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The General's Return
The General's Return
Author: Rukky
Chapter One – The Divorce
Author: Rukky
last update2025-09-08 22:14:22

The air inside the visitation hall clung like a wet cloth stale, sour, heavy with the ghost of bleach and sweat. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, their cold glare bleaching every corner of humanity out of the room.

A guard leaned against the far wall, his hand resting lazily on his belt, eyes alert but bored. Selene Carter sat with her back perfectly straight, as if her spine were forged from glass.

She had chosen her armor carefully: a charcoal gray suit that spoke of precision and power, her blouse a crisp white, her hair coiled into an elegant twist. Not a strand out of place. Not a hint of weakness.

Before her lay a manila folder, thick with papers, edges sharp enough to cut. Inside, a dozen signatures waited to sever the final tie between her and the man across from her.

Fowler Reddington.

He sat opposite, his wrists heavy with chains that clinked softly every time he moved. The prison uniform a drab, shapeless orange was meant to humiliate, to reduce men into numbers.

But on him, it only draped over a frame that refused to be diminished. Broad shoulders, lean muscle, a stillness that was anything but defeated.

Even caged, he was too large for the room. Selene forced her eyes down to the folder. She would not look at him. Not too long. Not again.

She had rehearsed this moment a thousand times. In the sleepless nights when headlines mocked her name, in the mornings when colleagues whispered behind manicured hands, in the countless events where her smile had to mask the shame of being the wife of a convict.

She had told herself this was necessary. Clean. Surgical. A cut that would bleed, but heal.

“This doesn’t have to be difficult,” she said at last, her voice clipped, steady. Practiced. “Sign the papers. I’ll make sure the settlement is… generous.”

Her fingers tapped once against the folder, betraying the tension she buried beneath her words. “You’ll be able to… start again. Somewhere else.”

The words caught in her throat, tasting like ash. For a long moment, silence pressed between them. Fowler’s eyes dark, steady, unreadable stayed fixed on her face. Not with anger. Not even sorrow. Just… silence.

Then, slowly, he leaned forward, the chain between his cuffs dragging softly across the table.

“You’ve already started again, haven’t you?” His voice was low, deep, carrying a weight that made the guard’s shoulders stiffen unconsciously. “While I rotted in here, you climbed higher. Cleaner without me dragging at your heels.”

The words sliced deeper than she had expected. Selene’s jaw tightened. “You made your choices,” she said sharply. “I’m making mine.”

Her mind screamed against the chill in her tone. Choices? What did she know of his choices? The man who once commanded armies had been reduced to nothing more than a stain on her name.

She had built her career with sweat, grit, and sacrifice and every time she signed a deal or entered a boardroom, she carried the whisper: Her husband is in prison. She couldn’t live under that shadow. Not anymore.

Fowler’s smile came slow, bitter, cutting. “Your father must be proud. Carter blood doesn’t tolerate stains, does it?”

The mention of her father tightened something in her chest. She wanted to retort, to cut him down with a sharper blade, but the truth was too close. Her father had wanted this divorce long before she admitted it to herself.

“Sign them,” she said flatly, shoving the pen across the table. “Let’s not pretend there’s anything left to save.”

For the first time, his eyes flickered. Something passed through them pain, maybe, or memory. But then it was gone, shuttered behind the cold mask he wore so well.

He picked up the pen. The chains rattled, the sound sharp and final. With slow, deliberate strokes, Fowler signed his name across the divorce decree.

Selene’s chest tightened as she watched his hand move. Each letter carved into the paper like a wound. His signature strong, unmistakable burned itself into the page.

When he slid the folder back to her, his fingers brushed the edge of the paper. Not touching her, never daring, but close enough that she could see the scars on his knuckles. Scars that told a story she no longer had the right to know.

“Congratulations, Selene.” His voice was quiet, steady. “You’re free.” The words hit harder than any shout could have.

She gathered the papers with hands that trembled despite herself. She rose, her heels clicking against the linoleum with merciless precision. She didn’t look back. Couldn’t. Her exit was sharp, decisive. Final. The heavy door closed behind her with a hollow clang.

Only then did Fowler let the smile fade from his face. The muscles in his jaw tightened. His eyes, so calm before, hardened like steel. Today was not just the day his wife left him.

Today, his prison sentence ended. And the world Selene Carter, her family, his enemies would soon remember the man they had tried to erase.

Fowler Reddington was no longer a convict. He was a Five-Star General. And his war was only beginning.

