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Kaitlynn and her two children

Kaitlynn and her two children

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10 Chapters
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Top DEA agent Kaitlynn Bruce woke up to a heavy, chemical lethargy, only to realize she was trapped in the body of a weak, abused war widow. Before she could even process her new reality, she heard her sister-in-law counting cash, selling her unconscious body to a local thug for a measly two hundred dollars. The thug dragged her new seven-year-old son, Cason, into the bedroom. "Mommy!" When the boy reached out, the man brutally kicked his small body into a wooden doorframe, leaving him gasping and bleeding on the floor. Memories flooded Kaitlynn's mind. Her predecessor was a pathetic doormat whose husband's military pension had been bled dry by these greedy in-laws, leaving her children to starve and suffer endless abuse. But as Kaitlynn looked at the bleeding boy's dark, unnervingly alert eyes, a chilling piece of DEA intelligence clicked in her mind. Cason Richmond. The name, the town, the abusive aunt-it all matched the classified files of the "Director of the Hive," the most ruthless and feared cartel puppet master in the criminal underworld. How could this battered, starving child be destined to become the ultimate monster she used to hunt? The original widow's tragic death was supposed to be the catalyst that pushed this boy into total darkness. But Kaitlynn Bruce was not a victim. Adrenaline burning through the drugs, she cracked the thug's neck with a brass lamp and choked the sister-in-law against the wall. Looking down at the boy who was supposed to become a global nightmare, she made a vow. She was going to rewrite his script, even if she had to burn the whole world down to do it.

Contents

Kaitlynn and her two children Chapter 1

The first thing Kaitlynn felt was the weight. It pressed down on her chest like a slab of concrete, squeezing the air out of her lungs. Her eyelids felt glued shut, her limbs heavy and disconnected. A dull, throbbing pain pulsed behind her temples, syncing with the erratic beating of her heart.

She tried to move her arm, but it barely twitched. It felt like moving through wet cement. Panic, cold and sharp, spiked through the fog in her brain. This wasn't right. She was a DEA agent. She was trained to wake up alert, to assess threats in milliseconds. This sluggishness, this paralysis-it was chemical.

"She's out cold, Dawn. You gave her too much."

The voice was male, gruff, and reeked of cheap tobacco and stale beer. It came from somewhere to her left.

"Shut up, Dwayne. She's fine. She's just a lightweight." A female voice, sharp and nasal, filled with irritation. "You got the money?"

Kaitlynn forced her eyes open a slit. The room spun nauseatingly, but she caught the blurry shapes of two people standing near the doorway. The woman had stringy blonde hair and a pinched face. The man was bulky, scratching at his crotch with one hand while the other rummaged in his pocket.

"Two hundred upfront, like we said." Dwayne pulled out a wad of crumpled bills. "But I ain't paying the rest until I get what I'm paying for. Look at her, she looks half-dead."

"She'll wake up when she needs to," Dawn snapped, snatching the money. "You'll get your fun, and I get the rest when you're done. It's not like she's going to remember anyway. And once she's gone, things can finally get back to normal. That money can go where it belongs."

The words pierced through the chemical haze in Kaitlynn's mind like ice picks. Sell her. Military pension. Family.

Images flooded her brain, disjointed and violent. A small, rundown farmhouse. Two kids-a quiet boy with dark eyes and a little girl with pigtails. A husband in a green beret, smiling in a photograph, then a folded flag. Colt. Dead. Kaitlynn Richmond. War widow.

She wasn't Kaitlynn Bruce anymore. She was in someone else's body, someone else's life. And these people were selling her.

A loud crash echoed from the front of the house, followed by a high-pitched, terrified scream.

"Mommy! Mommy, open the door!"

Cason. The name surfaced instinctively. Her son.

"God damn it," Dwayne muttered, stomping toward the bedroom door. "I told you to lock the brat in his room."

"I did! He must have climbed out the window," Dawn hissed, panic edging her voice.

Kaitlynn heard the front door bang open. She heard a scuffle, a small cry of pain, and then Dwayne's heavy footsteps returning. He walked back into the bedroom, dragging something behind him.

