My Ex’s Abusive New Husband Threatened My Kids. I Brought My Entire Unit Home From Deployment
The next morning, Scott made three phone calls. The first was to the FBI Field Office in Portland. He identified himself, provided his military credentials, and reported a large-scale drug distribution operation with law enforcement corruption.
The agent who took his call was professional but skeptical, until Scott mentioned he had photographic evidence and surveillance footage.
«I can have an agent meet you this afternoon,» the agent said.
«Make it two agents,» Scott replied, «and bring someone from the DEA.»
The second call was to a lawyer Horace recommended, Lori Navarro. She was a former prosecutor who’d left the District Attorney’s office after butting heads with corrupt officials once too often. She agreed to represent him in the custody matter and to review his evidence of the criminal enterprise.
The third call was to a journalist, Mandy Bruce, an investigative reporter with the Portland Tribune who had written extensively about rural drug operations and police corruption.
«Mr. Kane,» she said when they met for coffee, «I’ve been trying to crack the Vaughn organization for two years. If you have what you say you have…»
«I have it,» Scott said, sliding a flash drive across the table. «Full surveillance from last night. Faces, vehicles, license plates. Enough to start connecting dots.»
Mandy studied him. «Why are you doing this? You could just take your son and leave.»
«Because Tommy isn’t the only kid in this town,» Scott said. «And these people will keep hurting others until someone stops them.»
By afternoon, the pressure was mounting. The FBI agents, a veteran named Francis Meza and a younger agent named Ariel Peck, reviewed Scott’s evidence with increasing interest. The DEA agent, a hard-eyed woman named Kristen Vang, made three phone calls during the meeting, each one more urgent than the last.
«This is solid,» Francis said finally. «But I need to be straight with you. Building a case against a protected organization takes time. We’re talking months of investigation, wiretaps, surveillance. If they know we’re looking at them, they’ll destroy evidence and disappear.»
«So don’t let them know,» Scott said. «I can keep the pressure on. Make them think it’s just me. Just a father protecting his son. By the time they realize they’re under federal investigation, it’ll be too late.»
Kristen Vang leaned forward. «You’re talking about making yourself bait.»
«I’m talking about doing what needs to be done.»
What Scott didn’t tell them was that he’d already started. That morning, Bill had done something beautiful with his computer skills. He’d accessed the Barajas brothers’ phones—not to wiretap them, which would be illegal, but to send them each a single photograph.
The photograph showed Gilberto Barajas at the warehouse, clearly visible, time-stamped, and geotagged. Below it, a simple message: Smile. You’re being watched.
The message came from an untraceable number, routed through seven different servers across four countries. But its effect was immediate. By noon, Scott’s team observed Gilberto making frantic calls. By early afternoon, all three Barajas brothers convened at a local bar, Murphy’s Tavern, a known hangout for their crew.
Bill’s drone captured them meeting with Police Chief Peter Sharp in the parking lot.
«They’re panicking,» Bernie observed, watching the footage. «Look at the body language.»
«Good,» Scott said. «Panic makes people dangerous, but it also makes them sloppy.»
That evening, Scott took Tommy to dinner at a family restaurant in downtown Ridgefield. It was a calculated move: public, visible, normal. He wanted the Barajas brothers to see that he wasn’t hiding.
They were halfway through their meal when Jeremy Barajas walked in with two other men. He saw Scott immediately, his face darkening. For a long moment, their eyes locked. Then Jeremy smiled, a cold, predatory expression, and walked over.
«Scott Kane,» he said, his voice carrying false friendliness. «The famous war hero. My brother told me you were in town.»
Scott stood slowly, positioning himself between Jeremy and Tommy. «And you must be one of the cowards who threatens children.»
Jeremy’s smile didn’t waver, but something dangerous flickered in his eyes. «Careful, soldier boy. You might be tough overseas, but you’re in our world now.»
«Your world,» Scott said quietly, «is about to get a lot smaller.»
The two men with Jeremy shifted, hands moving toward their waistbands. Scott didn’t move, didn’t blink. He’d faced down armed insurgents in Fallujah. These thugs didn’t scare him.
«Is there a problem here?» The restaurant owner, an older man named Stevie Shields, had emerged from the kitchen. He held a baseball bat and a phone. «Because I’ve already called the police, and I’m recording everything.»
Jeremy glanced at the phone, then back at Scott. «No problem. Just saying hello to an old friend.» He leaned closer, his voice dropping. «My uncle wants to meet you. Valentine Vaughn. Tomorrow night, eight o’clock, Murphy’s Tavern. Come alone.»
«I’ll be there,» Scott said.
After Jeremy left, Stevie apologized profusely. Scott thanked him, paid for the meal, and took Tommy back to the motel.
«Dad?» Tommy asked as they drove. «Are you going to be okay?»
Scott looked at his son in the rearview mirror. «I promise you, buddy, this is all going to be over soon.»
