Tuesday, November 25, 2025

The Dallas Front Company

 


"Chapter 1: Morning in the Frat House

The door to the frat house slammed open at 5:30 AM sharp.

"UP! UP! UP! Let's go, let's go, let's go!"

Pops Benson stormed in like a drill sergeant, cigar already clenched between his teeth, brandy mug in one hand. At seventy-six, the old man moved like he still had jungle mud on his boots and Charlie on his six.

"Jesus Christ, Pops!" Jake groaned from the top bunk, throwing an arm over his eyes.

"Don't Jesus Christ me, boy. Sun's up, you're up. That's the rule." Pops grabbed the edge of Jake's blanket and yanked it clean off. "Move your ass!"

Billy was already stirring on the bottom bunk, but not fast enough. Pops slapped the metal bed frame with his palm—CLANG. "That means you too, little brother. Let's go!"

Across the room, Celeb sat up on the bottom bunk, disoriented. "What the—"

"Beaumont! You think Louisiana runs on Benson time? Get vertical!"

From the top bunk above Celeb, Jr groaned and swung his legs over the side. "I'm up, Pops. I'm up."

"Good boy."

On the mattress wedged between the two bunks, a slow drawl emerged from under a pillow. "Is he always like this?"

"Every damn morning, Louisiana!" Pops barked, grinning down at Colton. "And you love it, don't you boy?"

Colton—seventeen years old, Baton Rouge born and raised, Celeb's cousin—poked his head out, squinting. "Yes, sir, Pops."

"Damn right you do. Now move!"

Jake dropped down from the top bunk, landing barefoot with a thud. "You're insane, old man."

"Damn right I am. And you love it." Pops grinned, teeth flashing around the cigar. "Now get dressed and get downstairs before your mama throws out the bacon."

The five of them stumbled into jeans and boots, muttering curses under their breath—half of them picked up straight from Pops himself. Colton was still rubbing his eyes, his Louisiana drawl thicker in the morning. By the time they hit the stairs, the old man was already halfway down, barking orders at someone else.


Downstairs was controlled chaos.

Sarah Benson had three pans going on the stove—eggs, bacon, and hash browns—while Tom poured coffee and dodged his wife's spatula every time he tried to steal a piece of bacon. Ray was at the table with his laptop open, already running numbers. Josh stood near the counter with his clipboard, mentally organizing the day.

Rebecca was pouring orange juice for her son. "Jr, you eat before you go out. I don't care what Pops says about—"

"Rebecca, the boy's fine!" Pops hollered from his spot at the head of the table, refilling his brandy-laced coffee. "He's got Benson blood. He doesn't need coddling."

"He's sixteen, not bulletproof."

"Same thing on this ranch."

Billy and Jake slid into their chairs, already loading up plates. Celeb sat down next to them, still half-asleep. Colton grabbed a seat, yawning wide. Jr grabbed a biscuit and stuffed half of it in his mouth.

"Chew, don't inhale," Sarah said without looking up.

Tom grinned. "He gets that from you, Ma."

"Watch it, Thomas."

Pops leaned back in his chair, cigar smoke curling toward the ceiling, surveying his kingdom. "Alright, Josh. What's the word?"

Josh glanced at his clipboard. "Billy, Jake—north pasture. Fence line check and move the herd closer to the creek. Celeb, you're with Ray on the south side. Jr, Colton—you and your crew are on drone patrol. Wade wants eyes on the perimeter after last week."

"Copy that," Jr said through a mouthful of biscuit.

Colton nodded, his drawl kicking in. "We got it, sir."

Billy and Jake exchanged a look—one of those wordless twin moments. North pasture. Just the two of them. Long day in the sun.

"Radios, sidearms, water," Josh added. "And I mean it—radios on."

"Yes, sir," Billy said.

Jake grabbed another piece of bacon. "We'll be fine."

Pops raised his mug. "And don't do anything stupid."

Jake grinned. "No promises, Pops."

The table erupted—laughter, overlapping conversations, someone cursing when they spilled coffee. It was loud. It was messy. It was home.

Sarah turned from the stove, shaking her head with a smile. "Y'all are gonna wake the dead."

"Good," Pops said. "Dead don't work hard enough anyway."

Billy laughed, standing up to clear his plate. Jake clapped him on the shoulder as they headed for the door.

It was a good morning. A normal morning.

It wouldn't stay that way for long.

Chapter 2: The Abduction

The north pasture stretched out under the Texas sun like a promise—endless sky, rolling grassland, the kind of quiet that made you feel like the only two people on earth.

Billy and Jake had been at it for three hours. Fence line was solid. Herd was moving easy toward the creek. They'd stopped to drink water, leaning against the truck bed, boots dusty, shirts soaked through with sweat.

"Think Pops'll let us knock off early?" Jake asked, wiping his forehead with his forearm.

Billy grinned. "You asking the man who thinks sleep is for the dead?"

"Fair point."

That's when Billy saw it—dust cloud rising in the distance, coming fast.

"Someone's moving," he said, straightening up.

Jake turned, squinting. "That's not one of ours."

The truck came into view—black, unmarked, no plates visible from this distance. It wasn't slowing down.

Billy's hand went to his radio. "Something's off."

Before he could key it, the truck skidded to a stop twenty yards out. Doors flew open. Four men—tactical gear, balaclavas, rifles up.

"HANDS! HANDS UP! NOW!"

Billy's heart slammed into his throat. Jake's hand was already reaching for his sidearm.

"DON'T!" one of them shouted. "Touch that gun and you're dead!"

Billy's mind raced—no time to call it in, no time to run. The men were already closing in, weapons trained.

"Hands behind your head! On your knees! NOW!"

Jake's jaw clenched. "Billy—"

"Do it," Billy said quietly. His voice was steady, but his pulse was hammering. "Just do it."

They dropped to their knees, hands laced behind their heads. The dirt was hot under Billy's knees. The sun beat down. Everything felt surreal—like watching it happen to someone else.

Two of the men moved in fast. Rough hands patted them down—sidearms ripped from holsters, radios yanked off belts, phones pulled from pockets. Billy's hat hit the ground. Then Jake's.

"Strip," one of them said. "Shirts off. Now."

Billy hesitated. Jake's jaw was set, defiant.

The man raised his rifle. "Now."

Billy pulled off his shirt, his hands shaking slightly. The sun blazed down on his bare shoulders, his muscular chest already glistening with sweat. Jake did the same, his six-pack abs tensing as he moved. They stood there shirtless, boots still on, vulnerable.

"In the truck. Back. Lay down."

One of them grabbed Billy by the shoulder and shoved him toward the truck bed. Billy climbed in, the metal scorching hot. Jake was pushed in behind him.

"On your backs. Hands behind your heads. Don't move, don't talk, don't even breathe loud."

Billy lay down on the burning truck bed, the metal searing against his bare back. He laced his hands behind his head, elbows out. The sun beat down mercilessly on his exposed chest and torso. Sweat was already forming, trickling down his ribs.

Jake lay down beside him, same position—hands behind his head, biceps flexed, chest rising and falling with controlled breaths. Their shoulders were almost touching.

One of the men leaned over the truck bed, rifle pointed down at them. "You move, you die. Understood?"

"Yeah," Billy said quietly.

"Good boys."

The truck lurched forward.

Billy stared up at the endless blue sky, the sun directly overhead, blinding. The heat was unbearable—the metal beneath him felt like it was cooking his back, and the sun was roasting his front. Sweat poured off him, soaking into his jeans, dampening his boots.

He could hear Jake breathing beside him—steady, controlled, but fast.

"You okay?" Billy whispered, barely moving his lips.

"Yeah. You?"

"Yeah."

The truck bounced over rough terrain. Every jolt sent Billy's body sliding slightly on the sweat-slicked metal. His arms were already aching from holding them behind his head. His shoulders burned. His back was on fire.

