“Shut up!” the agent barked, zip-tying his wrists.

Another agent—a medic—knelt beside me.

“Ms. Thorne? I’m Agent Carter. We’re getting you out of here.”

“The baby…” I cried.

“We have an ambulance out front. Stay with me.”

They lifted me onto a stretcher. As they carried me out, I passed David. He was pinned to the floor, cheek pressed into the pool of my blood. He looked up at me with pleading eyes.

“Anna! Tell them! Tell them it was an accident! We’re married! They can’t arrest me!”

I looked at him. The man I had loved. The man who had destroyed our future.

“Officer,” I said to the agent holding David.

“Yes, ma’am?”

“I want to press charges,” I said clearly. “Aggravated assault. False imprisonment. And… murder.”

“No!” David screamed. “Anna!”

“And I want a divorce,” I added.

They carried me out into the cold night. The street was blocked by black SUVs with flashing red and blue lights. A helicopter circled overhead, its spotlight bathing the house like a crime scene.

Sylvia was being dragged out in handcuffs, still in her festive red velvet dress, now torn. She was screaming about her rights.

They loaded me into the ambulance.

A black city car screeched to a stop right beside the ambulance. The rear door flew open.

My father stepped out.

He wore a trench coat over pajamas. He looked older than I remembered, but his eyes were fierce.

“Anna!”

He ran to the stretcher. He grabbed my hand. Tears streamed down his face—the face that once terrified politicians.

“Dad,” I whispered. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry I ran away.”

“Shh,” he kissed my forehead. “You’re safe now. I’ve got you.”

He turned to the lead marshal.

“General,” my father said.

“Yes, Mr. Chief Justice?”

“That man inside,” my father pointed toward the house, “will be taken into federal custody. No bail. Flight risk. Danger to society. I’ll sign the order myself.”

“Understood, sir.”

“And make sure,” my father added, lowering his voice to a terrifying whisper, “he understands exactly who he fucked with.”

Chapter 6: Freedom

Six months later

The garden at my father’s Virginia estate was in full bloom. Cherry blossoms fell like pink snow.

I sat on a stone bench, feeling the sun on my face. My body had healed almost completely. The scars on my back had faded into thin white lines. The scar on my heart—the empty space where my baby should have been—was still raw, but bearable now.

While sitting on the bench, I picked up the Washington Post.

The headline read: “Former Attorney David Miller Sentenced to 25 Years.”

I read the article.

David had been federally charged. Assault on the family member of a federal judge carried severe penalties.

But they also found other things. When my father’s friends started digging, they uncovered that David had been embezzling from clients. They found fraud. They found everything.

He pleaded guilty, sobbing in court, begging for mercy. The judge—a man my father had mentored twenty years earlier—imposed the maximum sentence.

Sylvia had been sentenced to ten years for complicity and obstruction of justice.

They were gone. Erased.

My father came out of the house with two cups of tea. He sat beside me.

“Reading the news?” he asked softly.

“Just the comics,” I lied, folding the paper.

He smiled. “You look good, Anna. Stronger.”

“I feel stronger,” I said. “Yesterday I applied to Georgetown Law.”

My father raised an eyebrow. “Law? I thought you hated the law.”

“I hated the pressure,” I corrected. “I hated the expectations. But… I realized something that night in the kitchen.”

“What’s that?”

“The law is a weapon,” I said. “David tried to use it like a club to beat me down. He thought it belonged to him because he memorized the words.”

I took a sip of tea.

“But he was wrong. The law belongs to those willing to fight for it. It belongs to the truth.”

My father put his arm around me. “You’re going to be a terrible lawyer, Anna.”

“I intend to be,” I said.

I looked at the garden. I thought of the baby I lost. I would never hold him.

But I would make sure his memory meant something. I would spend the rest of my life making sure men like David—men who thrive on silence and fear—never win again.

I was no longer the servant. I was no longer the victim.

I was Anna Thorne. And I was the law.

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