My husband changed the locks on our mansion while I was at my mother’s funeral, texting me: “You took too long to grieve. Pack your things from the porch.” When I arrived, my clothes were stuffed into garbage bags next to his new girlfriend’s luxury car. I didn’t shed a tear. I simply called the private security firm that guarded the entire gated community—a firm owned by my father. As the security team began towing his girlfriend’s car and blacklisting his access cards to the estate, my husband ran out in a panic. I looked him dead in the eye and said, “You have five minutes to leave my property.”

Through the camera feeds, I watched four black Cadillac Escalades with heavily tinted windows and the subtle, grey Apex Guardian logo silently roll down the palm-lined street in a staggered, tactical formation. Trailing closely behind them was a heavy-duty, flatbed tow truck, its diesel engine a low, menacing growl against the manicured silence of the neighborhood.

In the Apex command center, miles away, I knew a technician’s fingers were flying across a mechanical keyboard.

On my tablet, the status of my home’s network blinked in real-time.

Target Profile: David Thorne.
Facial Recognition Database: Purged.
Biometric Access: Revoked.
Gate Transponder: Disabled.

Within seconds, the mansion’s sprawling smart-home system—which David proudly controlled from an app on his phone, treating it like his personal toy—was severed. I tapped a command on my screen.

Inside the house, the ambient house music abruptly cut off. The central air conditioning, humming quietly to keep the Los Angeles heat at bay, powered down with a dying mechanical sigh. The motorized sheer blinds in the master bedroom immediately rolled up, exposing the room to the glaring afternoon sun.

I zoomed in on the bedroom window camera. David frowned, lowering his champagne glass. He pulled his phone from his pocket, his thumb furiously tapping the screen, a look of mild irritation washing over his face.

Damn smart home glitches, he was undoubtedly muttering, attributing the collapse of his world to a faulty Wi-Fi router.

He walked over to the digital wall panel near the bedroom door, intent on manually overriding the climate control. I watched his finger press the glass.

I tapped the final command on my tablet.

The wall panel in the bedroom, and every other screen in the house, flickered violently. The gentle blue interface vanished, replaced by a glaring, pulsing crimson red. The built-in speakers of the house, usually reserved for smooth jazz, cracked to life with a synthesized, automated voice that echoed off the high ceilings.

“ACCESS DENIED. TRESPASSER DETECTED. PERIMETER BREACH IN 3… 2… 1…”

The countdown was immediately swallowed by the heavy, rhythmic thud of combat boots hitting the front porch.

The heavy mahogany front doors didn’t just open; they were mechanically overridden and swung inward with a violent, synchronized precision. Four men in full black tactical gear, Kevlar vests bearing the Apex insignia, stepped into the expansive, sunlit foyer. They moved with the silent, fluid lethality of ex-military contractors—which, of course, they were.

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