But worse than the pain was the fear.

Why us?

The drive felt endless. The sun didn't let up. Billy's vision swam with heat exhaustion. His mouth was dry. His chest heaved with each breath, sweat rolling down his abs, pooling at his waistband.

Jake's breathing was getting heavier too. Billy could see him out of the corner of his eye—jaw clenched, muscles taut, glistening with sweat.

"Jake," Billy whispered.

"I know."

They both knew. This wasn't random. This was planned.

The truck slowed. Turned. Stopped.

Billy's heart hammered. His arms were shaking from holding the position.

"Up. Out. Now."

Rough hands grabbed them, hauled them out of the truck bed. Billy's legs nearly buckled—his boots hit gravel, and he stumbled. Jake caught himself against the truck.

Billy blinked, trying to adjust to the sudden shade. They were at a barn—old, weathered, isolated.

"Inside. Move."

They were shoved forward, shirtless and sweating, hands still behind their heads. The barn door creaked open. Dim light. Dust in the air.

And then Billy saw it.

Ropes. A pulley system rigged to the rafters. Cameras on tripods. A laptop set up on a crate.

His blood went cold.

"Jake—"

"I see it."

One of the men stepped forward. "Center of the room. Back to back. Hands stay behind your heads until I say otherwise."

Billy moved to the center, his boots quiet on the dirt floor. Jake backed up against him—their shoulders touching, their bare backs pressed together.

Billy could feel Jake's heartbeat. Could feel the sweat still dripping down both their spines.

"Hands down. Behind your backs."

Billy lowered his arms slowly. His shoulders screamed in relief—then in terror as his wrists were grabbed and yanked together behind him.

Rope. Thick, coarse. Wrapping around his wrists. Tight.

Jake grunted as they did the same to him.

And then the real work began.

More rope. Around their forearms, lashing them together. Around their elbows—Billy gasped as his arms were forced closer, biceps looped and cinched tight, pulled two inches apart. His shoulders felt like they were dislocating.

"Jesus—" Jake hissed through his teeth.

"Breathe," Billy whispered. "Just breathe."

More rope around their torsos now—chest to chest, their sweaty bodies bound together. Rope after rope, coiling around their muscular frames, lashing them into one unit. Billy could feel every breath Jake took, every twitch of muscle, every tremor.

His shoulders were on fire. The ropes bit into his biceps, pulling his arms back at an unnatural angle. Sweat poured down his chest, his abs, soaking into the ropes.

And then he felt it—rope around his neck.

A noose.

It looped around him, then around Jake. One noose for both of them.

"Stand up straight," the man said calmly. "Your legs give out, you both choke. Simple as that."

Billy's legs were already shaking. His boots were planted on the dirt floor. Jake's breath was ragged behind him.

One of the men stepped forward with a roll of duct tape. "Open your mouth."

Billy's stomach dropped. "What—"

The tape was ripped from the roll—a sharp, tearing sound. Before Billy could finish his sentence, a strip was slapped across his mouth, then another, wrapped around his head. He tried to speak but only muffled sounds came out.

Jake struggled. "Don't you—"

They did the same to him. Tape across his mouth, wrapped tight around his head, gagging him.

"Can't have you boys yelling for help," the man said.

Then came the tape over Billy's eyes. One strip, then another, then another—wrapped around his head, sealing him in darkness. He couldn't see. Couldn't speak. Could barely breathe through his nose.

He heard the same happening to Jake—the rip of tape, the muffled protest, then silence.

Billy stood in complete darkness now, bound and gagged and blind, his body pressed against Jake's, the noose slack but present around both their necks. His boots planted firm on the ground. His heart hammering.

He tried to say Jake's name but it came out as nothing—just a muffled sound behind the tape.

He felt Jake shift behind him—felt him try to speak too. Nothing.

"Comfortable?" one of the men asked, mocking.

Silence. Just the sound of their breathing—fast, panicked, through their noses.

"Good. Get used to it. You're gonna be here a while."

Footsteps. The sound of a door closing.

Billy stood in the dark, bound and gagged and blind, alone with Jake in the silence.

All he could do was stand.

And breathe.

And wait.

Chapter 3: Discovery

Pops was halfway through his second cigar when he checked his watch. 11:47 AM.

"They should've checked in by now," he said, more to himself than to Wade Nelson, who was standing next to him at the fence line on the east side of the property.

Wade—Kings County Sheriff, Virginia vet, and Pops' closest friend for forty years—glanced at his own watch. "Give 'em till noon. Billy's good about check-ins."

"Billy is. Jake gets distracted."

Wade grinned. "Apple doesn't fall far."

"Watch it, Nelson."

They went back to discussing fence repairs, but Pops kept glancing at his watch. Noon came and went. 12:15. 12:30.

"That's it," Pops said, pulling out his radio. "Billy, Jake, you copy?"

Static.

"Billy, this is Pops. Check in."

More static.

Wade straightened, his cop instincts kicking in. "Try Josh."

Pops keyed the radio. "Josh, you heard from the boys?"

Josh's voice crackled back immediately. "Negative. They were supposed to check in at noon. I was about to call you."

"We're heading to the north pasture," Pops said. "You stay on comms."

"Copy that."

Pops and Wade climbed into Wade's truck, and Wade gunned it. The drive to the north pasture took twenty minutes at normal speed. Wade made it in twelve.

They came over the rise and saw it immediately—Billy and Jake's truck, sitting alone in the middle of the pasture. Doors open. No one around.

"Jesus," Wade muttered.

Pops was out of the truck before it fully stopped, moving fast for a seventy-six-year-old man. Wade was right behind him, hand already on his sidearm.

The scene told the story before they said a word.

Two hats on the ground. Billy's and Jake's.

Two radios, lying in the dirt.

Two sidearms—still holstered—sitting near the truck.

And boot prints. Lots of them. Not theirs.

Pops stood there, staring at the gear, his jaw working. His hands were shaking—not from age, but from rage.

"Wade," he said quietly.

Wade was already on his phone, dialing. "I see it."

"They were taken."

"I know."

"They were taken, Wade."

Wade held up a hand, phone to his ear. "Dispatch, this is Sheriff Nelson. I need units to the Benson Ranch, north pasture, immediately. Possible abduction, two missing persons, ages twenty-one and twenty-two—" He rattled off descriptions while Pops paced, fists clenched, cigar clamped between his teeth so hard it was about to snap.

Pops pulled out his radio. "Josh. You there?"

"Go ahead, Pops."

"Tell Jr to hit the button."

There was a pause. Josh knew exactly what that meant. "Copy. Hitting it now."

Within seconds, the emergency protocol activated. Every radio, every phone, every system in the consortium lit up with the automated alert:

"911 BILLY JR. 911 BILLY JR. 911 BILLY JR."

Then the radios exploded.

"—what's happening—"

"—Jr, what's your status—"

"Benson Ranch, this is Renzo, we copy, what's the emergency—"

"—on our way—"

"Wade, you there? Wade—"

"—someone talk to me—"

"CLEAR THE NET!" Jr's voice cut through, sharp and commanding. The chatter stopped. "All families, emergency at Benson Ranch. Billy and Jake missing, possible abduction. Converge on main house immediately. Repeat—converge on main house. Over."

Silence for half a second. Then:

"Beaumont family rolling now."

"Nelson family en route."

"Renzo, copy, five minutes out."

"Mattern, on our way."

"Rodriguez, moving."

The consortium was mobilizing. Six families. Husbands, wives, and the wiz kids. All of them dropping everything and heading to the Benson Ranch.

Pops stared at the hats on the ground—Billy's and Jake's, sitting side by side in the dirt like grave markers.

Wade walked up beside him, hand on his shoulder. "We'll find them."

"I know we will." Pops' voice was low, dangerous. "And God help the sons of bitches who took my boys."

