“He’s going to plant something.”
“Probably.”
“He said my truck.”
“Then stop driving your truck.”
“No.”
Preston’s eyes narrowed. “I know that tone.”
“He wants to find evidence in my truck,” I said. “So we give him evidence.”
“That is a terrible sentence.”
“Powdered sugar.”
Preston stared at me.
I explained it.
A fake package. Hidden poorly. Enough to look damning at a glance. No actual illegal substance. Dominic’s ego would do the rest. He would arrest me, celebrate too early, skip proper testing, and create the false imprisonment case himself.
Preston stood. “You are gambling your freedom on the assumption that he is stupid.”
“No,” I said. “I’m gambling on the fact that he is arrogant.”
“That’s not better.”
“It’s more reliable.”
He paced now.
“While he has you in custody, what am I doing?”
“Lake house. Office. Safe. Men like Dominic keep records because they trust nobody completely.”
Preston looked at the financial files.
“A ledger.”
“Something like it.”
“And if I find nothing?”
“Then I spend a night in jail for powdered sugar.”
“And if his deputies decide to make that night rough?”
Preston cursed under his breath.
“You always were calmest right before doing something insane.”
“It’s not insane if it works.”
“That is exactly what insane people say.”
But he was already taking notes.
When I got home that evening, Amelia was cooking roast chicken. The kitchen smelled of rosemary, butter, and betrayal wearing an apron.
“How did it go?” she asked.
I let my shoulders slump.
“I apologized.”
She turned, eyes bright. “And?”
“He said he’d think about leaving us alone.”
Her smile was soft and poisonous.
“See?” she said, kissing my cheek. “Sometimes you just have to know your place.”
I looked at the woman who had stolen my money and sold my name.
“Yeah,” I said. “I’m learning.”
In the garage, beneath the spare tire, five taped bricks of powdered sugar waited like sleeping wolves.
By Monday morning, the trap was ready.
### Part 7
Monday came in gray and wet.
The sky hung low over the town, pressing the roofs and fields into silence. Rain tapped against the kitchen window while Amelia stirred her coffee with a silver spoon, slow circles, eyes on her phone.
I stood at the counter and tied my boot.
“I’m heading into the city today,” I said.
Her spoon stopped.
“For what?”
“Back appointment. Specialist had a cancellation.”
She looked up. “You didn’t mention that.”
“Forgot.”
“You’ve been forgetting a lot lately.”
I gave her the tired smile she expected. “Yeah. I guess I have.”
She studied me, trying to decide whether I was broken enough to be predictable.
Finally, she nodded. “Drive safe.”
“I will.”
I walked outside with my keys in my hand.
The rain had stopped, but the air still smelled metallic. My truck sat in the driveway with mud on the tires and a secret under the spare. I opened the door, paused, and looked back at the house.
Amelia stood in the window.
Phone in hand.
I drove slowly through town. Past the Rusty Spoon. Past the hardware store. Past the sheriff’s station where two cruisers sat angled like dogs waiting for a command.
I did not speed.
I used my signals.
I kept both hands visible.
Five miles beyond town, the road narrowed between pine woods. The rain had left the asphalt black and shining. In my rearview mirror, a black SUV appeared.
No lights at first.
Just presence.
Then the blue strobes flashed.
I pulled onto the gravel shoulder and parked.
My breathing stayed slow.
Dominic got out of the SUV.
Two cruisers pulled in behind him.
Three officers for one man going to a doctor.
He walked up to my window, hat low, smile lower.
“Step out of the vehicle.”
“What’s the reason for the stop?”
“We received an anonymous tip.”
“About?”
“A vehicle matching this description transporting illegal materials.”
I let a flicker of fear cross my face. Not too much. Just enough to feed him.
“That’s ridiculous.”
“Out.”
I stepped out.
He turned me hard against the truck and cuffed my hands behind my back. The metal bit deep. He wanted pain. He wanted witnesses. He wanted me to twist, curse, shove back.
I rested my cheek against wet steel.
“Search it,” Dominic ordered. “Every inch.”
