I led Ethan to the pantry and opened the concealed panel hidden behind the shelves. A reinforced room revealed itself—small, secure, stocked.

“Go inside,” I told him. “Lock it. Do not open for anyone except me. Not even the police.”

“Is Dad coming?” he asked, trembling.

“He’s going to try,” I said.

I closed the door and heard the lock click.

Then I waited.

The sound of tires crunching gravel came right on schedule.

I glanced through the blinds. A black SUV. Two police cruisers behind it.

Daniel stepped out first, soaked from the rain, holding a baseball bat.

Of course he didn’t come alone. He brought authority with him—men who owed him favors.

The intercom buzzed.

“I know he’s in there,” Daniel’s voice came through. “Open the door.”

“And a warrant at this hour?” I replied calmly.

A second voice—tired, uneasy. “Ma’am, we have a report of kidnapping. Please cooperate.”

“Or what?” I asked.

Daniel cut in, his tone venomous. “Or I come in, take my son, and make sure you regret ever interfering.”

I switched the intercom off.

Then I sat down in the center of the living room, a blanket draped casually over my lap, the weapon hidden beneath it.

“Alright,” I murmured. “Let’s see how far you’re willing to go.”

They didn’t wait long.

Glass shattered as a window gave way. The front door crashed open moments later.

Boots stormed inside. Flashlights sliced through the darkness.

“Police!”

Daniel followed, wild-eyed, gripping the bat.

“Find him!” he barked.

They saw me sitting there—still, silent.

“Ma’am, stand up. Show your hands,” one officer ordered.

I didn’t move.

“Where is he?” Daniel demanded, stepping closer.

“Safe,” I said.

He swung the bat—not at me, but at a lamp—smashing it to pieces. Intimidation.

I didn’t flinch.

“Search the house!” he shouted.

“Take one more step toward that hallway,” I said calmly, “and you’re stepping into something far above your pay grade.”

The officer hesitated.

Daniel laughed harshly. “She’s bluffing.”

“No,” I said quietly. “You’re just used to being untouchable.”

Then I glanced toward the laptop on the counter behind me.

“And that’s about to change.”

What followed unraveled fast.

Words turned into accusations.

Accusations turned into doubt.

And doubt turned into fear.

Because Daniel didn’t know what I had—or what I was willing to do.

And people like him always make the same mistake.

They assume power only runs one way.