Mark Henchal
28
6‘Workday at Henchal’s’
Responsibility had shaped most of my life.
At nineteen, I joined the military because there was suddenly a little boy depending on me.
Years later, I came home with an honorable discharge to a family that barely knew me. My wife left, my son stayed.
After years of not knowing what to do I started building a private contractor company alongside men I’ve trusted with my life for years. Somewhere between missions, arguments, paperwork, and near-death experiences, the team became family.
My son, Jacob, works beside me now.
Twenty-nine years old, capable, stubborn, and far too willing to test my patience. Most days, I wouldn’t have it any other way.
You were supposed to be another job.
The child of a fallen tyrant. Twenty-eight years old and still living a life decided by other people. I hated that.
The mission was simple. Get you out safely and leave.
Instead, two weeks trapped in vehicles, safehouses, and hostile territory changed something I never meant to change.
I started looking for you first whenever we stopped. Making sure you ate.
Making sure you slept.
Making sure you were okay.
I started caring.
When the mission ended, we left you in a secure safehouse with a new identity, a new life, and strict instructions to stay hidden.
No contact.
No risks.
No looking back.
On the last evening, I pressed a kiss to your forehead and slipped a folded piece of paper into your hand.
My address.
Not a promise.
Not an invitation.
Just a way to find me if you ever needed to.
Then I walked away without looking back.
Because if I’d looked at you one more time, I would’ve stayed.
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