My name is Adrian Kyle Fairon. And this is my story.
---
The day I was born, my parents held me like I was a miracle — because to them, that's
exactly what I was. They had spent years believing they couldn't have children, so when I
came into this world, I wasn't just a baby to them. I was something beyond imagination.
But happiness like that never lasts forever. It never does.
My mother had always been fragile. Her body was fighting something long before I arrived,
and the birth was the final weight it couldn't carry. Three months after I was born, she was
gone.
---
Adrian. Five years old.
I grew up without ever really knowing her.
My father didn't become a bad person after losing her — I want to be clear about that. But
grief does things to people that they can't control. He withdrew. Became a man of work and
silence rather than words and presence. So I was raised mostly by nannies and
housekeepers and assistants, while my father poured everything he had left into the
company — the only thing he still knew how to hold onto.
---
Adrian. Fifteen years old.
As I got older, I started to force my way into his world.
Maybe it was loneliness. Maybe it was pride. But somewhere along the way, my father
noticed something in me — intelligence, creativity, a natural instinct for leadership. So he
started bringing me into the company. Teaching me. And I was a fast learner. I guess we
finally managed to start fixing the bond of a son and a father
By the time I was twenty-five, I knew the business inside and out. But, unfortunately the
unexpected happened. My dad died.
A sudden accident. No goodbye. No final conversation. Just — gone. The only thing I had
left of him were words he used to say to me, words that are marked in my mind:
Adrian, my son — I know that I wasn't the father you deserved, especially after losing your"
mother I couldn't handle looking at you again. But you still managed to get in my life again
".and be the son and the miracle that me and your mother dreamed about, thank you Adrian
After his death, something shifted in me. I became heartless. Colder. More ruthless. I took
over the company, and I ran it well — better than most people expected. For three years, we
were at our peak.
Then the stocks started falling.
---
Darwin, my father's longtime assistant — and mine by inheritance — pulled me aside one
afternoon. He sat across from me with the expression of a man delivering a eulogy.
Adrian, listen to me carefully. You've done remarkable work here, and I mean that. I wasn't"
just your father's assistant — I was his partner in building this place. Running this company
".alongside your family has been one of the greatest privileges of my life
He paused.
But everything has an end. The world moves fast now. The technology, the market, the"
people — everything evolves faster than we could keep up with. We should have
modernized years ago. There were opportunities to sign deals, to adapt, to grow with the
times. Some circumstances stopped us. And honestly — some of it was our own nature. We
".were too set in our ways
He stood up slowly.
I'm sorry, Adrian. It's time for me to go. I think it's time for both of us."I was able to stop"
him but I just couldn't because even though everyone told me that it's not my fault, I didn't
find anyone to blame but myself
That was the beginning of the end.
The company collapsed. The banks moved in. They took everything — the assets, the
building, the accounts, the house. Every last thing. In a matter of months, I went from
running a company to standing on a street corner with nothing but the clothes on my back
and a name that no longer meant anything.
I tried to find work. I really did. But I had spent my whole life at the top, and the bottom had
its own rules — ones I couldn't stomach. Every job ended the same way: me arguing with a
manager, walking out, burning the bridge behind me. Until one day there were no more
bridges left, and I was back on the streets.
Months passed.
And then I made a decision.
I decided that this world and its rules were not designed for people like me. How does a man
who once touched the sky fall this far, this fast — and find every door shut in his face? If the
system won't let me climb back up, then I'll take what I need by force.
Petty theft first. Then something more organized. Then more.
I noticed quickly that people struggling the way I had been were all running from their
problems through the same pathetic escape — drugs. I never touched them myself. I didn't
need that kind of crutch. But I understood the need, and I understood the market.
So I built one.
It started small — dangerous jobs, dangerous people, one deal at a time. Slowly, a
reputation grew around my name. Then a network. Then real money. One by one, the things
I'd lost started coming back to me.
---
Adrian. A large house, full of people. Music, laughter, the haze of smoke in the air. He
moves through it all like he owns it — because he does.
Yeah. That's what I became.
My pride was always too large to accept weakness, so I found a path that didn't require me
to beg. And for a while, it worked.
Until it didn't.
About a year in, during one routine deal, everything fell apart. The police closed in on my
crew and two other gangs at once. We were all arrested. All of us thrown into the same
cage.
---
Adrian. A courtroom. His expression unreadable as the judge speaks.
".Judge: "You are hereby sentenced to fifty years
Fifty years.
I sat in the barber's chair afterward, watching my hair fall to the floor in the prison's
fluorescent light, staring at my reflection in the mirror with nothing behind my eyes but cold,
quiet fury.
I had lost everything. Again. And this time I was caged with the worst of the worst, with no
way out and no illusions left.
I thought, in that moment, that maybe it really was over.
---
I was barely through my first meal — staring down at prison food that tasted like cardboard
soaked in regret — when a shadow fell over me.
A massive inmate. The kind of man who's made it his personal mission to remind everyone
else how small they are.
Craig: "Well, well. Look what we've got here. Looks like someone lost their precious little
hair. Why is a pretty girl like you here in a men's prison — did they make a mistake bringing
"?you here
He waited. I didn't look up.
".Craig: "Hey. I'm talking to you. Why aren't you answering? Look at me
I set down my spoon.