Cason dangled from Dwayne's grip, his small feet kicking in the air. The boy's face was red, tears streaming down his cheeks. He reached out toward the bed. "Mommy!"

"Shut up, you little shit." Dwayne swung his arm.

His boot connected with Cason's chest. The boy flew backward, his small body hitting the wooden doorframe with a sickening thud. He crumpled to the floor, gasping, a thin line of blood trickling down his forehead from where his scalp had met the wood.

Something inside Kaitlynn snapped.

It wasn't a thought; it was a biological override. The maternal instinct fused with years of combat training, sending a surge of pure adrenaline through her veins. It burned away the drug-induced lethargy like a blowtorch through cobwebs.

Kaitlynn's hand curled into a fist, her nails digging so deeply into her palm that she felt the warm wetness of blood. The pain anchored her. It focused her. The sharp, grounding agony was a weapon, a jolt of pure fire she used to battle the chemical chains holding her down. Her limbs were still heavy, but a flicker of control returned-just enough.

Dwayne turned back to the bed, a leering grin spreading across his face. He reached for the hem of her shirt. "Now, where were we?"

Kaitlynn didn't hesitate. She didn't think about her weak muscles or the lingering dizziness. She acted.

As Dwayne's hand brushed her stomach, she exploded into motion. She drew her knees up to her chest, ignoring the screaming protest of her muscles, and then shot them out with every ounce of strength she possessed.

Her knee connected squarely with Dwayne's groin.

The sound he made wasn't a scream; it was a high-pitched wheeze, the air leaving his lungs in a rush. His eyes bulged, and he doubled over, clutching himself, his face turning a mottled purple.

Kaitlynn rolled off the bed. Her legs wobbled, but she locked her knees. She reached for the heavy brass lamp on the nightstand, ripping the cord from the wall.

Dwayne was still gasping, trying to catch his breath. He looked up, his eyes wide with shock.

She swung the lamp. The heavy base connected with the back of his neck with a sickening crack. Dwayne dropped like a puppet with cut strings, face-planting onto the floor. He didn't move.

Dawn screamed. It was a piercing, terrified sound that echoed off the thin walls. She backed away, her hands raised, her face pale. "You-what did you-"

Kaitlynn dropped the lamp. She crossed the distance between them in two strides. Her hand shot out, grabbing Dawn by the throat. She slammed the woman against the wall, the plaster cracking from the impact.

Dawn choked, her eyes bulging as she clawed at Kaitlynn's wrist.

"Where is the money?" Kaitlynn's voice was low, rough, and stripped of all emotion. It was the voice of a killer.

Dawn trembled violently, pointing a shaking finger toward Dwayne's prone form. "H-his pocket."

Kaitlynn kept her grip on Dawn's throat, squeezing just enough to keep her compliant. She knelt down, patting Dwayne's jeans. She found the wad of cash Dawn had just taken back, plus a few extra bills. She shoved them into her own pocket.

She released Dawn, letting the woman slide down the wall, gasping for air.

Kaitlynn turned to Cason. The boy was still lying on the floor, his breathing shallow. The anger drained away, replaced by a cold, sharp fear. She knelt beside him, her hands moving with practiced efficiency.

"Paige," she called out, her voice softening but retaining its command. "Paige, come here."

A small shape peeked out from behind the closet door. Paige's face was streaked with tears, her eyes wide with terror. "Mommy?"

"Stay right there, baby. Don't move."

Kaitlynn gently rolled Cason onto his back. She checked his pulse-strong but rapid. She parted his hair, examining the gash on his forehead. It was bleeding heavily, but skull fractures were tricky. She needed to get him to a hospital.

She looked back at Dawn, who was still cowering on the floor. The fear in Dawn's eyes was satisfying, but it wasn't enough.

Kaitlynn stood up. She walked over to Dwayne, grabbing one of his ankles. She began to drag him toward the bedroom door, his heavy body thudding across the wooden floor.

She paused, looking over her shoulder at Dawn. Her eyes were flat, devoid of any warmth.

"You. Follow me."

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