Chapter 1: The Mask
You know what three days in a stakeout van smells like? It smells like stale coffee, cold pizza, and anxiety.
My name is Jack. To the world, or at least the part of the city I was currently inhabiting, I was “Jax,” a low-level runner for a distribution ring in Chicago. I hadn’t shaved in a week. I had a fake neck tattoo that scratched against my collar. My knuckles were bruised, and I reeked of cheap cigarettes, even though I don’t smoke.
But to one person, I was just Dad.
My phone buzzed against my thigh. It was a vibrating pulse that felt like a lifeline in the silence of the van. I checked the screen, shielding the light with my hand.
It was the school. Oak Creek Middle.
“Mr. Reynolds? This is Principal Skinner’s office. We need you to come in immediately. It regards your daughter, Lily.”
My heart stopped. In my line of work, a phone call usually means someone is dead or arrested. “Is she okay?” My voice was raspy, unused for hours.
“Physically, she is fine,” the secretary said, her tone dripping with that specific kind of suburban judgment. “But there has been an incident regarding… academic dishonesty.”
Academic dishonesty? Lily?
My kid cries if she forgets to return a library book on time. She spends her weekends organizing her highlighters by color gradient. She doesn’t cheat. She works harder than any kid I know because she knows her dad isn’t around every night to help her.
“I’m on my way,” I growled.
I didn’t have time to change. I didn’t have time to shower. I couldn’t scrub the “Jax” off my skin. I had to go as I was.
I parked my beat-up undercover sedan—a rust-bucket Chevy with a rattling muffler—right in the front loop of the pristine middle school. I saw the parents in their shiny SUVs staring. They saw a guy in a stained hoodie, ripped jeans, and combat boots stepping out of a car that sounded like a lawnmower. They saw a threat.
I ignored them. I walked into the main office, and the silence was instant. The air conditioning hummed. The secretary adjusted her glasses, her eyes scanning me from my muddy boots to the grease in my hair.
“Mr… Reynolds?” she squeaked.
“Where is she?” I asked. I didn’t have time for pleasantries.
“Room 302. Mrs. Halloway’s class. They are… discussing the matter now.”
I turned on my heel and marched down the hallway. The linoleum floors squeaked under my heavy boots. The lockers lined the walls like silent sentinels. I felt the weight of my badge tucked deep inside my waistband, pressing against the small of my back. It was the only clean thing on me. It was the only thing that separated me from the criminals I hunted.
I approached Room 302. The door was cracked open.
I didn’t storm in. Old habits die hard. I listened first.
“You really expect me to believe this, Lily?”
The voice was shrill. Mrs. Halloway. I knew her type. The kind of teacher who peaked in high school and used her classroom as a kingdom. She had been riding Lily all year, making snide comments about her clothes, her lunch, her quiet demeanor.
“I studied, Mrs. Halloway. I promise,” Lily’s voice was small, trembling. It broke my heart.
“People like you don’t get 100% on my advanced calculus prep exams, Lily,” Halloway sneered. “I saw your father drop you off last week. I know what kind of… environment… you come from. We all know.”
My blood ran cold. The temperature in the hallway felt like it dropped ten degrees.
“He helps me study,” Lily whispered.
“That man?” Halloway laughed. A cruel, dry sound. “That man looks like he can barely read a takeout menu, let alone help with algebra. You cheated. You copied the answer key. Admit it.”
“I didn’t!” Lily sobbed.
I stepped closer to the door frame. Through the crack, I could see them. Lily was standing by the teacher’s desk, her small hands gripping the edge of her skirt. Halloway was sitting back, holding Lily’s test paper—the paper with the big red “100%” circled on top.
“I don’t tolerate liars in my classroom,” Halloway said. Her face twisted into a mask of disgust.
She held the test paper up with both hands.
“And I don’t grade trash.”
Chapter 2: The Sound of Tearing
RIIIIP.
The sound was louder than a gunshot in that quiet room.
I watched, frozen for a microsecond, as Mrs. Halloway tore the paper down the middle.