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  • Chapter Twenty-Two – The Storm Breaks

    The Carter estate was a fortress, its stone walls rising high against the storm. But even fortresses had cracks and Fowler Reddington had always known where to strike.Rain soaked his torn shirt and streaked through the blood on his face, but he pressed forward, rifle steady, eyes locked on the mansion glowing against the night.Raven moved beside him, silent and precise, her pistol raised, her body language coiled with lethal intent. Behind them, Marcus Hale limped heavily, every step drenched in pain, yet his presence was immovable.Lightning seared across the sky, illuminating the rows of guards fanning out on the estate grounds. Their rifles glinted as they took aim, orders barked above the storm.Fowler didn’t slow. The first burst of gunfire tore through the rain. Bullets screamed past, striking mud and stone.Fowler dove forward, rolling into cover behind a low stone wall as Raven returned fire, her shots snapping through the dark with terrifying precision. Two guards dropped b

  • Chapter Twenty-One – Daggers in the Dark

    The storm raged against the estate, rain hammering the tall windows as though the heavens themselves sought entry.Inside the study, three figures stood in silent collision, Selene behind her father’s desk, Damon by the fire, Vivienne Hale at the door.It was Vivienne who moved first. She closed the study door with a click, her crimson lips curving into something between a smile and a snarl.Her drenched dress clung to her curves, the rain glistening on her skin. But there was no softness in her posture; her eyes burned with intent.“Quite the family gathering,” she purred, though her voice was sharp as broken glass. “I can practically smell the betrayal in the air.”Damon’s smile didn’t waver. “Vivienne. You really should knock before entering private conversations.”“Private?” Vivienne scoffed, stepping forward. “You mean your little confessional about destroying Fowler? About framing him? About betraying the one man who could have carried this family into a future worth a damn?”Se

  • Chapter Twenty – Masks Off

    The Carter estate loomed in silence, rain dripping from its marble cornices. Lightning forked across the night sky, illuminating its walls like a stage for judgment.Inside, the storm was quieter, no thunder, no rain only the whispers of betrayal echoing through polished halls.Selene Carter paced her father’s study, every nerve raw. The conversation with Vivienne Hale replayed in her mind with poisonous clarity. Damon. Her brother.The boy she had once defended from boarding school bullies, the man she had trusted to stand at her side… plotting, destroying, deceiving.Her gaze fell to the folder on her father’s desk. The one she had unearthed weeks ago. The one that had cracked the first seam in her certainty.She opened it again.Fowler’s file stared back at her stamped with words like traitor and espionage. Evidence stacked like bricks, neat and damning. But Selene’s eyes, sharpened now, caught what she had missed before.Dates that didn’t align. Signatures forged by hands she reco

  • Chapter Nineteen – Escape Through Fire

    The chamber reeked of smoke and cordite, a tomb littered with bodies and blood. Fowler’s grip tightened on the rifle, his knuckles white, every sense straining for the echo of Damon’s laughter.But the snake was gone, vanished into the maze of corridors beneath the Carter estate. The mysterious woman, his phantom savior moved first.“Move,” she snapped, her tone cutting, brooking no hesitation.She slid a fresh magazine into her sidearm, holstered it, and strode toward the corridor, her steps silent despite the chaos around them. Fowler followed, dragging Marcus Hale up with one arm.The older man’s weight was heavy, his body failing him, but Marcus still had enough fire in his eyes to keep moving. “You’re not leaving me behind, Reddington,” Marcus rasped.“Not planning on it,” Fowler muttered, slinging him against his side as they stumbled into the corridor.The hallway stretched long and narrow, lit only by the faint glow of failing emergency lights. Shadows shifted along the walls,

  • Chapter Eighteen – The Phantom in the Dark

    Bullets tore through the chamber, sparks erupting where metal met lead. The air reeked of gunpowder and blood, thick and suffocating. Fowler moved with practiced instinct, rolling low, snatching the nearest mercenary’s fallen body as cover.Rounds slammed into the corpse, thudding wetly, but he kept moving, dragging himself into the corner shadows. His muscles screamed, his ribs burned with every breath, but freedom coursed through him like fire.The hand that had freed him pressed briefly against his shoulder again, pushing him deeper into cover. Then she was gone moving with lethal grace through the chaos.Mercenaries fell one by one, their cries sharp and short. Damon shouted over the chaos, voice breaking with fury. “Find them! FIND HIM!”But fear had infected his men. In the black, their bullets struck nothing but walls and each other.Fowler caught only fragments of her silhouette slender, deliberate, her motions swift as lightning. She wasn’t panicked, wasn’t flailing. She was

  • Chapter Seventeen – The Blackout

    The chamber dissolved into shadow. The humming of the bulb died, leaving behind only silence and the distant drip of water through corroded pipes.For a moment, no one moved. Even the mercenaries froze, caught between orders and uncertainty. Fowler Reddington’s head lifted slowly. His vision, though blurred with blood, adjusted quickly to the dark.Blackouts were no stranger to him battlefields, ambushes, covert missions often unfolded in half light or none at all. Darkness was not his enemy. It was his ally.The mercenaries weren’t so fortunate. Their mutters rose, harsh and disoriented, boots scuffing as they tried to reorient themselves in the pitch black chamber.“Lights out? What the hell?” one muttered. “Stay sharp!” another barked, his rifle cocking with nervous haste.Fowler heard every movement, every shuffle, every breath. His chains rattled softly as he shifted, testing their give. Still strong. Still unyielding. But steel was never eternal, it had weaknesses.Damon Carter’

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