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Now reading: Chapter 5: The Wall from The Retired Young Mercenary Is Secretly a Billionaire, a Action novel by noctistt.

The officer’s feet dangled in the air, kicking uselessly. His hands clawed at the iron grip around his neck as Miles held him up against the tree like he weighed nothing.

The second officer, wide-eyed, shouted into his radio, "Officer down, I repeat—" but before he could finish, Miles turned toward him, swift as a blade in the dark. With his free hand, he snatched the gun from the man’s grip, twisted it effortlessly, and dismantled it into two broken halves.

The pieces clattered to the ground like cheap toys.

The second officer turned pale, stumbled back, and ran.

A deep, primal growl erupted from Miles’s chest. His fingers tightened around the officer’s neck.

"How... DARE... you touch her!" His voice bood through the silence like a bomb detonating—shaking birds from the trees, turning heads, freezing breath.

Elena stood frozen.

She couldn’t see his face—his back was to her, broad and still, frad by the flickering blue and red of police lights. But sothing about him... sothing in the way he stood, shielding her, made her heart slow down. A mont ago, she had been terrified. Now... she didn’t understand why, but she felt safe.

And yet, that safety ca wrapped in chaos.

The man before her was a storm—silent, controlled rage pouring off him like heat from scorched tal. His hand held the officer like he weighed nothing, like justice itself had taken form.

Who was he?

Not a face she recognized. Not a na she knew.

But sothing in her chest twisted—not out of fear, but sorrow. A kind of heartbreak that had no reason. Like watching soone burn from the inside out. Like seeing a soul lost to its own fire.

She raised a trembling hand, uncertain whether it was to stop him or reach for him. But the words—whatever they were ant to be—never made it past her lips.

April arrived just in ti to see the horror unfold.

"No! Stop—please!" she shouted, rushing forward and grabbing his arm with both hands.

But he didn’t flinch. His grip only tightened, knuckles white, muscles rigid like coiled steel.

His eyes—those once soft, sorrow-filled eyes—were now infernos. His jaw locked. His breath ca in short, broken bursts, as though every inhale was laced with fury.

This wasn’t just about the officer. This wasn’t about the mont.

He was strangling the past. The nights he’d stayed silent. The bruises he’d seen and never erased. The screams no one had answered.

"They don’t get to touch her. "His voice trembled, but not from weakness. "They don’t get to hurt her!"

April could see it—he was slipping. Drowning in rage so deep, it was dragging him back into a place no one could reach.

She clung to his arm, desperate. "Please... stop. You’ll lose yourself."

But he couldn’t hear her.

Not yet.

Then, a voice—small, soft—cut through the thunder.

"Mama..."It was Hope.

Then again, "Mama...", trembling. It was Asher.

The twins stood behind April, wide-eyed and shaking. Tiny hands clutching Elena’s skirt. Too young to understand it all. But old enough to feel the fear.

Miles froze.

Ti slamd back into his chest like a freight train.

His pupils shrank. His grip loosened.

The officer dropped from his hand like dead weight, gasping, coughing, crumpling to the ground with his hands over his neck—red-faced, wheezing, barely conscious. His lip was busted, his uniform stained with dirt and fear.

Miles backed away slowly, hands trembling now—not with rage, but guilt.

Sirens wailed in the distance, growing louder.

Then, screeching tires. A police car pulled up.

Doors slamd. Guns cocked. Three officers raised their weapons, and one stepped forward—a tall man in a clean uniform, square-jawed, with calm but commanding eyes.

Captain Sam.

He scanned the scene—one of his officers on the ground, the other shaking in a corner, his gun dismantled nearby. A crowd beginning to form. Whispers. Shouts.

"Guns down. "The captain’s voice cut through the tension like a sword. The other officers hesitated—then slowly, obeyed.

He turned toward the shaken second officer. "Explain. Now."

"H-He attacked us, sir! He just—he ca out of nowhere—"

"That’s not what happened!" April stepped in, eyes blazing. "They manhandled an innocent woman. They tried to drag her like a criminal! He stopped them."

