A sharp slam echoed through Terminal B parking garage as a teenage boy was thrown face-first onto the hood of a black SUV. His backpack burst open. Books, clothes, and papers scattered across the wet concrete.
Travelers near the elevators froze.
Phones came out instantly.
Officer Travis Cole twisted the boyâs wrist harder.
Marcus cried out in pain.
âThatâs my dadâs car!â
The officer laughed without emotion.
âYour dad doesnât drive federal plates.â

Cold fluorescent lights reflected off the floor. Patrol lights flashed red across concrete pillars.
Marcus struggled to breathe.
âYouâre making a mistake!â
Cole reached down and grabbed a black leather badge wallet that had fallen from the backpack.
He held it up for the crowd like a trophy.
âNow fake federal ID too?â
Marcusâs face changed from fear to panic.
âDonât open that!â
The officer smirked and flipped it open.
Before he could read a single wordâ
Tires screamed through the garage.
Two black SUVs came flying around the corner and stopped hard behind the patrol car.
Doors burst open.
Men in tactical gear stepped out fast, calm, precise.
No yelling.
No wasted movement.
Then one tall broad man in a dark coat walked straight through them.
His eyes locked on the officer.
âTake your hands off my son.â
The entire garage went silent.
Cole slowly let go.
Marcus lifted his head, eyes full of tears.
âDadâŚâ
The officer looked down at the badge wallet still in his hand.
Real.
Federal.
His face lost all color.
Marcus pulled back, his wrist red and swollen.
The father took one step closer.
No anger.
Just control.
Then his eyes moved past everyone⌠to the rear SUV door still hanging open.
He froze.
Something was wrong.
His voice dropped lower than before.
âWhereâs the case?â
Marcus went pale.
The camera turned to the empty back seat.
Nothing inside.
And someone had just closed the elevator doors.
Part 2 in the comments.
