The emergency backup lights in the mansion suddenly flickered on, casting a dim, eerie, red glow over the scene of chaos.

The now-splintered front doors swung open again.

Ghost—my former second-in-command, a man built like a mountain with a face scarred by a dozen forgotten conflicts—walked calmly into the room. He was holding a small, ruggedized military tablet.

He walked over to where Richard was being held on the floor. He didn’t say a word. He simply tossed a small, encrypted satellite phone, already streaming a live video call, right onto the floor in front of Richard’s face.

On the glowing screen, my face appeared.

I was sitting in the stark, white, fluorescent-lit waiting room of the private hospital, my daughter sleeping peacefully, wrapped in warm blankets on a gurney beside me.

Richard glared at the screen, his chest heaving, his eyes wide with a mixture of profound confusion and absolute, soul-crushing horror as he recognized the face of the man he had just called a “lonely retiree.”

“Arthur?” Richard panted, spitting out a piece of half-chewed turkey. “What the hell are you doing? Are these your men? What is the meaning of this?!”