Wade nodded. "Amen to that."

They loaded the gear into the truck—evidence now—and headed back to the main house. The consortium was mobilizing.

And somewhere out there, Billy and Jake were standing in the dark, waiting.

Chapter 4: The Livestream

The Benson Ranch main house had never felt so crowded or so quiet at the same time.

Trucks kept pulling up—Beaumonts, Renzos, Matterns, Rodriguezes. Husbands and wives filed in, faces grim. The wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, Daniel Rodriguez—came through the door right behind their parents, all of them heading straight for the command center upstairs where Jr and Colton were already setting up.

Sarah stood by the kitchen counter, hands gripping the edge, knuckles white. Rebecca sat at the table, one hand over her mouth. Tom paced near the window. Ray and Josh were at the dining table with maps spread out, already trying to think tactically.

Celeb stood near the stairs, arms crossed, jaw clenched. He'd been in the south pasture with Ray when the 911 alert came through. Now he was back, helpless, waiting.

Pops stood near the fireplace, cigar between his teeth, brandy mug in hand, saying nothing. Just staring at the hats—Billy's and Jake's—sitting on the mantle where Wade had placed them.

Wade was on his phone with dispatch, coordinating deputies, keeping his voice level and professional. But his jaw was tight.

The front door opened again. Robert and Caroline Beaumont walked in.

"What happened?" Robert asked.

"They were taken," Pops said quietly. "North pasture. Two hours ago."

Caroline's hand went to her chest. Celeb turned away, fists clenched tighter.

Upstairs, Jr had the command center lit up. Four monitors, satellite phones, drones already prepped on the table. The wiz kids were moving fast—pulling up files, checking systems, running through protocols they'd drilled a hundred times but never thought they'd actually use.

"Jr, we got the surveillance footage from the north pasture perimeter?" Ryan asked, fingers already flying over a keyboard.

"Pulling it now," Jr said, his voice tight but focused.

The footage loaded. Grainy, but clear enough. The black truck. Four men. Billy and Jake on their knees, hands behind their heads. The men stripping them of gear. Forcing them to remove their shirts. Loading them into the truck bed.

"Jesus," Daniel muttered.

"Can you get a plate?" Jr asked.

"Negative. No plates. But I'm running the make and model."

Colton stood near the door, arms crossed, his Louisiana drawl thick with tension. "We gonna find 'em, right?"

Jr looked at him. "Yeah. We are."

Downstairs, Pops checked his watch. 1:47 PM. Almost two hours since the last contact.

And then Tom's laptop on the dining table chimed.

Everyone froze.

Tom looked at the screen, his face going pale. "We've got an incoming email. Unknown sender."

Wade was beside him in two steps. "Don't open it yet. Could be malware."

"It's a video link," Tom said.

Pops set down his mug. "Open it."

Wade nodded. Tom clicked.

The screen went black for a second. Then it loaded.

The room went silent.

On the screen: Billy and Jake. Shirtless, bound chest to chest, ropes coiled around their torsos and arms, their muscular frames pressed together and lashed tight. A noose looped around both their necks. Duct tape wrapped around their mouths and eyes. Standing in a dirt-floored barn, boots planted, barely moving.

Sarah's hand flew to her mouth. Rebecca choked back a sob. Celeb turned away, fists clenched harder, his knuckles white.

Pops stared at the screen, his jaw working, his hands shaking.

"They're alive," Wade said quietly. "That's what matters. They're alive."

The camera angle shifted—three cameras. One focused on their bound arms behind their backs. One on their taped faces pressed close together. One pulled back, showing the full setup—the noose, the pulley system, the way their sweaty bodies were bound together.

"This is a message," Wade said. "They want us to see this."

And then, as if on cue, a FedEx truck pulled up outside.

Tom looked out the window. "FedEx."

"What the hell?" Josh said.

Wade was already moving toward the door. He stepped outside, met the driver—a kid, maybe twenty-five, clueless, just doing his route.

"Package for Benson Ranch," the driver said, holding out an envelope.

Wade took it, signed for it. The driver left.

Wade walked back inside, turning the envelope over in his hands. Plain. No return address. Heavy paper stock.

He opened it.

Inside: documents. Legal papers. A deed transfer. Signatures required from all six consortium families.

And a note, printed in plain black text:

Sign and return within 24 hours, or they die. You have one day. We'll be in touch.

Pops read it over Wade's shoulder. His hands were shaking. His voice was low, deadly calm.

"Get everyone in here. Now."

Chapter 5: The Hunt Begins

Upstairs in the command center, Jr stood at the main monitor, his jaw tight, his hands steady on the keyboard. The other wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, Daniel Rodriguez—were at their stations, fingers flying over keys, eyes locked on screens.

Colton stood near the door, watching, feeling useless. His drawl was thicker when he was stressed. "What can I do?"

"Monitor the drone feeds," Jr said without looking up. "We've got four in the air. Any movement, you call it."

"Yes, sir."

On the main screen, the surveillance footage from the abduction played on loop. Jr paused it, zoomed in on the truck.

"Black Chevy Silverado, 2018 or '19," Billy Renzo said. "No plates, but look at the front bumper—there's a dent on the driver's side."

"Good catch," Jr said. "Ryan, can you run that through traffic cams in a fifty-mile radius?"

"Already on it," Ryan said. "Pulling footage from Kings County, checking highways and back roads."

Daniel looked up from his screen. "I've got the metadata from the livestream email. It's bouncing through multiple proxies, but I'm tracing it."

"How long?" Jr asked.

"Give me twenty minutes."

Jr nodded. "We don't have twenty minutes. Do it in ten."

Daniel grinned despite the tension. "Yes, sir."


Downstairs, the mood was darker.

Pops sat at the head of the dining table, the documents spread out in front of him. Wade stood beside him, reading over his shoulder. The other consortium families—Beaumonts, Renzos, Matterns, Rodriguezes—crowded around, reading the ultimatum.

"They want us to sign over the land," Robert Beaumont said, his voice tight. "All of it. To some shell company called Lone Star Development LLC."

"Never heard of them," Ray said.

"That's the point," Wade said. "It's a front. Someone's hiding behind it."

"Who?" Tom asked.

"That's what we need to find out," Wade said. "But right now, we've got twenty-four hours to decide if we're signing."

Pops slammed his fist on the table. "We're not signing a goddamn thing."

"Pops—" Josh started.

"I said we're not signing!" Pops' voice was a roar. The room went silent. "You think I'm gonna let these sons of bitches take my land and my boys? Over my dead body."

Sarah's voice was quiet but firm. "Then what do we do?"

Pops looked at Wade. "We find them. And we bring them home."

Wade nodded. "Agreed. But we need time. And we need information."

Rebecca spoke up, her voice shaking. "What if they hurt them? What if they—"

"They won't," Wade said, his voice calm, authoritative. "Not yet. They need leverage. As long as we have that ultimatum, Billy and Jake are alive."

Celeb was leaning against the wall, arms crossed, his face pale. "How long can they stand like that?"

Everyone turned to look at him.

"I'm serious," Celeb said. "How long can they stay standing with their arms tied like that? With a noose around their necks?"

Wade's jaw tightened. "Hours. Maybe longer if they're strong. And they are."

"But not forever," Celeb said quietly.

No one answered.


Upstairs, Ryan's monitor chimed.

"Got it!" he said. "Traffic cam picked up the truck heading east on Route 87, two hours ago. It turned off onto Old Mill Road."

Jr was at his side in a second. "Where does that lead?"

"Middle of nowhere," Ryan said, pulling up a map. "Old ranch properties, abandoned barns, nothing out there for miles."

"Perfect place to hide someone," Billy Renzo muttered.

"Deploy drones to that area," Jr said. "Thermal imaging. We're looking for body heat, vehicles, anything."

Colton was already moving, pulling up the drone controls. "On it."

