Julian Cross did not spare a single glance at the corpse cooling on the concrete floor. His attention was singular, a laser-focused beam of cold malice locked entirely on the bald man who had, only moments ago, driven a fist into Julian’s ribs.
Silence.
A suffocating stillness descended. Derek Stone, previously arrogant, now trembled, feeling like prey under a lion's gaze. The air grew thin, the pressure mounting until it felt like the Grim Reaper’s hand closing around a throat.
One step.
Julian Cross took a single, light step forward. The sound of his shoe sole connecting with the grit on the floor shattered the coagulated tension like a hammer striking glass.
Derek Stone let out a strangled cry. Terror seized him, and he scrambled backward, screaming for salvation that wasn't coming. "Help! Guards! He’s going to kill me!"
The sheer volume of his shriek, sounding as if he had seen a demon, jolted the entire cell block awake. Inmates in adjacent cells pressed their faces against the cold iron bars, craning their necks, desperate to catch a glimpse of the c*****e.
Down the corridor, a correctional officer confused by the sudden eruption of chaos, gripped his baton tighter and broke into a sprint toward the source of the disturbance.
He was too slow. Julian Cross moved—a blur of kinetic energy. He closed the distance instantly, launching a kick into Derek Stone's face. The impact was sickeningly solid, lifting the man off his feet and severing his screams instantly.
The impact was sickeningly solid. The massive force lifted the bald man off his feet, sending him flying backward. His screams were cut short, severed instantly like a radio cord yanked from the wall.
Crack.
The sound of fracturing bone echoed through the cell, a wet, crisp noise that made the skin crawl. Derek Stone’s body convulsed violently—once, twice—and then went completely limp.
Julian Cross released his grip. The bald man slid to the floor like a sack of wet cement, revealing a face ruined by blood and bone.
Thud.
The other nine inmates recoiled in horror. They had seen violence, but this cold, efficient butchery executed with machine-like precision made their legs give out. They slumped against the walls, nauseous with shock.
The correctional officer burst in, skidding to a halt at the gory tableau. "Get down! On the ground!"
Six officers swarmed Julian Cross, pinning him to the concrete while a stun baton drove into his spine. Current arced through him, but Julian made no sound. The heavy shackles were snapped back onto his wrists and ankles with aggressive haste.
Current arced through him. Julian gritted his teeth, muscles spasming, but he made no sound. The heavy shackles, which had only been removed minutes ago, were snapped back onto his wrists and ankles with aggressive haste.
"Drag him to the isolation wing! Now!" A man in a crisply pressed uniform stormed into the cell block. It was the Correctional Captain, his face flushed with a mixture of fury and disbelief. He surveyed the c*****e—two dead bodies and a room full of traumatized felons.
He gestured violently for the officers to remove Julian Cross, then whirled around, unhooking a leather strap from his belt. He lashed out, striking a shivering inmate huddled nearby.
"Drag him to the isolation wing! Now!" The Correctional Captain stormed in, his face flushed with fury. He surveyed the two dead bodies and the traumatized felons, then lashed out with a leather strap at a shivering inmate.
"Who the hell is dead? Tell me!"
The inmate flinched, teeth chattering. "It... it was the new guy. Julian Cross. The dead ones... that's Cole Lynx and... and Derek Stone."
"Julian Cross? The new admission?" The Correctional Captain frowned, turning to officer James Carter.
"Yes, sir," Carter replied nervously. "He was processed this evening. The kid from the Hawthorne State massacre."
"That psycho?" The Captain’s eyes widened. "Why in God's name did you put a high-profile killer in general pop? He should be with the lifers on the upper floors!"
James Carter wiped sweat from his forehead. "I messed up, Captain. I read his file. He's eighteen, a student at Harborview High School. No priors. He only killed to avenge his girlfriend. I thought it was a crime of passion, a one-time thing. I wanted to give him a break."
