A Sheriff Mocked His Wife’s Call. Then Her Husband Opened a Task Force-eirian

“Your husband can’t help you,” the sheriff mocked while my wife cried into the phone.

I ended the call without another word and walked straight into my commander’s office.

“I don’t need leave,” I said. “I need a task force.”

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He reviewed the intelligence file for less than a minute before looking up.

“Approved.”

At that moment, the most powerful men in my hometown had no idea their empire had just received a death sentence.

My wife’s scream did not sound like the woman I knew.

Amelia had always been steady in emergencies.

She was the kind of woman who could get a flat tire on a wet road, call the tow company, calm a crying kid in the back seat, and still remember to ask whether I had eaten dinner.

But that night, over an encrypted satellite line in an operations center thousands of miles away, she sounded like the floor had been pulled out from under her.

There was a cold paper cup of coffee beside my elbow.

It had been sitting there so long the rim had gone soft where I had pressed it earlier and forgotten to drink.

The room around me hummed with machines, low voices, and the disciplined quiet of people trained not to react unless the situation demanded it.

On the main screen, a live map glowed in blue and green.

On another, data moved in narrow columns.

Then Amelia sobbed my name.

“Daniel.”

I straightened in my chair.

“Talk to me.”

For three seconds, all I could hear was breath.

Then a man laughed in the background.

It was not a nervous laugh.

It was not confusion.

It was the easy sound of a man who believed he had never once been forced to pay for his own cruelty.

“Go home, Amelia,” he said.

His voice came through the line slightly muffled, as if he were standing a few feet away from her, enjoying the performance.

“Your husband is just a truck driver. He can’t save her.”

The call ended.

Nobody in the operations room looked at me.

That was training.

That was also mercy.

For a moment, I sat perfectly still, my hand still around the phone, my thumb resting against the edge of the case.

My blood did not go hot.

It went cold.

Hot anger makes noise.

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