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The Pentagon's Fury

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 524    |    Released on: 25/06/2025

. Or maybe i

humiliation. The grit of the ashes was

protest. My reflection in the shattered glass of a picture fra

Smashed furniture, torn photos, the stench of s

s, was an old wooden footlocker. It had belonged to my father. It wa

I undid the latches.

bons studded with white stars. The Medal of Honor. One was my father's, awarded posthumou

ed American flags. The burial fla

irl, lost in a sea of uniforms. A tall, kind-faced man, my father's best friend, had knelt down in

motion. "The United States Army does not forget its own. If you ever, ever need

years. It seemed like a lifetime ago, a chi

rk. At the Pentagon. I'd seen his

The legal system had failed me. The city had aban

ates Army does no

represented a different kind of law, a different k

the foo

, one I had hoped to put the ashes in before... before. I carefully, reverently, began to gat

oken cookie jar. I didn't even bother

the footlocker in one hand and the small urn

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The Pentagon's Fury
The Pentagon's Fury
“My life was perfect. I had a loving husband, Andrew, and our bright, energetic five-year-old son, Caleb. We lived happily in Chicago, a normal American family. Then, in a screech of tires and a thunderous crash, a low-slung, obscenely yellow Lamborghini, driven by rich kid Barney Hughes, stole them from me. One moment they were alive, the next, crumpled on the asphalt. But the nightmare didn' t end there. Barney' s father, a powerful real estate magnate, bought off the police, made surveillance footage vanish, and had my family' s bodies illegally cremated. Every lawyer I approached laughed me out of their office, warning of "professional suicide" against the Hughes empire. I lost my job, and then Barney sued me for harassment. My world crumbled. One night, Barney and his thugs broke into my home, beat me mercilessly, shattered every photo of my family, then committed the ultimate desecration: they opened the box of ashes, the stolen remains of my husband and son, and dumped them over my head. "Buy yourself a new kid or something. Get over it," he sneered, before urinating on the floor beside me. How could this happen in America? How could a family of heroes, dedicated to service, be murdered and then have their memory so brutally insulted by a corrupt system? Lying broken on the floor, covered in dust and urine, I suddenly remembered two Medal of Honor recipients and an old promise: "The United States Army does not forget its own." I packed the medals and made a silent vow. My fight had just begun.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 9