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The Medal of Honor: A Daughter's Reckoning

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 845    |    Released on: 17/06/2025

led in a plastic cup, bu

tificate for the Harrison Art Scholarship.

I hugged him tight. "

art-time college textbooks and his art

rd knock o

friend

hree large men.

n front asked. He had a b

es

is building empty by ne

ver our neighborhood. Buying up everything,

" I said, my voic

runted. "He's making you a s

eside me. "We're n

n, brave, and s

, ugly sound. "Big talk

avid back. "Maybe yo

ent," David said, his

he wrong t

d. Another one grabbed me, shoved me into the tin

ashes. Dav

y port

nother. And David' s cri

he door, screa

e hours. Th

e man with the brok

red. Next time,

y l

niture overturned, my books scat

ed up, blood matting his dark hair. His d

te lay torn beside him, s

a cold stone in my chest

ered open. Pai

Sarah... m

lled

d a severe concussion, three broken ribs,

ctor said. "It could

ck

ied a hero. He got a Medal of Honor for it. He ta

elt small and broke

rity footage. It wasn't perfect, blurry, but it sh

police station

desk looked bored

ened. Showed him the

ression. "Ma'am, this doesn't clearly

d my home! They put my b

ked it up. "Yeah? Okay

were colder. "Look, we'll file a re

suit walked in. Smooth, late thir

on. The sophisticated fac

ficer. "Everything

r. Rizzo," the officer said

to me. His smile w

unfortunate incident. Terribl

expenses. And a small inconvenience fee. You just need to sign this wa

the counter. And a chec

lars for David's

eck, then at Tony

voice was low, t

ngs happen. This

the check an

both in half, t

e pieces i

our blood money.

ile vanished. Hi

rabbed my arm, fingers digging in. "You

step. The officer wa

hed his suit. "H

shaking, the torn pieces

felt a milli

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The Medal of Honor: A Daughter's Reckoning
The Medal of Honor: A Daughter's Reckoning
“My younger brother, David, clutched his art scholarship, his face beaming with the promise of a future. Our small, cramped apartment, usually filled with textbooks and art supplies, felt like a palace that night. He was seventeen, brilliant, and on the cusp of his dreams. Then, a hard knock on the door, not the friendly kind. Three brutal enforcers from the notorious Rizzo crime family burst in, smashing our world. They shoved me aside, seized David, and I heard screams, crashes, and my brother's desperate cry: "No! My portfolio!" When they finally left, David lay bleeding, his drawing hand bent at a sickening angle, his scholarship certificate torn and stomped on. But the nightmare had only just begun. The police laughed me out of the station, dismissing it as "not clearly an assault." Lawyers turned pale at the Rizzo name, citing "conflict of interest." Our cries for justice were met with chilling threats, online smear campaigns, and my job loss. Frank Rizzo Sr. himself called, gloating, threatening to have David discharged from the hospital. How could they be so powerful, so terrifyingly untouchable? Every avenue for help was blocked. We were just two kids against an powerful empire built on fear and corruption that seemingly owned our entire city. Were we truly fighting a losing battle against evil that had permeated every system? They wanted me to feel utterly hopeless, to break me. But when I saw my Medal of Honor father' s torn uniform photograph amidst the wreckage, a desperate, crazy thought sparked. Washington D.C. The Pentagon. Could a dead hero's forgotten legacy still offer a chance at justice, even when all hope seemed lost in a world gone wrong?”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10