Larkspur, Hawthorne State. June 7, 2002.
The midnight emergency bell at the Central Precinct screamed, shattering the night watch and sending a shockwave through the city’s nervous system. It was a wake-up call that dragged the city’s elite from their beds and thrust them into a nightmare.
Seventeen dead.
The initial reports were so grotesque that dispatchers hesitated to repeat them. Five students. Twelve hardened g**g members. The scene was a tableau of visceral cruelty that made seasoned homicide detectives vomit in the gutters.
Vacations were canceled. Every badge in Larkspur was activated. By 2:00 AM, the City Hall conference room was choked with smoke and fear. The Mayor and Police Commissioner presided, their faces pale. The mandate was absolute: capture the monster before sunrise, or the city would tear itself apart.
If the victims had only been the twelve gangsters, the administration might have spun it as a g**g war. But the five eighteen-year-old students changed everything. Their butchered bodies were a political guillotine hanging over every official in the room.
Yet, the investigation moved with terrifying speed. Within two hours, all evidence converged on a single point of origin. The suspect was not a g**g lord, but a student.
The dossier landed on the Criminal Investigation Division Captain's desk with a heavy thud.
"Julian Cross," the Captain read gravely. "Male. Eighteen. Harborview High School senior. Class Monitor. Top grades. Parents run a bistro called Happy Belly."
The officials struggled to reconcile the profile with the c*****e. Then, the Captain read the motive.
"June 5, 2002. Eliza Bennett, girlfriend of the suspect, was abducted by fellow student Logan Hayes and four others. They took her to Nightjar, a club controlled by the Iron Crest syndicate. They sold her to Victor Hale for five thousand dollars."
The room went deathly silent.
"Eliza Bennett was r***d and killed by Victor Hale and his men. Tonight's massacre... was revenge."
Julian Cross wasn't a psychopath; he was an avenging angel. But he was armed, dangerous, and unhinged. A city-wide dragnet was launched. Three hundred officers, including Riot Police and SWAT, swept through the streets like a steel broom.
Dawn broke with a bleed of grey light. The manhunt ended in the quiet solitude of the municipal cemetery.
When the tactical teams located Julian Cross, even the SWAT operators lowered their weapons in shock. It was a new grave. A young man knelt before it, weeping silently. But it was his offering that froze their blood.
Five red candles burned low. Next to each was a severed human head—Logan Hayes and his accomplices, their faces frozen in terror. To the side, twenty severed fingers were arranged on the grass to form a single, massive word in blood red:
VENGEANCE.
There was no shootout. There was no resistance. Julian Cross, the butcher of Larkspur, simply stood up and allowed the SWAT team to shackle him. The flashing lights of the police cruisers cut through the morning mist, illuminating his face as he was shoved into the back of a squad car. He looked less like a monster and more like a boy whose soul had burned to ash.
In a single night, the most horrific criminal case in the history of Hawthorne State was closed.
The public reaction was a fractured mirror of society. When the details leaked, the city was torn. Some wept for the tragedy of the young couple. Some gasped at the brutality. Some were outraged by the vigilante justice.
Five days later, the trial began. It was a spectacle, yet Julian Cross refused a defense attorney. He sat in the defendant's chair, silent and detached, as the prosecution laid out the grim evidence.
The verdict, when it came, sent a shockwave through the courtroom that was even more confusing than the crime itself. By all rights, Julian should have faced immediate execution. The laws of Hawthorne State were unforgiving regarding m*********r.
However, the judge, a man known for his severity, delivered a sentence that baffled the legal experts present: "Death Penalty, with a two-year suspension of execution."
It was a suspended death sentence—a rare legal maneuver that essentially meant life in prison, provided the prisoner committed no further infractions. It was a reprieve. A second chance at life, however grim.
Even more unsettling was the reaction from the gallery. The parents of the five dead students—Logan Hayes and his cohorts—sat stone-faced. They did not scream. They did not protest. They did not appeal. Their silence was heavy, implying a settlement or a threat that had taken place behind closed doors, hidden from the public eye.
Before he was led away, Julian was allowed a brief moment with his parents. The owners of Happy Belly were broken people, clinging to each other as they looked at their son. Julian did not speak. He knelt on the hard floor of the courtroom and knocked his head against the wood ten times—a heavy, rhythmic sound of filial piety and apology.
Then, he stood up. Without a word, without a backward glance, he allowed the bailiffs to drag him toward the transport van.
The atmosphere was calm. Strange. Too calm. A suffocating, eerie silence hung over the proceedings, suggesting that this was not the end of the story, but merely the prologue.
The prisoner transport van rattled over the asphalt. Julian Cross sat alone in the rear cage, ignoring the murmurs of the guards up front and the noise of the traffic outside. His eyes were dry now. There was no regret in his gaze, no pain. Instead, there was a haunting clarity, a look of deep reminiscence, or perhaps, deliverance. He had completed his mission. Eliza was avenged. The rest was just details.
Lost in his memories, Julian didn't notice the passage of time. The journey to the state penitentiary was supposed to take two hours. But the van kept moving. The sounds of the city faded, replaced by the drone of tires on rougher roads.