Daniel looked up from his screen. "I've got a partial trace on the email. It's routing through Dallas, but the original source is local. Within fifty miles."

Jr's eyes narrowed. "They're close."

"Yeah," Daniel said. "They are."

Jr pulled out his radio. "Pops, Wade, you copy?"

"Go ahead, Jr," Wade's voice came back.

"We've got a lead. Truck headed east on Route 87, turned onto Old Mill Road. Drones are en route. We're narrowing it down."

There was a pause. Then Pops' voice, gravelly and hard: "Good work, son. Keep going."

Jr looked at the other wiz kids. "Let's find them."


On the main screen, the livestream was still running. Billy and Jake stood in the barn, bound and gagged and blind, their chests pressed together, the noose around their necks. Their bodies were tense, muscles trembling from the strain. Sweat glistened on their skin.

Jr stared at the screen, his fists clenched.

"We're coming," he whispered. "Just hold on."

Chapter 6: Standing

Time lost meaning in the darkness.

Billy didn't know if it had been minutes or hours since the men left. All he knew was pain.

His shoulders were screaming. The ropes around his biceps pulled his arms back at an angle that felt like his joints were tearing apart. Every breath sent fire through his chest where the ropes bit into his skin. His legs were shaking—not just from fear anymore, but from exhaustion.

He could feel Jake's chest rising and falling against his own, fast and shallow. Could feel the sweat between them, slick and hot. Could feel the tremor in Jake's body that matched his own.

Billy tried to shift his weight slightly—just to ease the pressure on his left leg—but the movement made the noose tighten. He froze. Felt Jake freeze too.

Don't move. Just don't move.

He tried to take a slow breath through his nose, but the duct tape was making it hard. His mouth was dry. His tongue felt thick. Every inhale was a conscious effort.

Behind the tape over his eyes, tears were forming—not from crying, but from the strain, the heat, the exhaustion. He blinked them away, but they had nowhere to go, just pooling against the tape.

He wanted to say something. Wanted to tell Jake he was okay, that they'd get through this, that help was coming. But all he could do was make muffled sounds behind the gag.

He felt Jake's heartbeat against his chest—fast, hard, steady. It was the only thing keeping him grounded. The only thing reminding him he wasn't alone.

We're in this together. Just keep standing.


Jake's legs were on fire.

Every muscle from his calves to his thighs was cramping, trembling, threatening to give out. He'd been standing for—how long now? Two hours? Three? He didn't know. Couldn't tell.

His shoulders were worse. The ropes around his elbows and biceps were cutting into him, pulling his arms back so far he thought his shoulders would dislocate. He'd felt this kind of pain before—dislocated his shoulder once in high school during a rodeo—but this was different. This was sustained. Relentless.

He could feel Billy's chest pressed against his, could feel every breath Billy took, every twitch of muscle. They were one unit now. If one of them fell, they both choked.

Don't fall. Don't you dare fall.

Jake tried to focus on something—anything—other than the pain. He thought about the ranch. Thought about Pops yelling at them to get up in the morning. Thought about breakfast with the family. Thought about Billy laughing at something stupid he'd said.

Billy.

Jake could feel Billy's breathing change—getting faster, more panicked. He tried to steady his own breathing, tried to slow it down. Maybe Billy would feel it. Maybe it would help.

We're gonna make it. We have to.


The barn was silent except for their breathing.

Billy's mind was starting to drift. The pain was so constant now that it was almost becoming background noise—almost. He could feel his body shutting down, conserving energy, trying to keep him upright.

His legs buckled slightly.

The noose tightened.

Billy gasped—a muffled, panicked sound behind the tape—and forced his legs straight again. His boots scrambled on the dirt floor for purchase. Jake grunted, his body tensing, compensating for the shift in weight.

No no no no—

Billy's heart was pounding. He could feel Jake's heart pounding too, pressed against his chest, matching his own frantic rhythm.

They stood there, frozen, the noose slack again but present.

Billy's legs were shaking harder now. He didn't know how much longer he could do this.

Behind the tape, he closed his eyes—not that it mattered in the darkness—and focused on breathing. In through his nose. Out through his nose. Slow. Steady.

He felt Jake's breathing slow too. Felt Jake's chest expand and contract against his own in a deliberate rhythm.

I'm here. Stay with me.


Time passed. How much, Billy didn't know.

His body was beyond exhausted. Every muscle was screaming. His shoulders felt like they were being ripped apart. His legs were trembling so hard he didn't know how he was still standing.

But he was.

They both were.

And then—footsteps.

Billy's heart jumped. He felt Jake tense against him.

The barn door creaked open. Light—Billy could see it even through the tape, a faint glow at the edges.

Heavy footsteps on the dirt floor. Multiple people.

"Well, well," a voice said. "You boys are tougher than I thought."

Billy tried to speak, but it came out as nothing behind the tape.

"Let's see how tough you really are."

Billy heard a mechanical sound—a ratcheting, like a pulley being turned.

And then the noose around both their necks started to tighten.

Slowly.

Lifting them.

Billy's boots lifted off the ground—just an inch, then two. The rope bit into his throat. He couldn't breathe. Couldn't—

Jake was choking beside him, their bodies jerking, trying to find footing that wasn't there.

No no no—

Ten seconds. Maybe less. It felt like forever.

And then they were dropped back down. Their boots hit the dirt floor hard. Billy gasped for air through his nose, his throat burning, his vision swimming even in the darkness.

Jake was gasping too, their chests heaving against each other.

"That's just a taste," the voice said. "You've got twenty-three hours left. Better hope your family signs those papers."

Footsteps. The door closing.

Silence again.

Billy stood there, trembling, his throat raw, his body shaking.

He felt Jake's heartbeat against his chest—still there, still strong.

And he held on to that.

Chapter 7: Mobilization

The scream came from Sarah.

Everyone in the dining room had been watching the laptop screen—the livestream still running, Billy and Jake standing in the barn, bound and silent. And then the pulley system activated.

The noose tightened. The boys were lifted—boots off the ground, bodies jerking, choking.

Sarah's hands flew to her mouth, but the scream escaped anyway. Rebecca was crying, her hands shaking. Caroline Beaumont turned away, unable to watch.

Ten seconds. It felt like an eternity.

And then they were dropped. Their boots hit the ground hard. Their chests heaved, gasping for air through their noses.

Pops stood frozen, staring at the screen. His cigar had gone out. His hands were trembling—not shaking, trembling—with pure, unfiltered rage.

"That's it," he said quietly.

Wade looked at him. "Pops—"

"I said that's it." Pops turned, his voice rising. "We're not waiting twenty-four hours. We're not signing a goddamn thing. We're going in."

"We don't have a location yet," Wade said, trying to stay calm.

Pops grabbed his radio. "Jr. Tell me you got something."

There was a pause. Then Jr's voice came through, tight but steady. "We got it, Pops. Abandoned barn, Old Mill Road, twelve miles east. Drone just confirmed heat signatures—two bodies, upright, stationary. It's them."

The room went silent.

Pops looked at Wade. "Now we have a location."

Wade nodded slowly. "Alright. But we do this smart. We go in fast, we go in quiet, and we don't give them time to hurt those boys any more than they already have."

"Agreed," Pops said. He looked around the room—at Tom, Ray, Josh, Robert Beaumont, the other consortium men. "Gear up. Rifles, sidearms, vests if you got 'em. We roll in fifteen."

"I'm coming," Celeb said from the doorway.

Pops looked at him. "Son—"

"I'm coming," Celeb said again, his voice harder. "They're my brothers too."

Pops nodded. "Alright. Get your gear."


Upstairs, the command center was a hive of controlled chaos.

Jr had the barn location pulled up on the main screen—satellite imagery, drone feeds, thermal overlays. The wiz kids were already moving, packing up the portable command center, syncing their iPads, checking systems.

