Phase Three: Personal
With his organization in chaos, his finances frozen, and his protective shell of corrupt officials stripped away, Royce Clark did exactly what Shane and Marcus predicted—he focused his remaining resources on revenge against the person he blamed for all his troubles.
Shane Jones had humiliated his nephew, sparked the investigation that was destroying his empire, and generally made himself the perfect target for all of Royce’s rage and frustration. The fact that Shane had done this to protect his daughter was irrelevant to Royce—what mattered was sending a message that no one attacked the Viper organization and lived to celebrate.

The first attempt came three days after the federal raids. Two men—muscle hired from outside Royce’s usual crew—waited in Shane’s truck after his shift at Morrison Furniture. They intended to beat him severely enough to send him to the hospital and warn off anyone else who might consider crossing Royce.
What they hadn’t counted on was that Shane had been expecting exactly this kind of move. When he approached his truck and saw the slight shift in shadows that indicated someone inside, he was already in combat mode before he opened the door.
The fight was brutal but short. One attacker caught an elbow to the temple before he could fully exit the truck, dropping him unconscious. The second made it out but found himself facing someone whose skills far exceeded anything his street fighting experience had prepared him for. Shane’s joint locks, pressure point strikes, and devastating throws put the man on the ground in less than fifteen seconds.

By the time security arrived, Shane was sitting calmly in his truck while both attackers lay groaning in the parking lot. The police report would note that Shane had acted in self-defense against two armed men (Marcus had made sure both attackers were carrying weapons), and the whole incident only reinforced Shane’s legal position while demonstrating to Royce that direct attacks weren’t going to work.
The second attempt was more sophisticated. A pipe bomb was discovered beneath Shane’s truck before it could detonate, disarmed by the bomb squad after an anonymous tip—the same anonymous tip that led police to security camera footage showing Royce’s top lieutenant placing the device.
That arrest was the beginning of the end for what remained of the Viper organization. With their leadership facing federal charges, their finances frozen, their protection gone, and their primary enforcer in jail for attempted murder, the organization simply collapsed. Associates scattered or flipped to save themselves, and within two weeks, the Southside Vipers ceased to exist as a functional criminal enterprise.

But Royce himself remained at large, having posted bail and now facing trial on multiple federal charges. And despite everything that had happened, despite the destruction of his organization and the certainty of serious prison time, Royce remained focused on one thing: making Shane Jones pay for destroying his empire.
The final confrontation came on a Tuesday evening in late November, when Royce made one last desperate move to hurt the man he blamed for all his misfortunes. He came to Shane’s house with a gun, intent on killing Shane and sending a final message about what happened to people who crossed him.
What Royce didn’t know was that Shane had been waiting for exactly this moment, had prepared for it, had even hoped for it in a way. Because Royce coming to his house, armed and intent on violence, would finally provide the justification Shane needed to end the threat permanently and irrevocably.

The Final Confrontation
Shane was in his garage workshop when Royce kicked in the back door of his house. He heard the crash, heard Lisa scream upstairs, and felt the familiar calm of combat situations settle over him like an old coat—comfortable, familiar, deadly.
Royce came through the house shouting threats, waving a pistol, his judgment clouded by rage and the desperate knowledge that he’d lost everything and had nothing left to lose. When he burst into the garage, Shane was ready.
The next sixty seconds were documented by security cameras that Shane had installed throughout his property, footage that would later be reviewed by multiple law enforcement agencies and eventually become part of training materials on self-defense in home invasion scenarios.

Royce’s first shot missed because he was shaking with rage and Shane was already moving, diving behind his workbench while simultaneously grabbing a chisel from his tool rack. The second shot buried itself in wood while Shane closed the distance with movements so fast they were almost invisible on the security footage.
Shane’s disarm was textbook perfect—a wrist lock that forced Royce to drop the gun combined with a knee strike that broke ribs and drove the breath from his lungs. What followed was fifteen seconds of devastating strikes delivered with the precision of a combat instructor and the fury of a father whose family had been threatened.
By the time police arrived—called by neighbors who heard the gunshots—Royce Clark was on the ground, barely conscious, his weapon several feet away, and Shane standing over him with his hands raised and his story already prepared.
“He broke into my home armed with a gun,” Shane would tell the responding officers. “He fired at me twice. I defended myself and my family using only my hands and the training I received in the Marine Corps. I stopped when he was no longer a threat.”
The security footage corroborated every word. The ballistics report showed Royce’s gun had been fired twice. The trajectory of the bullets matched Shane’s account. Every aspect of the incident was textbook self-defense, and even the most aggressive prosecutor couldn’t make a case that Shane had done anything wrong.
Royce was charged with attempted murder, home invasion, and illegal possession of a firearm while out on bail. With his existing federal charges and this new state case, he was looking at the rest of his life in prison.
The threat was over. Completely. Irrevocably. Finally.
Aftermath
Six months after Royce’s final arrest, Shane sat on his back porch watching the sunset and holding his infant grandson—Marcy’s son, born healthy and happy into a world that was safe because his grandfather had been willing to fight for that safety.
Marcy had left Dustin permanently after the hospital incident, had gone through counseling, and had slowly rebuilt her life with the kind of strength Shane always knew she possessed. She’d met a good man—a accountant named Marcus who treated her with respect and kindness—and they’d built a life together that was everything a relationship should be.
The Southside Vipers were gone, disbanded, scattered, destroyed so thoroughly that even the name was just a memory. Royce was serving forty years federal time plus life on the state charges. Dustin had taken a plea deal for his assault of Marcy—ten years with a restraining order that would last the rest of his life.
Shane returned to his furniture making, his hands creating beauty again instead of destruction, his garage workshop once again a place of peace rather than the staging ground for war. But he kept his skills sharp just in case, kept his awareness high, kept his family protected with the vigilance that came from knowing how quickly peace could be shattered.
Sometimes at night he would think about those seventeen seconds at Titan’s Forge, or the sixty seconds in his garage when Royce had come to kill him. He would remember the violence, the efficiency, the way his training had saved his life and protected his family. And he wouldn’t feel guilty about any of it.
Because some threats can only be met with overwhelming force. Some enemies can only be stopped through absolute commitment. Some battles can’t be won through diplomacy or legal channels—they require warriors willing to step into darkness so their loved ones can stay in the light.
Shane Jones had been that warrior when his family needed him. He would be that warrior again if necessary. That was his promise to his daughter, to his grandson, to everyone he loved.
The price of that protection had been high—legally risky, morally complex, physically dangerous. But looking at his grandson’s face, feeling the weight of new life in his arms, knowing that this child would grow up safe because of choices Shane had made…
It was worth it. Every risk, every fight, every moment of danger.
It was worth it.
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