Chapter 1: The “Madman” at the End of the Street

Oakridge was a quiet town where rumors traveled faster than the morning sun. Among them, the story of Arthur Vance was always the most popular topic of conversation.

Arthur was a retired veteran—lean and weathered, but his back was as straight as a spear. Every morning at exactly 6:00 AM, regardless of the scorching heat or driving snow, he would don his faded, worn-out uniform and stand at attention before a derelict, abandoned house at the end of the street. Once a grand wartime villa, the house was now nothing more than moss-covered walls and rusted iron gates.

Arthur stood there, offering a sharp military salute for exactly thirty minutes. No wasted movement. No words. The neighbors called him the “Madman in Rank.” Children threw stones at the fence to taunt him, but Arthur never blinked. His eyes were locked onto the shattered windows of the ruin, as if he were guarding an invisible king.

Chapter 2: A Curious Intrusion

In December 2025, a group of local youths, led by a reckless young man named Kyle, decided to “expose” Arthur’s madness. They were convinced the old man was hiding gold or contraband inside the ruins.

On Christmas Eve, as heavy snow began to fall, Kyle and two friends slipped into the house through the back door. Inside was a wreckage of time: thick dust, spiderwebs, and the pungent scent of rotting wood. They used shovels and metal detectors, scouring the rooms, but found nothing but peeling wallpaper.

“Dammit, maybe he really is just crazy,” Kyle cursed, kicking a loose floor tile in the center of the great hall.

The sound that followed wasn’t the dull thud of solid earth, but a hollow, metallic “clang.” The group froze. They pried the tile up, revealing a hatch of matte-black steel engraved with the emblem of Squad 7—a legendary unit that had vanished during a classified mission decades ago.

Chapter 3: A Treasure Without Gold

As the hatch creaked open, a strange scent wafted out—not of mold, but of gun oil and sandalwood. Below was a small cellar, astonishingly clean.

In the center of the room sat a large oak chest. Kyle opened the lid with trembling hands, hoping for the glint of gold bars. But there was none. Instead, they found:

Twelve military dog tags arranged in a perfect circle.

Stacks of unsent handwritten letters, tied with olive-drab paracord.

An old film camera containing an undeveloped roll.

And most notably, a detailed map of a covert operation, stained with dried, dark-brown blood.

Suddenly, a shadow appeared at the cellar entrance. Arthur Vance stood there, the handgun in his grip as steady as a rock. Under the flashlight’s beam, his face looked colder and more formidable than ever.

Chapter 4: The Oath of Squad 7

“You’ve just touched something that twelve men bled to protect,” Arthur’s voice was low and commanding.

He didn’t call the police. Instead, he made them sit and began to speak. In 1995, Squad 7 was tasked with protecting a “Black List” containing the names of traitors within the government—men who had sold out their comrades to the enemy. Surrounded in this very house (then a secret safehouse), the squad took an oath: “The last survivor shall be the keeper of the truth until the day justice is served.”

Arthur’s entire squad had fallen that night to buy him time to bury the chest before reinforcements arrived. For thirty years, Arthur hadn’t been crazy. His daily salute was a report to the fallen: “The mission continues. The treasure is safe.”

The abandoned house was, in reality, a spiritual bunker where Arthur spent his life watching over the shadows of the traitors—men who were still hunting for any trace of that chest.

Chapter 5: Final Justice

The next morning, Oakridge was rocked by a scandal. Not because Arthur was arrested, but because a trove of classified documents had been delivered directly to the International Court. The most powerful names in the country began to fall.

Arthur Vance no longer stood to salute the abandoned house. The ruins were cleared to build a memorial for Squad 7. On the day of its dedication, Arthur appeared in his finest uniform, a rare smile touching his lips. He placed eleven white roses on the monument—and one final blossom for his own silent, lifelong vigil.

As it turned out, the greatest treasure wasn’t gold; it was Honor. And the town’s “madman” was the only one truly sane—the man who kept his oath when the rest of the world had forgotten.