"How many hostiles?" Jr asked.

"Drone picked up four heat signatures outside the barn," Ryan said. "Could be more inside, but we can't confirm."

"Four we can handle," Jr muttered.

He opened the emergency locker mounted on the wall—five sidearms, holstered and loaded. One for each of them. They'd been shooting since they were eight years old. Every one of them could hit a target at a hundred yards.

Jr tossed a sidearm to Billy Renzo. Then Ryan. Then Daniel. Then Colton.

"We're going with them," Jr said.

Colton's eyes widened slightly. "All of us?"

"All of us," Jr said, holstering his own sidearm. "We take the portable command center, keep the drones up, maintain comms. We're their eyes and ears out there."

Billy Renzo nodded, already slinging his iPad bag over his shoulder. "Let's do it."

Ryan grabbed the portable command unit—a reinforced case with laptop, satellite uplink, and battery packs. Daniel had the drone controller.

"Pops is gonna let us?" Colton asked, his drawl thick.

Jr grinned grimly. "Pops knows we can shoot. And he knows we can run comms better than anyone. He'll let us."

They headed downstairs, armed and equipped.


Downstairs, the living room had been transformed into an armory.

Rifles laid out on the coffee table. Sidearms being checked and loaded. Tactical vests pulled from storage. Pops was already geared up—vest, rifle, sidearm, knife. He looked like he was back in Vietnam, ready to move.

Wade was methodical, checking his gear piece by piece. Tom and Ray were doing the same. Josh had his rifle slung over his shoulder, jaw set. Robert Beaumont was loading magazines, his hands steady.

Celeb stood near the door, rifle in hand, his face pale but determined.

The wiz kids came down the stairs—Jr in front, the others behind him, all of them armed with sidearms, carrying the portable command center and iPads.

Pops looked at them. Looked at the sidearms. Looked at Jr.

"We're coming," Jr said. Not a question.

Pops studied them for a long moment. Then he nodded. "You stay back. You run comms, you guide us in, you keep those drones up. You do not engage unless you have no choice. Understood?"

"Yes, sir," Jr said.

"All of you?"

"Yes, sir," the wiz kids said in unison.

Sarah stood near the kitchen, arms crossed, watching her son gear up. Her face was tight, but she wasn't crying anymore. She was past crying. "You bring them home," she said quietly.

Pops looked at her. "I will."

Wade pulled out a map, spread it on the table. "Alright, listen up. Old Mill Road, twelve miles east. Abandoned barn, middle of nowhere. Drones confirm two bodies inside, standing. Four hostiles outside, possibly more inside."

"We split into three groups," Pops said. "Wade, you take Tom, Ray, and Robert—come in from the west. I'll take Josh and Celeb—we come in from the east. Jr, you and the wiz kids set up command at the tree line, two hundred yards out. You keep eyes on us, you call out movement, you guide us in."

"Copy that," Jr said.

Wade's voice was hard. "Rules of engagement: they kidnapped and tortured two of ours. They don't get a warning. They get taken down."

No one argued.

Pops checked his rifle one last time. "Mount up. We leave in five."


The trucks rolled out—three of them, loaded with armed men and the wiz kids, moving fast down the ranch roads toward Old Mill Road.

Inside the lead truck, Pops sat in the passenger seat, rifle across his lap, cigar clamped between his teeth. Jr sat in the back with the portable command center on his lap, monitoring drone feeds on his iPad.

"Drone's holding position," Jr said. "No movement from the hostiles. You're clear to approach."

"Copy," Pops said.

Behind them, Wade's truck followed, and the third truck carried the rest of the wiz kids with their equipment.

Pops looked out the window at the darkening sky. The sun was setting. They'd be going in at dusk.

Perfect.

"We're coming, boys," Pops muttered. "Hold on just a little longer."

The hunt was on.

Chapter 8: The Raid

The trucks killed their headlights a mile out and rolled in silent.

Old Mill Road was nothing but dirt and gravel, flanked by scrub brush and mesquite trees. The barn sat in a clearing ahead—weathered wood, rusted metal roof, no other structures for miles. Perfect isolation.

Perfect for an ambush.

Wade's truck peeled off west, disappearing into the tree line. Pops' truck continued east. The third truck—carrying Jr and the wiz kids—stopped at the tree line two hundred yards out.

Jr was out first, Ryan and Daniel right behind him with the portable command center. Billy Renzo had the drone controller. Colton was already pulling up thermal imaging on his iPad.

"Set up here," Jr said quietly. "Billy, get the drone repositioned—I want a full view of the barn and all approaches."

"On it."

The drone adjusted, its camera feed streaming to all eighteen iPads—the ones carried by every man on the raid, and the one back at the ranch house with Sarah and the ladies.


At the Benson Ranch, Sarah stood at the dining table, her hands gripping the edge. Rebecca was beside her, one hand over her mouth. Caroline Beaumont stood on Sarah's other side. The other consortium wives crowded around.

The iPad screen showed everything—the barn in the center, four heat signatures outside, two inside the barn standing upright.

"They're moving in," Sarah whispered.

Rebecca's voice shook. "Please, God—"


Jr watched his screen, his jaw tight. He could see his father and Celeb moving through the brush on the east side. Could see Wade's team advancing from the west. Slow. Methodical. Professional.

"Sixty yards out," Jr said into his radio. "No movement from hostiles."

Pops keyed his radio. "On my mark, we take them simultaneous. Wade, you got the two at the back?"

"Affirmed. We got 'em."

"Jr, you call it."

Jr's heart pounded. He watched the screen—Pops' team closing in from the east, Wade's from the west. The hostiles hadn't moved. Hadn't noticed.

"Forty yards," Jr said.

The teams kept moving. Silent. Ghosts in the dusk.

"Thirty yards."

Pops raised his rifle. So did Josh. Celeb's hands were steady on his own weapon.

"Twenty—"

And then the barn door opened.

Jr's blood went cold. "Contact! Hostile exiting the barn!"


Back at the ranch, Sarah gasped. On the screen, a fifth man stepped out of the barn, holding something in his hand.

"What is that?" Rebecca said.

"A remote," Caroline whispered.


"He's got a trigger!" Daniel said.

The man pressed the button.

Inside the barn, the pulley system activated.


Billy felt the noose tighten before he heard the ratchet.

His boots left the ground. The rope bit into his throat. He couldn't breathe—couldn't—

Jake was choking beside him, their bodies jerking upward together, the ropes around their chests holding them tight.

No—not again—

Ten seconds. Twenty. Thirty.

Billy's vision was going dark even behind the tape. His lungs screamed. His legs kicked uselessly.

And then—gunfire.


Sarah saw it on the screen—the two heat signatures inside the barn lifting off the ground.

"NO!" she screamed.

And then the gunfire started. Four—no, five—shots in rapid succession. The heat signatures outside the barn dropped.

"They're moving in!" Rebecca said, her voice breaking.


"TAKE THEM DOWN!" Pops roared.

The silence shattered.

Pops' rifle cracked—once, twice. The hostile at the front entrance dropped. Josh took the second one. Wade and Tom fired simultaneously—the two at the back fell.

The man with the remote spun toward the sound, fumbling for his sidearm.

Celeb fired. Center mass. The man went down, the remote clattering from his hand.

"GO GO GO!" Wade shouted.

Pops was already moving, rifle up, charging the barn. Josh and Celeb flanked him. Wade's team converged from the other side.

Pops hit the barn door first, shouldering it open. Inside—dim light, dust in the air, cameras still running.

And there—center of the barn—Billy and Jake.

Hanging. Boots off the ground. The noose pulled tight around both their necks. Their bodies limp.

"GET THEM DOWN!" Pops roared. "GET THEM DOWN NOW!"

Josh was already climbing, knife out, cutting through the pulley rope. Wade grabbed Billy's legs, lifting him. Tom grabbed Jake.

