Home / Mystery/Thriller / Shadows of the Law / Chapter One – The Night Everything Changed
Shadows of the Law
Shadows of the Law
Author: B.L. Sinclair
Chapter One – The Night Everything Changed
Author: B.L. Sinclair
last update2025-08-14 22:12:34

The rain had a strange way of speaking that night — not in words, but in whispers, sliding down the cracked windowpane like it was trying to warn her. Twelve-year-old Adanna Cole sat on the living room floor, knees drawn up to her chest, coloring in the pages of a book she had long outgrown. The power had gone out an hour ago, and the candlelight on the low table threw ghostlike shapes against the walls.

Her mother was in the kitchen, humming softly as she prepared a late dinner. Her father’s voice drifted from the study, warm and deliberate, as he dictated notes into his tape recorder — something about “court evidence” and “the case breaking wide open.” Adanna didn’t care much for her father’s work as a human rights lawyer. All she knew was that sometimes, people didn’t like him because he defended those the powerful wanted silenced.

Outside, the rain deepened into a downpour. The roof groaned under its weight. Somewhere in the distance, a dog barked — one sharp cry that cut off too quickly.

The first knock came like a slap against the door.

Three hard raps.

Too hard. Too late at night.

Her mother froze mid-stir. “Adanna,” she called softly, “go to your room.”

“But—”

“Now.”

There was a tone in her voice Adanna had never heard before. It wasn’t fear, not exactly. It was something heavier, like she had been expecting this moment.

Her father’s footsteps crossed the hall quickly. He reached the door but didn’t open it. “Who’s there?”

Silence. Then, a deep voice, muffled by the wood: “We just want to talk, Barrister Cole.”

The hairs on Adanna’s arms stood up. Her father’s hand hovered over the lock, then drew back. “We can talk tomorrow. My family is—”

The door splintered inward.

It happened so fast that Adanna didn’t process the sequence — only flashes. Two men in dark jackets and masks are pushing through, the glint of metal in one man’s hand. Her mother’s scream. Her father is trying to shield them both, shouting something about the law. The first gunshot cracked like lightning, echoing in the small living room.

Adanna’s ears rang. She couldn’t move. The candle fell, rolling under the table, its flame shrinking into a guttering glow. The second shot knocked her father against the wall. He slid down slowly, like a puppet with cut strings.

Her mother lunged for her, grabbing her shoulders, shoving her toward the hallway. “Run, Ada! Go—”

A third shot.

Her mother’s hands went slack.

"Adanna stumbled backward and struck the wall with force." Her breath came in jagged bursts. The world around her slowed, sounds muffled except for the thundering of her heartbeat. She saw her mother lying still. Her father wasn’t moving.

One of the men stepped toward her.

Adanna’s vision tunneled, panic shoving her body into motion. She scrambled to her feet, tearing down the hallway toward her bedroom. She heard heavy boots chasing her. Her small fingers fumbled at the window latch — she managed to wrench it open just enough to squeeze her thin body through.

Cold rain swallowed her whole as she dropped into the backyard, hitting the wet earth. Pain flared in her ankle, but she ran, barefoot, the mud sucking at her feet. The neighbor’s fence loomed ahead; she climbed it clumsily, scraping her palms on the rough wood, dropping down on the other side.

Somewhere behind her, a voice cursed into the storm.

She didn’t stop until she reached the road. Headlights blinded her as a car screeched to a halt. The driver — Mrs. Opara from down the street — jumped out, her umbrella flying. “Adanna! Child, what—? Oh my God!” She wrapped her coat around her, pulling her into the car. Adanna could barely form words, her body shaking so hard her teeth clattered.

When they reached the police station, the smell of damp paper and stale coffee hit her. She tried to speak, but the words wouldn’t come out in order. The officers looked at each other, murmuring about how “these political cases are dangerous.” One officer asked her for descriptions, but she could only remember shadows and the glint of a gun.

That night, she learned two things.

One: The law could not always protect you.

