The courtroom was silent—too silent for a place so full of people. The air was thick, the kind of heavy that settled in your chest and made it hard to breathe. Michael Carter sat shackled at the defense table, his heart pounding like a drum against his ribs. The polished wood of the bench, the cold glare of fluorescent lights, and the faces staring down from the jury box all blended into one overwhelming blur.
He had worn his uniform in this very courthouse dozens of times. Not today. Today, he wore prison-gray.
“Guilty,” the judge declared, his voice echoing across the walls like a gunshot. “On all counts.”
Michael didn’t move.
He couldn’t.
Fifteen years on the force. A spotless record. Commendations for bravery, dedication, selflessness. All of it gone in a single word. His world—his career, his reputation, his future—crumbled in the echo of that verdict.
But the pain didn’t hit him in the way he expected.
It wasn’t the humiliation. It wasn’t even the knowledge that he was being framed, that someone had twisted the truth with planted evidence. That someone had betrayed him.
The worst pain came from what waited in the back of the courtroom, behind the railing: Luke.
Luke, his K9 partner. His best friend. A loyal German Shepherd with more courage in one paw than most officers had in their whole bodies. Luke wasn’t just a dog. He was Michael’s partner in the field, in the fight. They had cleared buildings together. Found missing children. Chased down suspects in the pouring rain. They’d nearly died together—more than once.
Now, Michael was being taken away, and Luke didn’t understand why.
From his spot near the rear benches, Luke stared at Michael with a quiet intensity, ears perked, sensing something deeply wrong. He let out a soft whine. Michael didn’t dare look at him for too long. It would break him.