The rope went slack. They dropped—Wade and Tom caught them, lowering them to the ground.

"Somebody get this rope off!" Wade shouted.

Pops was there, knife out, sawing through the noose around their necks. The rope fell away. Billy gasped—a wet, choking sound. Jake did the same.

"They're breathing!" Wade said. "They're breathing!"


Sarah's knees buckled. Rebecca caught her. "They're alive," Rebecca sobbed. "They're alive."

On the screen, they could see the heat signatures on the ground now, men crowded around them, moving fast.

Caroline's hand was over her heart. "Thank God. Thank God."


Josh was cutting the ropes around their torsos—layer after layer, thick and tight. Celeb was cutting the ones around their arms. It took three knives and two minutes to get through it all.

The ropes fell away. Billy and Jake collapsed forward, still gagged and blindfolded, their bodies shaking.

"Easy, easy," Pops said, his hands on Billy's shoulders. "You're okay. You're safe now."

Wade pulled the tape off Jake's mouth first—carefully, slowly. Jake gasped, coughing, his voice raw. "Billy—"

"Right here," Pops said, peeling the tape off Billy's eyes. "He's right here."

Billy blinked, his vision swimming. The first thing he saw was Pops' face—weathered, furious, relieved.

"Pops," Billy croaked.

"I got you, son. I got you."

Wade pulled the tape off Jake's eyes. Jake's gaze found Billy immediately. "You okay?"

"Yeah," Billy whispered. "You?"

"Yeah."

Celeb dropped to his knees beside them, his face pale, his hands shaking. "Jesus, guys—"

"We're okay," Billy said. "We're okay."

Jr came through the door, the other wiz kids behind him. He stopped, staring at Billy and Jake—freed now, sitting on the ground, leaning against each other, alive.

"You did good, Jr," Pops said. "Real good."

Jr nodded, not trusting his voice.

Wade was already on his radio. "Dispatch, this is Sheriff Nelson. We've got the victims. Barn secured. Five hostiles down. Send paramedics to Old Mill Road, abandoned barn, twelve miles east of Benson Ranch. Over."

Pops looked at Billy and Jake, his hands still on Billy's shoulders. "Can you stand?"

Billy tried. His legs buckled. Jake caught him.

"Take your time," Pops said. "We got all the time in the world now."

Billy looked up at him, tears streaming down his face now—not from pain, but from relief. "Thank you."

Pops' jaw tightened. "You're family. We don't leave family behind."

Outside, sirens wailed in the distance. Paramedics were coming.

But for now, in the dim light of the barn, surrounded by his family, Billy closed his eyes and let himself breathe.

They were safe.

They were home.

Chapter 9: Heroes

By noon the next day, the Benson Ranch command center was packed.

Two FBI special agents—Morgan and Chen—stood at the main monitor with Jr, watching as the wiz kids walked them through the digital trail. Billy Renzo had the keyboard, pulling up files, metadata, email routing logs.

"We traced the livestream email back through six proxies," Billy Renzo said, his fingers moving fast. "But the original source IP is here—Dallas. Commercial building, downtown."

Agent Morgan leaned in. "Can you confirm the address?"

"Already did," Ryan said, pulling it up on his screen. "1847 Commerce Street. Registered to Lone Star Development LLC. Same company on the land transfer documents."

Agent Chen was taking notes. "What else did you find?"

Daniel pulled up phone records from the kidnappers' devices. "Burner phones, but they were sloppy. Multiple calls to the same Dallas number over the past two weeks. We cross-referenced it with the LLC's business filings—matches the registered agent's contact info."

Jr looked at the agents. "They planned this. Surveillance, timing, everything. This wasn't their first job."

Agent Morgan nodded slowly. "Good work. Really good work." He looked at Wade, who was standing near the door. "Sheriff, we're gonna need to move on this fast. Before they know we've got their people."

Wade was already pulling out his phone. "I'm calling the Texas Rangers. This is multi-state, organized crime—we're gonna need more than just FBI on this."

He stepped into the hallway, dialing.

Pops stood near the window, cigar between his teeth, watching. "How long before you hit them?"

"Two hours," Agent Morgan said. "Maybe less. We'll coordinate with Dallas PD, get a warrant, and breach."

"I want to be there," Wade said, coming back into the room.

"You're invited," Agent Morgan said. "Let's roll."

Wade looked at Pops. "You got this here?"

"I got this," Pops said. "Go get the bastards who bankrolled it."

Wade grabbed his vest, checked his sidearm. Jr handed him an iPad. "Stay on comms. We'll monitor everything from here."

"Copy that."

Wade, the two FBI agents, and a Texas Ranger who'd just arrived headed out to the trucks. Within five minutes, they were gone.


Downstairs, Sarah had lunch going—sandwiches, chips, sweet tea, enough to feed an army. The consortium families were still there, unwilling to leave until this was finished.

Billy and Jake sat at the kitchen table, arms in slings, bruises dark on their shoulders and necks. They'd been checked by paramedics, cleared—dislocated shoulders reduced, rope burns treated, but nothing permanent. They'd heal.

Celeb sat beside them, quiet, just glad they were there.

"You guys need anything?" Sarah asked, setting plates in front of them.

"We're good, Ma," Billy said.

Jake grabbed a sandwich with his good hand. "Thanks, Ma."

Pops walked in, cigar smoke trailing behind him. He looked at Billy and Jake, then at the table. "You boys eat. You've earned it."

"Yes, sir," they said in unison.

Jr came down the stairs, iPad in hand. "Wade's team just hit the highway. ETA Dallas in ninety minutes."

Pops nodded. "Good. Now we wait."


Two hours later, Jr's iPad chimed.

Everyone in the dining room looked up. Jr answered. "Wade?"

Wade's voice came through, tinny but clear. "We got 'em. FBI, Rangers, Dallas PD—we breached the office. Four arrests, hard drives seized, documents everywhere."

Pops leaned in. "What'd you find?"

"A goddamn operation," Wade said. "This wasn't just about your land. They've been running kidnap-for-land schemes across three states—Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma. Targeting ranchers, small operations, forcing sales. We're talking dozens of cases over the past two years."

The room went silent.

"How many families?" Sarah asked quietly.

"At least twenty that we can confirm so far," Wade said. "FBI's calling it one of the biggest organized land fraud rings in the region."

Pops' jaw tightened. "And we just took them down."

"You did," Wade said. "Your boys, your tech, your people—this was all you. FBI's gonna want statements, but they're already calling you heroes."

Jr looked at the other wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan, Daniel, Colton. They were grinning.

"When you coming back?" Pops asked.

"Few hours. Paperwork. You know how it is."

"Alright. We'll save you some dinner."

"Appreciated."

The line went dead.

Pops looked around the table—at his sons, at the consortium families, at the wiz kids who'd made it all possible. "We did good today."

"Yes, sir," Tom said. "We did."


By evening, the mood had shifted. Relief. Pride. Exhaustion.

The frat house was loud again—Billy, Jake, Celeb, Jr, and Colton sprawled across the bunks and floor, boots kicked off, still riding the adrenaline.

Pops knocked once and walked in, carrying a bottle of Jack Daniels and six glasses.

"Pops," Jr said, grinning. "You serious?"

"Damn right I'm serious," Pops said, setting the bottle down. "You boys just took down a criminal empire. You've earned a drink."

He poured—not much, just enough. Handed them out. "To family. To brotherhood. And to not doing anything that stupid ever again."

They raised their glasses. "To family."

The Jack burned going down. Jake coughed. Billy laughed. Celeb shook his head, grinning. Jr and Colton were trying not to wince.

"Alright, alright," Pops said, taking the glasses back. "That's it. One drink. Don't tell your mothers."

"Yes, sir," they said.

Pops looked at them—these boys, his grandsons, his family. Beaten up, exhausted, but alive. Safe.

