Academy Recruit Assaulted by Instructor Uncovers a Family Betrayal-eirian

My name is Maya Vance, though for most of my time at the Metropolitan Police Academy, nobody knew that.

On every roster, every dorm assignment, every weapons qualification sheet, I was listed as Maya Jackson.

Jackson was my mother’s maiden name, and I chose it because I wanted one clean chance to earn something without my father’s shadow standing beside me.

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My father was Harrison Vance, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Department, a man whose uniform seemed to enter rooms before he did.

People stood straighter around him.

They lowered their voices.

They quoted him like doctrine.

When I was a child, I believed that meant he was good.

He taught me the language of law before I understood the weight of it.

He showed me how to polish shoes, how to shake hands, how to keep my voice steady when someone tried to make me small.

He told me that a badge was not power.

It was responsibility.

That sentence built a cathedral inside my head.

For years, I lived there.

When I applied to the academy, I told him I did not want a call made, a door opened, a warning whispered, or a favor cashed in.

He listened from behind his desk at home, hands folded, expression impossible to read.

Then he said, “Earn it clean.”

So I tried.

I used my mother’s name because I wanted every instructor to see only my work.

I wanted my scores to stand alone.

I wanted my mistakes to be mine and my progress to be mine and my graduation, if I reached it, to belong to nobody else.

The third-floor hall of the academy always smelled of bleach, wet rubber mats, old coffee, and sweat sealed under fluorescent lights.

At 0500, the place came alive with boots on tile, locker doors slamming, radios crackling, and nervous recruits pretending they were not nervous.

Fear has a sound when people try to hide it.

It is too much laughter.

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