Lily gasped. It wasn’t just a gasp; it was the sound of her pride shattering. She had stayed up until 2:00 AM for three nights studying for that test. I had sat with her, reviewing flashcards in the dim light of the kitchen table while I cleaned my service weapon (hidden from view, of course). She had worked for this.
Halloway didn’t stop at once. She put the halves together and ripped them again.
Riiiip.
“Zero,” Halloway declared, dropping the confetti-like pieces onto the floor in front of Lily’s feet. “Go to the principal’s office. I’ll be calling your father to let him know his daughter is a fraud. Though I doubt he’ll answer. Probably out at a bar or…”
She trailed off.
Because the light in the room had changed.
I was standing in the doorway.
I didn’t say a word. I just stood there. I let my silhouette fill the frame. I looked every bit the criminal she thought I was. My eyes were shadowed, my jaw set so hard my teeth ached. The adrenaline that usually reserved for busting drug dens was now pumping through my veins, directed entirely at this woman in a floral blouse.
The class, about twenty other kids, went dead silent. Thirty-eight eyes turned to me. Then they turned to Mrs. Halloway.
Halloway looked up. Her face went pale, then flushed with indignant anger. She stood up, smoothing her skirt, trying to regain her composure.
“Excuse me,” she snapped, her voice wavering slightly. “You cannot just walk in here. This is a secure campus. I’ll have security remove you.”
I didn’t blink. I stepped into the room.
My boots thudded heavily on the floor. Thump. Thump. Thump.
I walked right past the terrified students. I walked right up to Lily.
She looked up at me, tears streaming down her face. “Daddy, I didn’t cheat. I promise.”
I knelt down. I ignored the teacher for a second. I wiped a tear from Lily’s cheek with my thumb. My hands were rough, stained with engine grease from the van, but I was gentle. “I know you didn’t, Lil-bit. I know.”
I stood up to my full height. I’m six-foot-two, and in my current state, I looked like I could snap a baseball bat in half.
I turned to Mrs. Halloway.
“You think I can’t read?” I asked. My voice was low, a rumble from deep in my chest. It wasn’t the voice of “Jax” the thug. It was the voice of Detective Jack Reynolds, 12 years on the force, decorated officer. It was a voice of absolute authority.
Halloway stepped back, hitting the whiteboard. “I… I am calling the police.”
“Go ahead,” I said. I crossed my arms. “Save yourself the trouble.”
I reached behind my back.
Halloway flinched, probably thinking I was reaching for a knife or a gun to rob her. The kids in the front row ducked.
Slowly, deliberately, I pulled out my leather wallet.
I flipped it open.
The gold badge caught the fluorescent overhead lights. It gleamed like a star in the middle of a nightmare. Beside it, my ID card read: DETECTIVE J. REYNOLDS – CHICAGO PD – NARCOTICS & ORGANIZED CRIME DIVISION.
The room was so quiet you could hear the clock ticking on the wall.
“You just destroyed evidence in an ongoing investigation of harassment and discrimination against a minor,” I lied. Well, mostly lied. It was about to be an investigation. “And you just destroyed government property.”
“I… I…” Halloway stuttered. Her eyes darted from the badge to my face, trying to reconcile the thug she saw with the badge she feared.
“Pick it up,” I said.
“Excuse me?”
“The test,” I pointed to the shredded paper on the floor. “Pick. It. Up.”
She didn’t move.
“Now!” I barked. It was the command voice. The voice that makes suspects drop their weapons and hit the dirt.
Mrs. Halloway, the tyrant of Room 302, dropped to her knees. Her shaking hands reached for the scraps of paper.
But the story didn’t end there. Oh no. The Principal walked in right at that moment, and what happened next turned this from a classroom dispute into a city-wide scandal.
Chapter 3: The Principal’s Mistake
Principal Skinner was a man who wore his authority like a cheap suit—ill-fitting and uncomfortable. He bustled into Room 302, his face already red from the exertion of