The Correctional Captain let out a cold, derisive snort. "A break? You i***t. It's the quiet ones you have to watch. When a 'polite kid' snaps, they don't just get angry; they break completely. Their psychology twists. Especially this type—the sudden explosion. Once they taste blood, they turn into jackals. There is no coming back from that."
He poked a finger into James Carter’s chest. "You've been working here too long to be this naive, Carter. Don't let it happen again. I'll bury this mistake for you this time, but this is your last warning."
James Carter nodded furiously, relief washing over him. "Thank you, Captain. Thank you. I promise, never again. Oh, but... sir?"
"What now?"
"The isolation cells on the fifth floor of the other blocks are at capacity. The only vacancy we have in the entire high-security sector is in this building... Cell 502."
The Captain froze. "502?" He paused, rubbing his chin slowly as the implication sank in. The number carried weight in this prison. "Hmm. Fine. Put him in there. We’ll keep him there for forty-eight hours and reassess."
Julian Cross, his body still numb from the high-voltage shock, was dragged through the corridors. His feet barely touched the ground as the guards hauled him toward the elevator. They ascended to the top level—the fifth floor.
The atmosphere here was different. The air was colder, sterile, and smelled of heavy disinfectant and old rust. They passed through seven distinct reinforced iron gates, each one clanging shut with a finality that echoed in the soul. Finally, they reached the end of the line.
The fifth floor wasn't designed like the open barracks of the first floor. There were no rows of cells facing a blank wall. Here, the cells were isolated, facing each other across a narrow, heavily monitored corridor. Single occupancy. Solitary confinement in all but name.
The guards dragged Julian Cross to the very end of the hall. They unlocked a heavy steel door, tossed him inside onto the cold floor, and slammed the gate shut. The lock engaged with a heavy thunk.
Silence returned.
It took fifteen minutes for the tremors in Julian’s nerves to subside. The paralysis from the stun baton slowly faded, replaced by the dull ache of bruised muscles. Slowly, deliberately, Julian Cross pushed himself up from the floor.
He looked around. The cell was small, claustrophobic, but blessedly quiet. A thin mattress, a toilet, a sink. He touched his split lip and a faint, almost imperceptible smile touched the corners of his mouth.
Quiet is good, he thought. No noise. No idiots posturing. Two lives in exchange for a private room. It was a fair trade.
He rotated his shoulder, working out a knot of tension. He still wasn't entirely sure why the judge had given him a suspended death sentence rather than ordering an immediate execution. Perhaps his age, or the circumstances. But in a way, living was a harsher punishment. Death would have been a release; survival was a gauntlet of memory and pain.
He had balanced the scales.
They had killed Eliza Bennett. Therefore, they had to die. Now that he had killed them, he accepted that he, too, would eventually have to pay the price. Julian held no grudges against the law or fate. He simply wanted to endure his punishment, serve his time in hell, and then, whenever the end came, go down into the dark to find Eliza.
He leaned back against the cold concrete wall, closing his eyes. He was just a kid from the suburbs. A nobody. He wasn't rich, he wasn't a genius, he wasn't a g**g member. He was just a student at Harborview High School. For a girl like Eliza Bennett—bright, beautiful, full of life—to look at him, to choose him... his classmates had joked that he must have saved the world in a past life to earn such luck.
He had nothing to offer her but his devotion. He had sworn to protect her.
Her voice drifted through his memory, clear as a bell, reciting those words she loved, adapted from a poem she adored: "I wish to be collected, safely kept, and cherished. To be spared from shock, spared from suffering, spared from wandering without a home, and spared from having no branch to rest upon. And that person, I have found. It is you, my beloved."
The memory was a jagged shard of glass in his heart. He hadn't kept his promise. He had failed the simple, sacred vow of a man to his woman. When he had found her body... when he saw the brutality, the brokenness, the sheer inhumanity of what they had done to her before dumping her in the wilderness like garbage...
That was the moment Julian Cross died.
