Janitor Dad’s Secret Past Exploded After Sheriff Shot His Son-QuynhTranJP

I was mopping the courthouse lobby when my old life came looking for me.

The floor was white marble, polished so hard it reflected the fluorescent lights in long, sickly strips.

At night, after the lawyers went home and the clerks locked their offices, the building smelled like lemon cleaner, dust, and old coffee.

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I liked it that way.

Quiet places suited me.

Quiet work suited me because noise had taken too much from me.

Most people in Livingston County knew me as Dennis Irwin, the night janitor.

Gray hair.

Worn boots.

County shirt.

A man who emptied trash cans, replaced paper towels, nodded at deputies, and never stayed in a room long enough to be remembered.

If they noticed me at all, it was only to step around my mop bucket.

That was exactly how I wanted it.

Seventeen years earlier, men had called me Reaper in places that never made the news.

Not because I liked the name.

Because other people did.

I had led teams into rooms where the wrong breath could get you killed.

I had watched dawn break over desert walls with my finger still locked around a rifle.

I had carried men out under fire and left pieces of myself in countries where the sun came up mean.

Then I came home.

I married Sarah.

I raised our son, Tyler.

I took a job nobody respected because respect had cost me enough already.

I buried the man called Reaper so deep I thought even God would have trouble finding him.

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