The deputies tore through my truck with theatrical violence. Floor mats tossed into mud. Glove box emptied. Tool roll dumped. Registration papers trampled beneath boots.
“Nothing inside,” one deputy called.
Dominic’s jaw tightened.
“Check the bed.”
Rainwater dripped from the brim of his hat.
A deputy climbed into the back, lifted the spare, and froze exactly the way I needed him to.
“Sheriff.”
Dominic turned.
“I got something.”
The deputy held up one duct-taped brick wrapped in plastic.
For a moment, Dominic looked like a man seeing God.
Then he looked at me.
“Well, well,” he said. “What were you planning, Logan? Starting a little side business?”
“That’s not mine.”
“Sure.”
“I don’t know what that is.”
“Oh, I believe that.” He leaned close, voice soft. “Men like you never know how the evidence got there.”
He lifted the brick high enough for his deputies to see. High enough for the body camera on one cruiser to catch. High enough for his pride to stand beside him.
“Logan Reed, you are under arrest for possession with intent to distribute illegal substances.”
He shoved me into the back seat of his SUV.
As we pulled away, I watched through the rain-speckled window while Dominic held the package like a trophy.
He did not open it.
He did not test it.
He did not question why it was hidden badly enough for a drunk teenager to find.
Perfect.
At the station, they processed me under fluorescent lights that hummed like insects. Fingerprints. Mug shot. Belt removed. Boots taken. Wallet bagged.
They put me in a holding cell with a metal toilet and a bench bolted to the wall.
Dominic came by an hour later with coffee.
“I called Amelia,” he said. “Poor thing is destroyed.”
“I’m sure.”
“She says she had no idea she married a criminal.”
I looked at him through the bars. “I get a phone call.”
He grinned. “Call the president if you want.”
He passed me the phone.
I dialed Preston.
“It’s done,” I said.
His voice came calm and clear. “I’m at the lake house.”
“Status?”
“Empty. Your sheriff brought everyone to celebrate.”
“Find it.”
I heard a lock click through the phone.
Then Preston said the words I needed.
“Logan. There’s a safe.”
Dominic watched me from the hallway, smiling.
He thought I was trapped.
He did not know the cage had been built for him.
### Part 8
Jail has a smell that never leaves a man once he knows it.
Bleach on concrete. Old sweat in thin blankets. Metal warmed by too many hands. Fear pretending to be boredom.
I sat on the bench and listened.
A deputy walked past every eight minutes. Keys on left hip. Slight limp. Radio low. He paused at the water fountain each time, drank twice, cleared his throat, moved on.
Patterns calm me.
Dominic wanted panic. Instead, I counted.
At 3:12 p.m., he came back with two deputies and a grin wide enough to split his face.
“Big day for you,” he said.
“Is it?”
“Press is coming tomorrow. Small-town hero sheriff takes down decorated fraud turned trafficker.” He tapped the bars with his ring. “I might even get my picture in the state paper.”
“You should test your evidence before the cameras show up.”
His eyes sharpened.
“What?”
“Just a thought.”
He laughed, but the laugh had a crack in it. “You’re trying to scare me.”
“I’m in a cell, Dominic. How would I do that?”
He stepped closer.
“You think because you sat quiet in that diner, you’re strong? You’re not strong. You’re empty. Amelia told me everything. You wake up sweating. You check windows. You can’t walk into a crowded room without looking for exits.”
My face stayed still.
“She said being married to you was like sleeping beside a locked door.”
That one hit.
Not because it was cruel.
Because it sounded like something she might have once said with sadness before she learned to say it with contempt.
Dominic saw something in my eyes and mistook it for weakness.
“There he is,” he whispered. “There’s the broken soldier.”
I leaned back against the wall. “You talk too much.”
His smile vanished.
Before he could answer, the phone on the desk outside rang. A deputy picked up, listened, and frowned.
“Sheriff,” he called. “County clerk’s office says state investigators requested contract copies.”
Dominic turned slowly. “What?”
The deputy swallowed. “Municipal contracts. Last five years.”
Dominic looked back at me.
For the first time, his confidence flickered.
That scared him more.