The crowd stirred. An old man shouted, "She was just walking with her kids! "A woman added, "These cops do this all the ti in this area. Bullies with badges!"

Voices grew louder. The tide was turning.

Captain Sam, narrowed his eyes at his two officers—disgust, disappointnt, and fury simring in one glance.

"Get him dical attention," he ordered about the downed officer. Then to the second, "You and I will be having a long conversation."

He turned to Miles, who now stood quietly, breathing heavy, head bowed, arms by his side. Not resisting. Not reacting. Just... standing still. Like the eye of the storm.

"Young man," the captain said, stepping closer, "I understand the situation. But why did you have to go that far?"

Miles slowly looked up, pain and fire in his eyes.

"Because when the ones ant to uphold the law... beco the ones breaking it..."He paused, voice cold but clear."...soone has to build the wall. Even if they have to beco one."

The second officer, still nursing his pride, sneered through swollen lips."But you have no right to lay a hand on an on-duty officer," he spat, regaining a sliver of arrogance as backup stood beside him. "I’m placing you under arrest. Put your hands behind your back."

He stepped forward—foolishly.

Elena imdiately moved between them. "Please, Captain... don’t. He’s just a boy," she pleaded, her voice trembling with fear and confusion.

April followed, stepping beside her. " You can’t arrest him for doing what your n should’ve never done in the first place!"

But Miles raised his hand—calm, firm, silencing them gently. His eyes stayed on the captain. His voice was steady.

"Captain," he said quietly, "if a civilian lays hands on authority, it’s a cri."

A tense beat.

"But what if it’s authority... teaching authority how to behave?"

Captain Sam’s eyes narrowed.

"What do you an?" he asked, warily.

Miles slowly reached into his coat.

No one moved.

Then, he pulled out a slim black wallet, flipping it open to reveal a red military ID card—stamped with the Provincial Army insignia, gilded edges glinting under the police headlights.

The air went still.

Captain Sam stepped forward, his eyes locked on the card.

Red.

Only one kind of man carried that.

His pupils widened.

No. It couldn’t be. But... it was.

He looked up—really looked—at the young man before him.

Lean. Silent. Unshaken and so young.

The calm in the storm.

mories flooded him.

Years ago, back at the Academy—when instructors spoke in hushed tones about a phantom of war. A young rcenary so skilled, so lethal, they called him Ghost. A man who never showed his face. A man who ended wars before they began. A man who disappeared after every mission like smoke in the wind.

He was a myth.

Until recently.

Sam had read the internal mo.

Ghost—retired. Given Honorary rank: General. Red ID issued by Presidential order.

And now... standing before him... was no criminal.

It was him.

Captain Sam’s throat went dry. His heart thudded in his chest.

He had trained under the sa provincial army. He had read the Ghost’s tactical reports—one-of-a-kind writings burned into classified archives. He had heard of how Ghost took down a warlord camp single-handedly. Of how his presence alone once turned the tide of a civil war.

And now...

He was here.

In his twenties. Young. Calm. Alive.

"I... I didn’t know," Sam whispered, his voice hoarse, almost reverent.

He stepped back instinctively, every protocol in his mind firing like alarm bells.

The second officer, seeing the shift, glanced between them in confusion. "W-Who is he?"

But no one answered.

Because the na didn’t need to be spoken.

Captain Sam gave a sharp breath—trying to collect himself. Trying to balance duty... with the realization that he had almost drawn guns on a living legend.

This wasn’t a suspect.

This was a man with more authority than half the generals in the country.

He had just tried to arrest the wall.

Captain Sam’s hand trembled slightly as he stepped forward, his gaze fixed on the red military ID card held between the fingers of the young man standing in front of him. That card—it wasn’t just identification. It was a symbol of a power that transcended local jurisdiction, a rare mark issued only by the Presidential Complex itself. And the man holding it wasn’t just anyone.

