I spent 15 years training Marines in hand-to-hand combat, and my rule was simple: never lay a hand on a civilian. But that rule was shattered the moment I saw my daughter in the ER because her boyfriend had hurt her. I drove straight to his gym. He was laughing with his friends—until he saw me. And what happened next made even his coach fall silent.
Shane stopped ten feet away, his voice quiet, conversational. “You put your hands on my daughter.”
“Your daughter’s a clumsy girl who can’t follow simple instructions,” Dustin sneered. “Told her your old self couldn’t protect her. She didn’t believe me, so I had to teach her some respect.”
The three fighters with them—Shane recognized their faces from Gabriel’s report: Lamar Duncan, Brenton Cantrell, and Andres White, all Viper associates—spread out slightly, surrounding him.
Perry stepped forward. “Here’s how this goes, Grandpa. You turn around, walk out, and forget you have a daughter, or my boys will make sure you leave on a stretcher.”
Shane smiled. It was the smile he’d given enemy combatants who didn’t know they were already defeated. “I was a Marine Corps hand-to-hand combat instructor for fifteen years. I trained Force Recon operators, MARSOC Raiders, and over three thousand combat Marines.” He rolled his shoulders, and suddenly the extra weight didn’t look so soft. “You’re going to need more than three guys.”
“Cocky old fool,” Perry nodded at his fighters. “Put him down.”
What happened next took seventeen seconds.
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