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She Was Just Doing Her Job Until She Found Something Illegal She wasn't a detective. She didn't carry a gun. She didn't go looking for trouble. Dana Reyes was a state evidence compliance auditor — a woman paid to count things, match numbers, and file reports. She drove down to a small Texas county on a Sunday afternoon, checked into a roadside motel, and showed up Monday morning with a legal pad and a laptop, ready to do what she always did. Then she picked up a box. And the numbers didn't match. What followed wasn't a Hollywood thriller. There were no car chases. No dramatic confrontations in dark alleys. Just a woman sitting very still inside a government evidence room, under a buzzing fluorescent light, understanding — with the quiet, flat certainty of someone who is very good at their job — that what she was holding in her hands was not a clerical error. This is the story of Dana Reyes, Sheriff Ray Colton, a small town in Bandera County, Texas, and the four hundred grams of methamphetamine that should have been on a shelf but wasn't. It is a story about institutional corruption that doesn't look like corruption from the outside. About a man who told himself a story about neutrality until a twenty-three-year-old nursing assistant named Adriana Molina was found dead in her car at the edge of a park in Uvalde County. About the slow, imperfect, deeply unsatisfying machinery of justice — and one woman who kept doing her job when it would have been much easier not to. No superheroes. No cartoon villains. Just people making decisions, and the weight of what those decisions cost. 🎧 Best experienced with headphones. Full narration runtime: approximately 58–62 minutes. ⚠️ CONTENT WARNING This story contains the following themes. Viewer and listener discretion is advised: — Drug trafficking and controlled substance references — Institutional corruption and abuse of law enforcement authority — Brief reference to a drug overdose death — Depiction of financial hardship and family breakdown — Federal criminal prosecution and incarceration — Psychological manipulation and coercion within a workplace setting This content is intended for mature audiences aged 18 and older. 📋 LEGAL DISCLAIMER This is a work of original dramatic fiction created for entertainment and narrative purposes only. It does not represent, depict, or reference any real investigation, any real law enforcement agency, any real legal proceeding, or any real individual. The law enforcement procedures, court processes, and agency descriptions referenced in this story are used fictionally and for narrative authenticity only. Nothing in this story constitutes legal advice, law enforcement guidance, or factual reporting of any real event. The creator of this content does not endorse, promote, or glorify any illegal activity depicted or referenced within the narrative. All criminal behavior depicted in this story is portrayed within a fictional dramatic framework for the purpose of storytelling only. Any use of real location names — including Bandera, Texas; San Antonio; Austin; and Uvalde — is used solely for geographic and atmospheric context within a fictional narrative. These references do not imply any real events occurred in these locations. PRODUCTION NOTE This story was written as a long-form literary crime drama in the tradition of works by James Ellroy, Scott Turow, and Dennis Lehane — grounded in procedural realism, human psychology, and the unglamorous reality of institutional corruption in American law enforcement. No portion of this story is intended as commentary on any specific department, administration, political figure, or ongoing legal matter. © All rights reserved. No portion of this script or narration may be reproduced, redistributed, or monetized without written permission from the original creator. TAGS FOR DISCOVERABILITY crime drama narration, long form crime story, American crime fiction, evidence room corruption, law enforcement corruption story, Texas crime drama, female protagonist crime story, realistic crime narration, literary crime drama, true crime style fiction, procedural crime story, crime audiobook style, short film narration, crime fiction 2024, best crime narration YouTube