Two: When it failed, you had to become the law yourself.

The Funeral

The days that followed were a blur of faces she didn’t recognize, voices speaking in polite, rehearsed sorrow. At the funeral, the priest talked about justice and eternal rest, but the words felt hollow. She stood between two distant aunts, her small hands clenched into fists so tight her nails dug into her palms.

Everywhere she looked, she saw people watching her — not with sympathy, but with curiosity. The kind of curiosity that came from knowing the truth but being too afraid to speak it. When she overheard one aunt whisper, "She shouldn't know everything now,” Adanna made a silent promise to herself: she would know everything, no matter what it cost.

The Oath

A week after the burial, she snuck into her father’s study. The police had collected evidence, which, judging by the empty drawers, meant they had taken almost everything. But in the back of a cabinet, she found his old leather briefcase. Inside was a single folder labeled Cole vs. Rivers State – Confidential. She didn’t understand the legal jargon, but one name repeated over and over: The Black Crest.

She whispered it aloud. It sounded like something out of a nightmare.

From that day forward, she carried that name in her heart like a burning coal. It was all she had left of the truth.

Fifteen Years Later

The rain still had a way of speaking to her. But now, instead of warning her, it seemed to echo her resolve. On nights when the city streets glistened under streetlamps, she would look out her apartment window and remember her parents’ faces. The fear in her mother’s eyes. The sound of her father’s voice trying to reason with men who had no use for reason.

It was the reason she became a lawyer. Not just any lawyer — a criminal prosecutor with a reputation for tearing apart corrupt witnesses and dismantling airtight alibis. She wasn’t interested in small crimes. She went after the big players — the syndicates, the power brokers, the men who thought themselves untouchable.

But every win felt incomplete. Because the Black Crest was still out there. And the faces behind those masks had never been unmasked.

That night in her office, the rain tapping at the windows like an old friend, her phone rang. Detective Banjo’s gruff voice came on the line.

“Cole,” he said, “we’ve got something. Big. A man named Ethan Cross. Name rings a bell?”

It didn’t. Not yet. But her pulse quickened anyway.

“Money laundering. Ties to the Black Crest.” A pause. “He’s charming, careful, but… something’s off. Thought you’d want to handle this one personally.”

Adanna leaned back in her chair, eyes narrowing. “Send me everything you have.”

As she hung up, a strange feeling crept into her chest, a mix of anticipation and something she didn’t want to name.

Because if this Ethan Cross is tied to her parents’ murder, she wouldn’t stop until he broke down

Or until she did.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 11 – The Betrayal Seed

    The city was quiet in that strange, almost threatening way that comes just before a storm. The streets glistened from an earlier drizzle, streetlamps casting fractured halos on wet pavement. Adanna pulled her coat tighter around her, the collar brushing her jawline as she walked toward the small café where Ethan had insisted they meet.He rarely picked the location. That, in itself, made her uneasy.Inside, the café was dim and warm, with the hum of soft jazz bleeding from a speaker somewhere near the counter. A scattering of late-night customers lingered over their mugs, lost in their worlds. Ethan sat in the back, his face half-hidden in the shadow cast by the overhead light. He didn’t look like a man meeting a lover or even an ally. He looked like someone bracing for war.Adanna slid into the seat across from him, setting her gloves on the table. “You said it was urgent.”He didn’t answer right away. His fingers were wrapped tightly around a coffee cup, as if drawing heat from it h

  • Chapter 10 – Doubts and Whispers

    The courthouse café was never quiet. The hiss of the espresso machine, the chatter of attorneys hunched over case files, the clink of spoons against porcelain—it was all part of the background hum of Adanna’s workdays. But this morning, the noise felt sharper. Every laugh seemed a little too knowing, every glance lingered a fraction longer than necessary.Adanna stirred her coffee slowly, watching the milk swirl into dark spirals before dissolving. She’d barely slept the night before. Ethan’s revelations, their growing closeness, the constant shadow of the syndicate—it was a cocktail of tension she couldn’t shake. But something else was gnawing at her now, something she couldn’t quite name.She looked up and caught two junior associates from the prosecution team whispering in the corner, their heads close, their eyes flicking toward her before darting away.She knew that look. She’d seen it in law school, when the rumor mill decided she was too ambitious for her own good. She’d seen i

