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The Mother's War

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 647    |    Released on: 25/06/2025

a guitar, his fingers always strumming, his foot always tapping, his voice humming a new tune. Even when he was just watching TV, there w

of industrial cleaner sharp in my nose. My phone buzzed in my back pocket. I pulled it out, my hands still damp, h

. "Things are incredible. We're making real art here. Ryan Scott, the Ryan Scott, t

f-the-art studio, nodding seriously at a mixing board or laughing with Ryan Scott, a guitar slung over his shoulder. It all

Mr. Henderson, walked past.

g to force a smile. "He's in

ays the guitar, right?

lways called. He'd call to ask about my day, to tell me a stupid joke, to play me a new riff over the phone

shaky clip, seemingly from someone's phone, of Caleb sitting on a stool, playing a new, haunting melody. He looked good, fo

vere and blistered. He saw the camera catch it and yanked his hand back instant

rm, seemed to stare at me. He had burns on his body when they brought him home from Afghanistan, old scar

deo call him. The call ra

Can't talk, Mom. In the zo

I typed back. Caleb, wh

h. Just a stupid accident with a

it, telling me the whole ridiculous story. This was a lie. I could feel it in my bones, a mother

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The Mother's War
The Mother's War
“My son, Caleb, lived for music. Every strum, every hum, filled our small Rust Belt home with joy. When legendary producer Anthony Lester swooped him off to Nashville, it felt like his dream was finally coming true. Then the music stopped. For two months, all I got were slick, pre-recorded messages and B-roll videos, until a shaky clip revealed a raw, red burn on his hand, and a terrified flicker in his eyes before he yanked it away. I flew to Nashville, only to be branded a crazy mother and turned away from the studio by a condescending assistant. Then, a new music video teaser dropped, supposedly showcasing "authentic art," but it was my son, Caleb, being brutally beaten on camera, his genuine terror dismissed as "method acting." The local sheriff, bought and paid for by the studio, merely smirked, telling me to take the "signing bonus" money and go home. How could this be happening? How could a mother watch her child being tortured and find every door slammed in her face, the world calling his torment "art"? Watching his gaunt face on a live stream, pumped full of drugs, unable to remember the name of his own childhood dog, I knew the system had failed him. But they forgot one thing: I wasn' t just a cleaning lady from a forgotten town. I was the widow of Sergeant David Johns, a Medal of Honor recipient, and the Army does not forget its own.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 9