"I'm proud of you," he said quietly. "All of you."

Billy met his eyes. "Thank you, Pops. For everything."

"You don't thank family, son. You just show up. And you did."

He turned to leave, then stopped at the door. "Lights out in an hour. Morning comes early."

"Yes, sir."

The door closed.

They sat there for a moment, listening to Pops' footsteps fade down the hall.

Then Jake grinned. "Celeb, get the stash."

Celeb was already moving, dropping to his knees beside his bunk. He pried up the loose floorboard—the one they'd been using since the frat house became official. Hidden underneath: a case of beer, still cold from the mini cooler they'd rigged.

"Beautiful," Jr said.

Celeb pulled out five bottles, passed them around. They cracked them open, the sound satisfying in the quiet room.

"To not dying," Jake said, raising his bottle.

"To not dying," they echoed.

They drank. The beer was cold, familiar, perfect.

"Think Pops knows about the stash?" Colton asked, his drawl lazy.

"Pops knows everything," Billy said. "He just doesn't care as long as we don't get stupid."

"Fair," Jr said.

They settled in—Billy and Jake on their bunks, wincing when they moved wrong. Celeb on the floor. Jr and Colton leaning against the wall. The beer went down easy. The weight of the day started to lift.

"We really did it," Colton said again, his voice soft.

"Yeah," Jr said. "We did."

Billy leaned back, eyes closed. "You think it'll always be like this?"

"What, kidnappings and shootouts?" Jake said. "God, I hope not."

"No," Billy said. "This. All of us. Family."

Jake looked at him. "Yeah. It will."

One by one, the bottles emptied. The lights dimmed. The frat house went quiet.

Outside, the ranch was still. The stars were bright. The consortium was safe.

And in the morning, at 5:30 sharp, Pops would storm in and start it all over again.

Because that's what family did.

They showed up.

Every damn day.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Billy Jr saves his uncles and Pops

 


Chapter 1: Morning at the Frat House

The sun hadn't cleared the horizon when Pops kicked open the door to the frat house.

"Rise and shine, you sorry sacks of shit! Uncle Sam's burning daylight!"

Billy groaned from the top bunk, pulling his pillow over his head. Below him, Jake didn't even stir.

"I said UP!" Pops barked, yanking the blanket off Celeb's bunk. "You think Charlie's gonna wait for you to finish your beauty sleep?"

Billy Jr sat up fast, grinning. "Morning, Pops."

"That's more like it, Junior." Pops moved to the window and threw open the curtains. "Rest of you princesses planning to join us today, or should I get the hose?"

Jake swung his legs over the side of his bunk. "We're up, we're up."

"Damn right you are." Pops stood in the doorway, arms crossed, cigar already clamped between his teeth. "Breakfast in ten. You're late, you're eating standing up."

He slammed the door behind him, boots thundering down the hallway.

Celeb sat up, rubbing his eyes. "Does he ever wake up in a good mood?"

"This is a good mood," Billy said, climbing down. "You should see him when he's pissed."


The kitchen smelled like coffee, bacon, and Sarah's biscuits. Tom sat at the head of the table reading the livestock report while Sarah moved between the stove and the counter with practiced efficiency. Ray was already halfway through his plate, scrolling through his phone.

The five boys filed in and took their seats. Pops poured himself coffee from the pot, adding a splash of something from his flask when Sarah's back was turned.

"I saw that," she said without turning around.

"Saw what?" Pops said innocently.

Josh came in last, clipboard in hand. He set it down next to his plate and looked at his brothers. "Alright. Billy, Jake, you two are riding fence on the north forty. Reports of coyotes getting through. Take the mule quad and your radios."

"Got it," Jake said.

"Celeb, you're helping Ray with the cattle count in the east pasture. Junior, you and your crew are mucking stalls and prepping the feed barn."

Billy Jr made a face. "Mucking stalls?"

"You want to be on the payroll, you do the work," Josh said. "Besides, builds character."

"Builds blisters," Junior muttered.

Pops laughed, smoke curling from his cigar. "Welcome to ranching, kid."

Tom folded his newspaper. "Weather's supposed to hold through the week. Let's make the most of it. And boys—" He looked at Billy and Jake. "Keep your radios on. Check in every hour."

"Yes sir," they said in unison.

Sarah set down a platter of biscuits. "Eat up. Long day ahead."

Chapter 2: The Ambush

The mule quad bounced over the rough terrain, kicking up dust as Billy navigated between the mesquite and scrub oak. Jake stood in the back, one hand on the roll bar, scanning the fence line with binoculars.

"There," Jake said, pointing. "Twenty yards ahead. Wire's cut clean through."

Billy killed the engine and they both hopped out. The morning sun was climbing fast, already hot on their necks. Billy knelt by the fence, running his gloved hand along the severed wire.

"Coyotes didn't do this," he said.

"Wire cutters," Jake agreed. He straightened up, looking around. "Fresh too. Maybe last night."

Billy pulled the radio from his belt. "Base, this is Billy. We found the breach on the north forty. Wire's been cut. Looks deliberate."

Static crackled. Then Josh's voice: "Copy that. You need backup?"

"Nah, we got it. Just gonna patch it and keep moving."

"Roger. Check in at eleven hundred."

Billy clipped the radio back and moved toward the quad to grab the repair kit. That's when he saw the truck.

It came fast over the ridge, engine roaring, a battered Ford F-250 with three men in the cab. Billy's hand went instinctively to his radio, but Jake was already shouting.

"Billy! Move!"

The truck skidded to a stop ten feet away, doors flying open. Three men piled out, all holding rifles.

"Don't even think about it," the tallest one said, leveling a semi-automatic at Billy's chest. "Hands up. Both of you."

Billy's hand froze on his radio. His eyes widened. "Crawford?"

Jake's jaw tightened. "What the hell are you doing, Dwayne?"

Dwayne Crawford—tall, rangy, with a mean streak that went back to high school—smirked. "What's it look like, Jake? Business."

The stocky one with hard eyes stepped forward. That was Marcus, the middle brother. "Shut up and put your hands up. Now."

The youngest, Tyler, twitchy and wild-eyed, was already circling around behind them with his rifle raised.

"You boys are out of your minds," Billy said, raising his hands slowly. "You know what'll happen when—"

Marcus drove the butt of his rifle into Billy's stomach. Billy doubled over, gasping.

"Hey!" Jake lunged forward, but Dwayne caught him with a hard punch to the jaw that sent him stumbling back.

"That's for pricing us out, asshole," Dwayne said. He grabbed Jake by the collar and shoved him toward Tyler. "Tie him up."

Tyler yanked Jake's arms behind his back and wrapped hemp rope around his wrists, pulling it tight enough to make Jake hiss through his teeth.

"Not so tough now, huh?" Tyler muttered, binding Jake's ankles next.

Marcus hauled Billy upright and spun him around, slamming him face-first against the side of the quad. He ripped the radio off Billy's belt and threw it into the dirt with Jake's, then kicked both their hats aside.

"Your turn, Billy boy." Marcus forced Billy's arms behind him and started wrapping the rope around his wrists. Tight. Brutal. Billy gritted his teeth as the hemp bit into his skin. Marcus moved to his ankles, binding them just as tight.

Dwayne pulled out his phone and held it up, camera pointed at them. The red recording light blinked.

"Smile for the camera, boys. Your daddy's gonna want to see this."

Billy's eyes locked on the phone. Jake glared at it from where Tyler was shoving him toward the truck.

"You're making a big mistake," Jake said.

"Only mistake we made was trusting the Benson consortium to play fair," Dwayne said. He grabbed Billy and shoved him toward the truck bed. "Get in. Both of you."

They threw Jake in first, flipping him onto his back so he landed on top of his bound wrists. He grunted, the weight of his body pressing down on his arms. Billy landed beside him the same way, breath knocked out of his lungs, his shoulders immediately screaming from the pressure.