  • Chapter 9 – The Pull of Emotion

    The café they’d chosen for their “planning session” was one of those places that looked like it belonged in a European backstreet — warm lighting, a few mismatched chairs, a counter lined with glass jars of cookies. On paper, they were just two professionals meeting for coffee. In reality, Adanna was sitting across from the man who had upended her entire life’s mission, talking about criminal leads as if they were old partners.Ethan sat angled toward her, one hand wrapped loosely around a mug of black coffee, the other flipping through a small leather notebook. He looked like he belonged in this scene — relaxed but alert, an edge in his movements that spoke of someone used to watching his surroundings.Adanna tried to keep her eyes on the notepad, but every so often, her gaze drifted up. His hair caught the amber glow of the café lights, and there was a faint shadow of stubble along his jaw. It shouldn’t matter. He shouldn’t matter. And yet… he did.“…and this,” Ethan said, sliding a

  • Chapter 8 – The Alliance

    The rain had not stopped since dawn. It fell in stubborn sheets against the tall windows of Adanna’s office, tracing crooked paths down the glass as if the sky itself were sketching out warnings she didn’t yet understand. The clock on her desk ticked with irritating precision, each second reminding her she shouldn’t be here — alone, with him.Ethan sat opposite her, leaning back slightly in the chair, his hands resting open on his knees in that careful, non-threatening posture people used when they wanted to be believed. He wasn’t wearing a tie today; his shirt sleeves were rolled to the elbows, revealing forearms laced with thin, pale scars. She tried not to look at them too long. Scars always told stories, and she wasn’t ready to hear him yet.“You said you wanted to explain yourself,” she said, her voice as flat as the rain’s drumming. “So talk.”Ethan studied her for a moment, as though weighing how much truth she could handle before she pushed him out of her life completely. “I’v

  • Chapter 7 – Confrontation

    The evening air was heavy with the scent of rain-soaked asphalt when Adanna stepped out of the courthouse. The glow of the streetlights cast long shadows, the kind that made the edges of her vision feel untrustworthy. She clutched her briefcase a little tighter, her heels clicking against the pavement in a steady, determined rhythm.She had spent the entire day building her wall — the mental one that kept her professional resolve intact — but Ethan Kane’s eyes had been hammering against it from across the courtroom. His gaze wasn’t pleading or defiant; it was something more dangerous. It was known.Now, as she made her way toward her car, she saw him.He was leaning against the side of a sleek black motorcycle parked under a flickering streetlamp. His dark jacket absorbed the light, making him appear like a silhouette carved out of the night. He didn’t move until she was close enough to hear the subtle rasp of his voice.“Counselor.”She froze, every muscle on edge.“What do you want,

  • Chapter Six – Cracks in the Armor

    The rain outside the courthouse had not let up since morning. It streaked the tall glass windows like tears on a giant’s face, blurring the city beyond into an abstract painting of grey and gold lights. Inside, the air was thick with the smell of wet coats, coffee, and tension. The sound of shuffling papers and muted conversations filled the corridor, yet Adanna’s heartbeat was loud enough to drown it all out.She stood near the prosecutor’s bench, her hand gripping a folder so tightly that her knuckles whitened. Her mind had been a careful, airtight vault for years—memories of her parents’ murder locked away behind steel walls of focus and discipline. But ever since Ethan Cole had walked into her courtroom, that vault had been rattling, the hinges groaning under the strain.She tried to shake it off. Focus, Adanna. He’s a suspect, nothing more. A name in a case file. A possible link in the chain that leads to the people who destroyed your life. And yet, she couldn’t forget the way hi

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App