
General's Battle for Honor
Chapter 3
I didn't sleep that night. Couldn't. The decoded message burned behind my eyelids every time I closed them—Owen's name listed among the conspirators, his testimony marked as "crucial for credibility." I'd memorized every word, every detail of the fabricated evidence they were preparing against my father.
At dawn, I was still sitting in the study, the laptop closed but present, like a bomb waiting to detonate. My father had wanted to call Senator Adams immediately, but I'd convinced him to wait until morning. We needed to be strategic. Careful. One wrong move and—
The sound of vehicles pulling up outside shattered the quiet.
My father appeared in the doorway, already dressed despite the early hour. His face was calm, but I saw the tension in his shoulders. "Isabelle. Stay inside."
"What's happening?"
The doorbell rang. Sharp. Official. The kind of ring that meant nothing good.
I followed my father to the foyer, my nightgown tangling around my legs. Through the front windows, I could see black SUVs, their engines still running. Men in dark suits. The metallic glint of weapons.
"General Marcus Hart?" The lead agent's voice carried through the door before my father even opened it. "We have a warrant for your arrest."
My father's hand stilled on the doorknob. For just a moment, he looked back at me, and I saw something in his eyes I'd never seen before. Not fear. Something worse. Resignation.
He opened the door.
They swarmed in like they owned the place. Five agents, maybe six, their badges flashing, their faces professionally blank. The lead agent—a woman with steel-gray hair pulled back so tight it looked painful—held out a document thick with legal seals.
"General Hart, you're under arrest for espionage, treason, and conspiracy to sell classified military intelligence to hostile foreign entities."
The words didn't make sense. Couldn't make sense. I stepped forward, but one of the agents moved to block me, his hand resting casually on his weapon.
"There's been a mistake," I said. My voice came out steady. Military training, kicking in automatically. "My father has served this country for thirty years—"
"We have documentation." The lead agent's eyes flicked to me, taking in my nightgown, the visible curve of my belly. Something like satisfaction crossed her face. "Financial records. Witness testimony. Including statements from Dr. Owen Richardson regarding suspicious communications he observed during recent deployments."
Owen's name, spoken aloud, hit me like a physical blow.
They put handcuffs on my father. The metal clicked shut around his wrists with a sound that seemed impossibly loud. He stood straight, parade-ground posture even now, but I saw his jaw tighten.
"Dad—"
"Isabelle." His voice cut through my panic. "Remember who you are. Remember what we stand for."
They led him toward the door. Outside, I could see more vehicles arriving. News vans. Cameras. Someone had tipped off the media.
"Wait." I grabbed my phone from the hall table, my hands shaking so badly I nearly dropped it. "I need to call our lawyer—"
"Your father will be provided with legal counsel." The lead agent was already guiding him down the front steps. "We recommend you secure your own representation, General Hart. Given your... condition... and your association with the accused."
The threat was clear. They weren't just coming for my father. They were coming for all of us.
I stood in the doorway and watched them load my father into the back of an SUV. Neighbors had gathered on the sidewalk, phones raised, recording everything. The cameras caught it all—the handcuffs, the federal agents, me standing there pregnant and helpless in my nightgown.
Before they closed the door, my father looked back at me one last time. His eyes were steady. Unbroken. "I love you," he mouthed.
Then they drove away, and I was alone.
I don't know how long I stood there. Long enough for the cameras to get their shots. Long enough for one of the reporters to shout a question about the baby's father. Long enough for a neighbor—Mrs. Chen, who'd brought us casseroles when my mother died—to look away when I met her eyes.
When I finally closed the door, my legs gave out. I sank down right there in the foyer, my back against the wall, and stared at my phone.
Seventeen missed calls from Owen, all those weeks ago.
Zero calls now. Zero messages. Just silence, while he testified against my family.
My hand moved to my stomach, feeling the slight curve there. The baby—our baby—would grow up knowing their grandfather had been arrested for treason. Would grow up with my face on the news, pregnant and disgraced.
Unless I fought back.
I pulled myself up, using the wall for support. My father's study was exactly as we'd left it last night—the laptop still on the desk, the decoded message still there, proof of the conspiracy.
I opened my contacts and scrolled to a name my father had mentioned once: Senator Patrick Adams. "One of the few truly principled men left in Washington," he'd said.
I hoped to God he was right.
The phone rang twice before a careful voice answered. "Senator Adams's office."
"I need to speak with the Senator. It's urgent. Tell him it's General Isabelle Hart, and I have information about the charges against my father."
A pause. Then: "Please hold."
I held. Outside, the news vans were setting up for their morning broadcasts. Inside, I stood in my father's study, one hand on my belly, and waited for someone—anyone—to help us fight back.
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