The stories ca flooding back—classified files, whispered legends from the barracks, missions that were never recorded but changed the tides of war. Sam rembered them all. He had trained under commanders who spoke of Ghost not as a man, but as a force—unstoppable, untouchable, unknowable. And now, that legend stood right before him... not cloaked in shadows, not in the middle of a battlefield, but here, in this very street, standing calm while the storm raged around him.

Sam’s chest tightened. Then, without hesitation, he brought his right hand up in a sharp salute. The motion cut through the air like a blade—crisp, precise, and filled with reverence. His eyes never wavered.

Then, to the shock of everyone watching—he bent the knee.

The crowd held its breath.

Gasps rose like a wave as disbelief rippled outward. His officers stared at him, stunned. No one moved. No one spoke.

But when a man like Sam—a decorated police captain—kneels without command, there is no doubt left in the air. One by one, the rest followed. Confusion etched on their faces, they lowered their weapons and bent down to one knee, unsure of the full truth but certain of one thing: the man before them wasn’t soone you opposed. Even the second officer—the one who had barked threats just monts ago—now found himself trembling. His pride crumbled beneath the weight of realization. Jaw tight, lips pale, he too sank down.

They weren’t kneeling in fear.

They were kneeling in recognition.

They knelt for authority—the kind that wasn’t won by title, but earned through sacrifice and unshakable legacy.

They knelt... for Ghost.

Captain Sam lowered his head in solemn apology. His voice, when it finally broke the silence, was low, grounded in sha. "I apologize... General. I didn’t know who we were confronting. My n failed today. We lost sight of duty. Of justice. And in doing so... we dishonored the very uniform we swore to uphold."

There was no theatrics in his words. No performance. Just the raw humility of a soldier who knew when he had crossed a line. Sam wasn’t speaking as a police captain. He was speaking as a man in the presence of soone whose very na once made warlords tremble.

A murmur rolled through the gathered crowd. Disbelief, awe, speculation—they couldn’t quite grasp what they were witnessing, but they knew it was sothing beyond ordinary.

And behind them, two won stood frozen.

April’s eyes widened, her lips parting as she struggled to make sense of the mont unfolding before her. She had never been close to anything involving military or authority, never heard stories or rumors—certainly not about this. To her, Miles was just a quiet, kind man who seed to carry a weight And now, watching the highest-ranking officer in the district kneel before him without a word of explanation, a shiver ran through her. No nas were spoken. No titles revealed. But sothing unspoken passed through the air, thick and undeniable. This wasn’t ordinary. This wasn’t normal. Whoever Miles truly was... he wasn’t who she thought. He was sothing far more.

Elena stood motionless, her breath caught sowhere between confusion and disbelief.

She had just witnessed the Captain of Police—a man of stature and command—lower himself to one knee. His voice had faltered. And in the seconds that followed, his officers, one by one, did the sa. Even the one who had grabbed her earlier, full of arrogance and swagger, now knelt in stunned silence.

And they were all kneeling... to him.

The man who had stepped in without hesitation. Who had said little, done less—and yet, sohow, everything. He hadn’t raised his voice. Hadn’t made a threat. Hadn’t even touched a weapon.

But the mont he showed that red card—whatever it was—the entire scene had shifted. Like the air itself recognized him before anyone else could.

Elena clutched the twins a little tighter, her heartbeat loud in her ears.

It wasn’t fear that gripped her.

It was sothing else. Sothing stranger.

Because none of this made sense.

This man... he wasn’t a bystander. He wasn’t just another concerned face in the crowd. There was a quiet authority in him, sothing unshakable, sothing you didn’t question even if you didn’t understand it.

But beyond that—beneath the steel and the silence—there was sothing else.

The way he had looked at her. Protective. Unflinching. Not like a stranger defending a stranger... but like soone invested. The way his eyes lingered on the twins—not out of curiosity, but with sothing that almost looked like... ache.

It unsettled her.

Because while she didn’t know who he was—

Sothing in her gut whispered... maybe she should.

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