When Duty Kills
Liam Dunlap, my girlfriend's junior apprentice, bragged that he could defuse a bomb with one hand.
Then he slipped. The timer began to race. Terrified, he dropped his tools and ran.
I stepped in at great risk and saved the hostage. For that, I was commended.
Liam, on the other hand, was condemned across the internet and faced severe disciplinary action.
My girlfriend tried to speak up for him, but I stopped her.
"If you defend him now, not only will your promotion be revoked—people online will come after you too."
Later, unable to bear the pressure, Liam jumped to his death. Every line of his suicide note blamed my girlfriend for not standing by him.
She said nothing. She simply burned the letter in silence.
After that, she rose step by step from a frontline officer to a model figure in the police force.
On the day I was kidnapped by criminals, she came in person to defuse the bomb strapped to me—using only one hand.
She looked coldly at the device on my chest and said, "See? It can be done with one hand. Why did you all have to drive Liam to his death back then? If I had protected him at the time, the one in my position today… should have been him."
The bomb detonated. I died on the spot.
After I opened my eyes again, I saw her running around desperately for Liam.
She didn't know—the hostage was the mayor's son.