He walked out fast, boots heavy on concrete.
The deputy resumed his rounds.
At 5:40, the cell block door opened again.
Amelia entered.
She wore a black dress beneath a beige coat. Too formal for a jail visit. Too polished for grief. Her hair was smooth, her makeup careful, but her eyes were restless.
Dominic stood behind her, his hand on the small of her back.
“You have five minutes,” he said.
Then he left us alone, though he stayed where he could watch through the window.
Amelia approached the bars.
For a long moment, she only stared.
“You look awful,” she said.
“Good to see you too.”
Her mouth tightened. “Do you have any idea what you’ve done to me?”
“To you?”
“People are calling. Nora from the diner texted. My mother heard something from someone. Do you understand how humiliating this is?”
I stood slowly.
“Amelia, I didn’t do it.”
She rolled her eyes. “Stop.”
“You know I didn’t.”
Her gaze slid away.
That was enough.
She reached into her purse and pulled out folded papers.
“I can help you.”
“No, you can’t.”
“Yes, I can.” She pushed the papers through the bars. “Divorce agreement. Deed transfer. Sign them tonight. Dominic says if you cooperate, things can go easier.”
I unfolded the documents.
My house.
My savings.
My future.
All reduced to signature lines.
Her voice softened. “Please, Logan. Don’t make this uglier than it has to be.”
I looked at her through the bars. “You brought these here while I’m in a cell.”
“You left me no choice.”
“You put me here.”
Her eyes flashed.
“You put yourself here by being impossible to love.”
There it was.
The truth without costume.
I asked, “Do you remember our vows?”
She closed her eyes. “Don’t do this.”
“For better or worse.”
“In sickness and health.”
“Sign the papers.”
“Until the sheriff offers a better deal.”
Her face changed.
I tore the papers once.
Then again.
Pieces fluttered to the cell floor like dead moths.
Amelia’s mask cracked open, and hatred poured through.
“You useless idiot,” she hissed. “You think this makes you noble? You’re nothing. Dominic will bury you, and I will still get that house.”
I stepped closer to the bars.
“No,” I said quietly. “You won’t.”
Something in my voice made her step back.
Dominic stormed in and grabbed her arm.
“Visit’s over.”
As he pulled her away, she screamed my name like a curse.
The door slammed.
The cell block went silent.
On the floor, the torn deed transfer lay near my boots.
And far away, beyond the walls, I imagined Preston opening Dominic’s safe.
### Part 9
The raid began at 9:17 p.m.
I knew because I had been watching the second hand on the clock outside the cell block door for almost an hour.
The station had gone quiet. The celebration was over. The deputies who had strutted all afternoon now spoke in low voices near the front desk. Dominic had disappeared into his office after three phone calls he did not like.
At 9:17, tires screamed outside.
Not local tires.
Heavy vehicles.
Trained drivers.
Then came the sound that changes every room it enters.
“State police! Hands where I can see them!”
A chair crashed.
Someone cursed.
A deputy shouted, “What the hell is this?”
Another voice, female, sharp as a blade: “Move away from the desk.”
Boots thundered through the station. Not lazy deputy boots. Tactical boots. Coordinated. Purposeful.
The young deputy who had been walking past my cell all evening ran toward the front, then stopped like he remembered I existed.
He looked at me.
I smiled.
His face drained of color.
The cell block door flew open.
A state trooper entered first, rifle low but ready. Behind him came a woman in a navy suit with silver hair cut at her jaw and eyes that could freeze a river.
Behind her stood Preston.
He looked at me through the bars.
“You comfortable?”
“I’ve slept worse places.”
“Always dramatic.”
The woman stepped forward. “Commander Reed?”
“Retired.”
“I’m Deputy Attorney General Marsha Kline. We’ll need your statement.”
“Happy to give it.”
Dominic’s voice erupted from the hallway.
“You can’t do this! I am the sheriff of this county!”
He was dragged into view by two troopers, hands cuffed behind his back. His hat was gone. His hair stuck up on one side. His face was red and wet with sweat.
When he saw me, he twisted hard enough that one trooper shoved him into the wall.