That night, the team gathered for a tactical briefing.
«They’re inviting you into a trap,» Vince said. «Murphy’s is their territory. They’ll have every advantage.»
«I know,» Scott said. «Which is why we’re going to flip the script. Bill, can you get eyes and ears inside Murphy’s?»
«Already working on it. The place has Wi-Fi, which means I can access their security cameras. I can also place some wireless microphones. Plant them during the lunch rush. Nobody will notice.»
«Good. Felix, Bernie, I want you outside with overwatch positions. Jonathan, you’re my backup. You’ll be inside, playing the drunk regular. Vince, you coordinate with our FBI friends. If this goes sideways, I’ll want federal agents on standby.»
«And Vaughn wants to talk business?» Horace asked.
Scott smiled, but there was no warmth in it. «Then we’ll talk. And I’ll make sure every word is recorded and admissible in court.»
Murphy’s Tavern smelled like stale beer and cigarette smoke that had soaked into the wood over decades. Scott walked in at precisely 2000 hours, wearing jeans, a black t-shirt, and a leather jacket. He knew he was being scanned for weapons. Valentine Vaughn wouldn’t risk a meeting without security, so he’d left his sidearm in the SUV. He didn’t need it. This wasn’t that kind of meeting.
Valentine Vaughn sat in a booth at the back, surrounded by four men. He was in his fifties, lean and sharp-featured, with silver hair and cold eyes. He wore an expensive suit that looked out of place in the dive bar.
«Sergeant Kane,» Vaughn said, gesturing to the seat across from him. «Thank you for coming.»
Scott slid into the booth. Jonathan Garza sat three tables away, hunched over a beer, the perfect picture of a lonely drunk. Scott could feel, rather than see, Felix and Bernie in their positions outside, rifles ready.
«Let’s skip the pleasantries,» Scott said. «You wanted to meet. Here I am.»
Vaughn smiled. «Direct. I appreciate that. I’ll be direct too. You’re causing problems for my organization. The school incident, the surveillance, the federal agents asking questions. This needs to stop.»
«Your nephew hurt my son. That needs to stop.»
«Gilberto has a temper. He’ll be dealt with.»
«Not good enough.»
Vaughn’s smile faded. «You don’t seem to understand your situation, Sergeant. I run three counties. I have police, judges, lawyers on my payroll. You’re one man with a grudge. How do you think this ends?»
Scott leaned forward. «It ends with you in a federal prison. See, while you’ve been building your little empire, I’ve been building a case. The FBI has my evidence. The DEA is watching your warehouse. And in about…» he checked his watch, «ten minutes, a story is going to drop in the Portland Tribune detailing your entire operation with photos.»
Vaughn’s face went still. «You’re bluffing.»
«Am I? Check your phone.»
Vaughn pulled out his phone, his fingers moving rapidly. His face went pale. Mandy Bruce’s story had just gone live online, complete with photographs and a detailed breakdown of the Vaughn Organization structure.
«You made a mistake,» Scott said quietly. «You thought you were untouchable. You thought hurting a kid wouldn’t matter because his father was too far away. But I’m not far away anymore. And I’m not stopping until every one of you is behind bars.»
Vaughn’s men tensed, hands moving toward weapons. Scott didn’t move.
«You pull those guns,» Scott said, «and every one of you gets caught on camera. Bill, show them.»
On every screen in the bar—the TV above the counter, the old-school arcade machine in the corner, even the jukebox display—the same image appeared: a live feed from the security cameras showing the booth, showing Vaughn’s men reaching for their weapons.
«Say cheese,» Scott said. «You’re live on the internet.»
Bill had hacked every device in the bar and was streaming to multiple platforms. Thousands of people were watching. Vaughn’s jaw clenched.
«Turn it off.»
«Not until we’re done talking. Here’s how this works. You and your organization are finished. The feds are coming. You can cooperate, cut a deal, maybe see daylight before you’re seventy. Or you can fight, in which case I’ll make sure they add every charge they can think of. Your choice.»
«And Gilberto?»
«Gilberto is done hurting people. If he comes near my son again, if he comes near Tammy, if he even thinks about retaliating, I will end him. And I don’t mean legally. Do you understand?»
Vaughn stared at him for a long moment. «You’re threatening to kill him.»
«I’m promising to protect my family, however necessary.»
For the first time, something like respect flickered in Vaughn’s eyes. «You know, Sergeant, in another life, you’d have made a good soldier for my organization.»
«In another life,» Scott said, «you’d have made an honest living.»
He stood to leave, then paused. «Oh, and Vaughn? Tell Peter Sharp his career is over. The FBI knows about his partnership. He’ll be arrested tomorrow morning.»
Scott walked out of Murphy’s Tavern, knowing every eye in the place was on him. He’d just painted a target on his back, but he’d also made his position clear. The Vaughn organization could surrender or fight, but either way, they were going down. The question was, what would they choose?