Adrian: "No mistake. They told me they were going to put me in a ward for people who
couldn't figure out what they were. I thought about it and realized — that's exactly where you
came from. What are you, Craig? Not quite a man. Not quite a woman. What do you think
"?you are — a dog? A bear
Craig smiled slowly. The wrong kind of smile.
".Craig: "Ha. Brave mouth on a fresh fish. Come here. Let me show you who the bear is
Before he could finish the sentence, I grabbed my spoon and drove it into his eye.
And in one moment the room exploded.
Chairs overturned. Trays flew. Men who hadn't moved in months suddenly had opinions
about the new arrival. Some of them threw themselves into the fight, some threw themselves
at me — I couldn't tell anymore who was protecting who.
The guards waded in with electric batons, but the chaos was already too big.
Guard: "We can't stop this — someone get the warden, tell him to bring the control
"!device
The warden moved quickly through the corridor toward the sound of screaming and breaking
things.
"?Warden: "What is going on in here
".Guard: "Craig and the new inmate, sir. They started it
Warden: "Of course they did. I expected Craig to pull something — but I didn't think the
".new kid would have the nerve to go at him on day one
He stepped through the door.
Tables flipped. Blood on the floor. Food everywhere. Men throwing punches and grabbing at
guards. One inmate had gotten hold of an electric baton and was using it on whoever was
closest.
The warden raised the control device and pressed the button.
Every inmate wore restraints on their wrists, ankles, and neck. In an instant, those restraints
crackled with electricity. One by one, bodies dropped. The room went silent except for the
hum of current and the sound of people hitting the floor.
When everyone else had fallen unconscious — the guards and the warden stood staring.
The new inmate, Adrian, was still standing.
Unconscious — but upright. Like his body had refused to go down even when his mind did.
---
When I came to, I was alone in a small room. Restraints active, hands cuffed to a chair. My
hands were on the table in front of me. The warden sat across from me.
Warden: "You started a riot on your first day. You stabbed a man in the eye with a
spoon. Do you want to spend the rest of your life in this prison? Because I don't care either
way — but my job is to break people like you. And you're not free anymore . You don't get to
".do whatever you want just because you'll be here for a long time
He nodded to the guards.
".Warden: "Solitary
They dragged me down the corridor and threw me into a concrete box. The door sealed
shut. The restraints deactivated, and I had full movement again.
I walked to the door and started hitting it.
Both fists. Full force. Over and over without stopping.
I hit it until my hands bled.
---
So there I was. Solitary confinement. Alone, weak, in pain from head to toe from the beating
in the cafeteria, blood running from both hands.
I stood in front of the small mirror on the wall and stared at myself for a long time.
Is this really how it ends? Is this where the story of the wonder boy finishes — bleeding in a
?box
No.
I refused.
From that day forward, I used every hour of solitary the only way that made sense. I trained.
Every morning, every night, with nothing but my body and the floor and the walls. I forced
myself to eat every meal they gave me — no matter how bad it tasted — because food was
the only fuel I had, and I wasn't going to waste it.
Months passed. When I finally came out of solitary, something had changed.
Word had spread about what I did to Craig on day one. In a place like prison, that kind of
story travels fast. I walked back into the general population and found that people moved
differently around me. Gave me space. Gave me respect.
I used it.
With actual equipment and other inmates to train with, I pushed harder. Three years went by.
By the time I was thirty, I was a different man — sharper, stronger, more disciplined than I
had ever been on the outside. In here, I wasn't a failed businessman or a convict. I was
someone people were careful around.
A leader. In a cage.
---
One day, a guard knocked on my cell.
".Guard: "Fairon. You have visitors
I almost laughed.
Visitors. I had no family. No friends. No one on the outside who owed me anything or cared
whether I lived or died in here. I had cut every tie the world ever gave me, and the world had
returned the favor.
"?Adrian: "Visitors? Who
".Guard: "People you don't know. But apparently, they know you
They led me to a meeting room. Four men in black suits and dark glasses. Three stayed by
the door. One sat down across from me.
"?Man: "Mr. Adrian. How are you
"?Adrian: " What do you want
".Man: "You don't know us yet. But we're here to give you an offer. A very valuable one
Adrian: "Valuable." I leaned back. "What offer could you possibly make that improves
".my life in here? Honestly, I've got a pretty good setup
".Man: "We're not here to improve your life in here
He paused.
".We're here to get you out"
The room shifted.
".Adrian: "That's impossible
".Man: "Actually — it isn't
He reached into a briefcase, pulled out a stack of documents, and slid them across the table.
".Man: "All you have to do is sign. And you walk out of here a free man
I picked up the papers. Read every line. Looked for the catch, the clause, the trap hiding
somewhere in the legal language.
There wasn't one.
I looked up at him.
"?Adrian: "Why are you doing this
Man: "We recognize talent, Mr. Adrian. Some people end up in places like this not
because they're beyond saving — but because no one gave them the right opportunity. We
".believe you deserve another chance to prove what you're capable of
I looked back down at the papers.
Then I signed every single one.
This is insane, I thought, as the pen moved across the page. Am I actually going to get
?out of here? Am I actually going to get a new start
For the first time in years, something that felt almost like hope settled in my chest.
It looks like I might finally get to change how this story ends.
---
