A massive, dark, silent shadow rappelled down from the high, vaulted ceiling of the dining room. A heavy, tactical boot slammed violently into the back of O’Malley’s knees, shattering his kneecaps and sending him face-first onto the hard marble floor with a wet, sickening crunch.

The cold, steel barrel of a suppressed assault rifle pressed firmly against the side of O’Malley’s head before he could even scream.

“Federal Bureau of Investigation,” a cold, anonymous voice stated in the darkness, a simple, effective lie to sow maximum terror and confusion.

The front doors of the mansion, which had been locked and bolted, were not breached. They simply swung open silently, revealing four more massive figures in full, unbadged black tactical gear, their faces obscured by ballistic masks and night-vision goggles.

They moved with a terrifying, silent, choreographed precision that local law enforcement could never hope to match.

The guests were not harmed. They were simply herded, terrified and weeping, into a corner of the room by two of the operators, their cell phones and purses confiscated.

The other four operators zeroed in on their primary targets.

Four rifle barrels, each with a laser sight painting a small, dancing red dot, pointed directly at Richard’s chest. He froze, his hands shooting into the air.

He was kicked hard behind the knees, forcing him to collapse to the floor. His hands were yanked violently behind his back and bound tightly with heavy-duty, military-grade zip ties.

Eleanor shrieked in terror as a tall, slender female operative grabbed her by the hair, dragging her off her chair and pressing her face down onto the expensive, soft fabric of the sofa she prized so highly.

“Who are you people?!” Richard screamed, his voice cracking with a mixture of terror and wounded pride as his face was pressed into the remnants of his Thanksgiving feast. “Do you know who I am?! I am a millionaire! I will sue you! I will have all of your badges!”

The emergency backup lights in the mansion suddenly flickered on, casting a dim, eerie, red glow over the scene of chaos.

The now-splintered front doors swung open again.

Ghost—my former second-in-command, a man built like a mountain with a face scarred by a dozen forgotten conflicts—walked calmly into the room. He was holding a small, ruggedized military tablet.