He finally understood what a broken heart truly was. It wasn't poetic melancholy; it was a physical tearing, a violent rupture of the soul. In that moment of blinding darkness, the boy who did his homework and respected his elders vanished. In his hand, an imaginary blade formed, thirsting for blood.
He had lived a lifetime in eighteen years. He had known the warmth of family, the dizzying height of love, the pride of martial achievement, and the deepest, blackest pits of despair.
He had no regrets. The only shadow on his conscience was his parents. They were good people, honest workers. They must be in agony right now, weeping, wondering where they went wrong, hating him for throwing his life away for a girl. Was it worth it? they would ask.
Julian Cross, sitting in the dark of Cell 502, smiled.
Yes.
If time rewound, if the universe reset and he stood at that crossroads a thousand times, he would pick up the blade a thousand times.
Mentor, he thought, his mind drifting to the old man who had taught him everything. You once told me: "If others do not offend me, I do not offend them. But if others offend me, I will return it tenfold."
Once the blade is drawn, there is no turning back.
Mentor, it was you who taught me Jeet Kune Do since I was a child. You taught me the philosophy of intercepting, of flowing like water, but striking like stone. You taught me how to be a man.
Your student is only eighteen, but I have surpassed the limits you set. I have reached the eighth level of mastery. I haven't shamed your teachings. I hope, wherever you are in the great beyond, you can rest easy.
"Hey. I can't believe they put a high schooler in 502. That's actually hilarious."
The voice was deep, raspy, and dripped with amusement. It shattered Julian’s meditative trance.
Julian Cross slowly turned his head. Across the narrow corridor, in the cell directly opposite his—Cell 501—a man was watching him.
The man was massive, a mountain of muscle sitting casually against the wall. His eyes were wild, brimming with an arrogant, predatory intelligence. But it wasn't his size that drew the eye; it was the ink.
On his chest, a tattoo of a blood-red tiger roared toward the sky. The artistry was so vivid, so aggressive, that the beast looked as if it were about to leap off his skin and tear through the bars. Just looking at it induced a primal shiver, a warning signal from the reptilian brain.
Julian gave him a flat, indifferent look, then turned away. He lay down on the thin cot, turned his back to the bars, and prepared to sleep.
The large man in Cell 501 blinked, a flash of surprise crossing his face. Then, the sound of heavy chains rattling filled the corridor as he walked up to his cell door. He gripped the bars, staring at Julian’s back with genuine intrigue.
"You've got an attitude, kid. I like that," the man rumbled. "I'm new here too. Just got transferred this afternoon to this freak show. I heard the guards talking on the way up. They said the fifth floor is the 'Special Ward.' Twenty cells, 501 to 520, reserved for the worst of the worst. The danger level drops as the numbers go up. 501 and 502? Those are the penthouse suites for the most dangerous monsters they have. Those cells haven't been occupied in a long time."
He chuckled, a low, grinding sound. "But today is a special day. I, Rex Dalton—they call me Mad Tiger—I moved into 501. And you... a kid who looks like he should be doing algebra homework... you moved into 502."
"It's boring as hell in here, kid," Rex Dalton continued, leaning his forehead against the cold iron. "Why don't you chat with your Grandpa Mad Tiger? Tell me what you did. What kind of havoc do you have to wreak to get a VIP pass to 502? I’m actually curious."
Julian Cross did not respond. He didn't move. He kept his breathing steady, his eyes closed, shutting out the world.
Rex Dalton waited, but the silence stretched on. Instead of getting angry at the disrespect, the large man licked his lips and grinned, his eyes gleaming in the dim light.
"Grandpa is very interested in you," he whispered.
He pushed himself off the bars and walked back to his bunk. He settled in, interlocking his fingers behind his head, staring up at the water-stained ceiling.
"Looks like prison won't be so boring after all," he muttered to himself, a dark laugh bubbling up in his throat. "Heh. Heh heh."