him the burner phone. “Record what I say. Word for word. And if you lie, I’ll know.”

He nods, pale as chalk.

“Tell the world what your brother did. Tell them what Ray watched. Tell them how you stood by.”

The brother starts talking, shaking, spilling everything. I get every word on tape.

Jason is crying now. “Please, Cole, please don’t kill me…”

“I’m not going to kill you,” I whisper, pressing the muzzle of my gun to his temple. “I’m going to let you live with what you did. But first, you’re going to give me the hammer.”

His eyes widen. “I—I threw it in the river!”

“Wrong answer.”

I jab the pistol into his ribs. “Try again.”

He breaks. “It’s in Dad’s truck! In the back, under the seat!”

I nod. “Good boy.”

Outside, sirens wail. I knew someone would call eventually — probably the neighbor who hates loud noises. I toss the burner phone back to the brother still filming.

“Hand it to the Sheriff when he gets here. If he hides it, there’s three copies waiting in D.C., one with my Commanding Officer. That includes the video from my house.”

Jason gasps. “You had a camera?!”

“Oh yeah,” I say. “Brenda never trusted Ray. Neither did I.”

I step back, gun still raised. I can hear tires crunching on gravel. I move out the side door, vanish into the tree line, and watch from the shadows as flashing red and blue lights flood the driveway.

The Sheriff steps out, hand on his belt. “What the hell happened here?”

I hear Jason scream from inside. “He shot Ray! He broke in!”

The brother with the burner phone steps forward. “He had a reason. And you’re going to want to see this.”

The Sheriff looks at the phone. His expression changes — from irritation to disbelief to something like shame. He doesn’t say a word. Just starts making calls.

I melt into the woods before backup arrives.

By dawn, the town is buzzing. The video has leaked. So has the audio.

Brenda wakes up an hour later.

I’m waiting outside her ICU room, my hands still shaking, my mind still racing. But when I see her eyes open—really open—I feel something crack open inside me. Something warm and real and alive.

She whispers my name. It’s barely audible, but it’s there.

“I’m here,” I whisper back, taking her hand. “I saw everything. It’s over.”

Tears leak from her swollen eyes. Her fingers clutch mine weakly.

The Sheriff walks in quietly. “They’ve arrested Jason. And Ray’s in custody at the hospital. The others… well, they’ll be facing charges too. Thanks to you.”

I just nod.

It’s not enough. It’ll never be enough. But it’s a start.

Three weeks later, Brenda moves to a rehab center in another county — away from the stares and whispers. I go with her. We rent a small place nearby, somewhere quiet, surrounded by trees instead of monsters.

She still has nightmares. I still wake up ready to fight.

But we’re healing.

Together.

And the Wolf Pack?

They’ve scattered.

The town finally saw what they really were. Not protectors. Not family men.

Just wolves in human skin.

And I? I’m not the man I used to be either.

But I am hers.

And she is mine.

And as long as she draws breath, no one — no one — will ever hurt her again.