The journey took all day, driving deep into the mountains far from Larkspur. Finally, the van hissed to a halt in a concrete courtyard surrounded by razor wire.
The intake was a systematic stripping of humanity. Heavy shackles, strip search, head shaved, grey uniform. He was no longer Julian Cross; he was Inmate 7702.
Two hours later, guards escorted him to a communal cell.
"Get up! On your feet!" one of the guards shouted, rattling his baton against the bars.
Inside the cell, the shapes of men stirred. They climbed down from bunk beds, moving with the sluggish insolence of long-term captives. It was a communal cell, walls on three sides, steel bars on the front. It was spacious enough, housing six bunk beds—twelve men in total.
One of the inmates, a man with a face like a slab of dough and a body that spilled over his waistband, leered at Julian. He let out a strange, high-pitched laugh. "Well, well. Look what we have here. A kid? What is this, day care? How did a little bird with his feathers barely grown end up in a hole like this?"
Beside him, a bald man with a scar running through his eyebrow chuckled darkly. "Don't let the baby face fool you, Fatty. Kids these days are twisted. He looks quiet, but I bet he’s done some nasty stuff to get sent here. Right? Hahaha..."
The other inmates joined in, a chorus of exaggerated, mocking laughter that bounced off the concrete walls.
"Silence!" the guard barked, striking the bars. "This is Julian Cross. He belongs to Cell 105 now. You lot behave. Especially you, Cole Lynx. One excuse, and you're in the hole."
Cole Lynx, the cell boss known as 'Mountain Cat,' rolled his eyes. "Yeah, yeah. Got it."
The heavy door slammed shut. The guards walked away.
Julian, holding his bundle of bedding, walked silently toward the only empty bunk at the far end of the room.
He didn't make it two steps.
Cole Lynx stepped into his path. He didn't speak immediately. He just circled Julian, looking him up and down like a predator inspecting a wounded animal. The cell went quiet. The other inmates watched, their eyes gleaming with anticipation.
Suddenly, Cole Lynx cleared his throat and spat a thick glob of phlegm directly into Julian's face.
The surrounding inmates erupted in laughter.
"Hey, kid," Lynx sneered. "No greeting? No tribute? You think you can just sleep here? I run this block."
Julian didn't blink. He didn't wipe the spit from his cheek. He didn't even look at Cole Lynx. He simply sidestepped the man and continued walking toward his bunk.
The disrespect was palpable. The bald inmate, eager to impress the boss, roared in anger. "You little punk!"
He lunged forward, swinging a heavy fist directly into Julian's lower abdomen.
Thud.
It was a solid hit. Julian let out a muffled groan as the air left his lungs. He stumbled back six steps, crashing hard against the metal frame of a bunk bed. A trickle of blood escaped the corner of his mouth.
"Hahaha!" The cell roared. "Kneel down! Beg Cole Lynx for forgiveness!"
Julian slowly wiped the spit and the blood from his face. He looked up. His eyes were terrifyingly cold, like deep water under ice. He swept his gaze across the faces of the men."I don't want trouble," he said softly. "Don't trouble me."
He turned to his bunk again.
Cole Lynx’s eyes narrowed. The dismissal was an insult. He snorted, signaling the others to back off. He walked to Julian's bunk, unbuckled his pants, and urinated all over the fresh bedding.
"Hahaha! Holy water for the new guy!" the inmates howled.
Julian froze.
Slowly, he straightened his back. He turned around. His face was no longer human; it was the face of the reaper from the graveyard.
"I said," Julian whispered, his voice rasping, "don't mess with me."
The tone dropped the temperature in the room. Even Cole Lynx felt a shiver. But his ego took over. "You looking to die, boy?"
Lynx swung a vicious haymaker, aiming to crush Julian's face.
Snap.
Julian moved faster than thought. His left hand shot up, catching Lynx's fist in an iron grip.
"Don't. Mess. With. Me."
It was the last warning.
With a violent jerk, Julian pulled the trapped fist backward, unbalancing the larger man. Simultaneously, his right hand flattened into a rigid knife-hand. He drove it hard into Cole Lynx's ribcage.
CRACK.
The sound of bone snapping was wet and loud, sickeningly audible in the small space. It echoed off the concrete walls, silencing the laughter instantly.
Thump.
Cole Lynx's eyes bulged from their sockets. His mouth opened in a silent gasp of shock. He collapsed backward, hitting the floor like a sack of wet cement.
The force of Julian's strike had been superhuman. The shattered rib had been driven inward, piercing the heart like a dagger. Cole Lynx, the tyrant of Cell 105, was dead before his head hit the concrete.
"Ah—!"
The collective gasp of the other eleven inmates sucked the air out of the room. They scrambled backward, tripping over themselves, pressing their backs against the cold walls. They looked from the corpse on the floor to the young student standing over it.
Julian stood alone, his chest heaving slightly, his eyes sweeping over them with the indifference of a god of war. Terror filled the cell. They had forgotten how to speak. They had forgotten how to breathe. They were locked in a cage with something far worse than a criminal.