Dwayne climbed in after them, rifle across his lap, phone still recording. Marcus started the engine. Tyler jumped in the passenger side, grinning back at them through the rear window.

Dwayne leaned forward, positioning the phone to capture both their faces.

"Let me tell you what's gonna happen," Dwayne said. He dragged the butt of his rifle slowly across Billy's exposed stomach. Not hard. Light. Almost gentle.

Billy's abs twitched. He clenched his jaw, trying to hold still.

Dwayne grinned and did it again, trailing the rifle butt in slow circles across Billy's belly. Billy jerked involuntarily, a strangled sound escaping his throat.

"What's the matter, Billy? Ticklish?"

Dwayne pressed the rifle butt into Billy's ribs and dragged it down his side. Billy twisted, trying to get away, but there was nowhere to go. A choked laugh burst out of him—half gasp, half helpless sound he couldn't control.

"There it is," Dwayne said, camera capturing every second. He moved to Jake, repeating the same slow torture across his stomach, his ribs, his sides.

Jake fought it harder, jaw locked, but when Dwayne hit a sensitive spot just above his hip, Jake barked out a laugh—angry, humiliated, unable to stop it.

"Tough guys, huh?" Dwayne said to the camera. "Not so tough when you're tied up in the back of a truck."

He kept it up, alternating between them, the rifle butt tracing their bellies, their ribs, finding every spot that made them jerk and twist and let out those involuntary, gagged laughs. Tyler was howling with laughter from the cab. Marcus just shook his head and kept driving.

Billy's face burned with rage and shame. Beside him, Jake's jaw was clenched so tight his teeth might crack.

"We're thinking a million dollars ought to cover it," Dwayne continued, still filming. "One million, and maybe—maybe—we give you back in one piece. But if Tom Benson don't pay up?" He leaned closer, voice dropping. "Well, we got all kinds of fun planned for you boys. Might take days. Might take weeks. Either way, you're gonna wish you died quick."

The phone camera stayed on them, recording every word, every humiliating second.

Billy and Jake exchanged a look—silent, fierce. The same look they'd shared a thousand times growing up. The same competitive fire that got them through every hard thing since they could walk.

The truck lurched forward, bouncing hard over the ruts. Dwayne kept the rifle across their exposed stomachs and the camera rolling, humming to himself like he didn't have a care in the world.


Twenty minutes later, the truck turned off the main road onto a barely visible dirt track, overgrown with weeds. The house came into view—a sagging, weather-beaten structure with boarded windows and a collapsed porch. Abandoned years ago, forgotten by everyone.

Perfect for what they had planned.

The Crawfords dragged Billy and Jake out of the truck bed and hauled them inside. The air was thick with dust and rot. In the center of the main room, they'd already set up: a tripod with a phone mounted on it, pointing at an empty space on the floor.

"Welcome home, boys," Dwayne said, shoving them down onto their knees.

Marcus pulled out more rope—thicker this time, coarse hemp. He worked on Jake first, forcing his bound legs back and bending them up toward his tied wrists. He threaded the rope from Jake's ankles to his wrists, pulling it taut until Jake was arched in a tight hogtie, his back bowed.

Then he did the same to Billy. The rope dug in, unforgiving. Billy tested the bonds, but there was no give. Beside him, Jake was doing the same, breathing hard through his nose.

Tyler pulled out two plastic bags.

"Alright," Dwayne said, positioning the tripod camera and hitting record. "Let's give Tom Benson something to think about."

He held up the bag and looked straight into the camera.

Then he pulled it over Billy's head.

Chapter 3: The First Video

"Hold still," Marcus growled, shoving a bandana between Billy's teeth. He tied it tight behind his head, the fabric cutting into the corners of Billy's mouth. Billy tried to work his jaw, but the gag held firm.

Marcus moved to Jake next, gagging him the same way. Jake's eyes blazed with fury, but there was nothing he could do.

"Can't have you boys yelling for help," Dwayne said. He pulled out two more bandanas—dark blue, grimy. He tied one around Billy's eyes, plunging him into darkness. Then Jake's.

Billy's world went black. His breathing quickened, panic creeping in at the edges. Hogtied, gagged, and now blind. He could hear Jake beside him, breathing hard through his nose.

"Perfect," Dwayne said. Billy could hear him moving, positioning the camera. "Alright, let's give Tom Benson something to think about."

Billy heard the rustle of plastic. His body tensed.

Then the bag went over his head.

Billy's world became suffocating darkness. The plastic clung to his face, sucking inward with every desperate breath through his nose. He couldn't see. Couldn't speak. Could barely breathe.

Beside him, he could hear Jake thrashing, the sound of his body jerking against the hogtie, muffled grunts through the gag.

"Look at 'em go," Tyler said, laughing.

Dwayne's voice: "This is what happens when you cross the Crawfords. You listening, Tom Benson? You watching?"

Billy twisted his head, trying to shake the bag loose, but it held tight. His lungs burned. The blindfold pressed against his eyes under the plastic. He had no idea where he was, where the Crawfords were, when—or if—they'd take it off.

Don't panic. Don't panic.

But his body didn't care. His chest heaved, searching for air that wasn't there through his nose. The rope dug into his wrists, his ankles, holding him in that brutal arch. The gag filled his mouth, making it impossible to gulp air.

Jake was worse. Billy could hear him—thrashing, the hogtie making it impossible to get leverage, strangled sounds through the gag.

The competitive fire that always burned between them flared even now. If Jake can hold on, I can hold on.

"Thirty seconds," Marcus said, somewhere to Billy's right.

Billy's vision—what little existed behind the blindfold—started to blur. Dark spots crept in. His body bucked involuntarily, trying to pull air through the plastic, through his nose, past the gag.

"Forty-five."

Jake's movements were getting weaker. Billy could hear it. His own lungs screamed.

"One minute."

Just when Billy thought he couldn't hold on another second, the bag ripped off his head. Air rushed in through his nose, sweet and sharp. He gasped around the gag, coughing, his whole body shaking. Still blind. Still gagged. But he could breathe.

Beside him, he heard Marcus yank Jake's bag off. Jake sucked in air through his nose, making desperate sounds behind his gag.

"There we go," Dwayne said, still filming. "See that, Tom? We're being nice. Could've let 'em go all the way. But we didn't. Not yet."

Billy's head swam. He couldn't stop the ragged breathing, couldn't get enough air through just his nose. The rope kept him bent backward, ribs aching, shoulders screaming. The blindfold and gag made everything worse—disorienting, helpless.

"Alright," Dwayne said. "Let's do it again."

Billy tried to shake his head, tried to say something through the gag, but only muffled sounds came out.

The bag went back over his head.

Billy heard Jake making desperate sounds beside him, muffled protests through his gag, but it was no use.

This time was worse. Billy's body was already oxygen-deprived, already exhausted. The panic came faster, sharper. He twisted and bucked, the hogtie making every movement agony. Blind, gagged, suffocating. His thoughts fractured.

Can't breathe can't breathe can't—

He heard Jake beside him, thrashing harder now, desperate. The competitive streak kicked in again. Don't quit. Don't you dare quit before Jake does.

"Thirty seconds," Marcus said.

Billy's lungs were on fire. Behind the blindfold, his vision tunneled into nothing. He could feel himself starting to fade, consciousness slipping.

"Forty-five."

His body convulsed, searching for air through his nose. The world tilted.

"One minute. That's enough."

The bag came off. Billy gasped around the gag, choking, tears streaming down his face under the blindfold from the effort. Jake was the same beside him—coughing, shaking, completely spent, muffled sounds of distress.

Dwayne stood up, stopping the recording. "Perfect. Absolutely perfect." His boots scraped on the floor. "Your daddy's gonna love this."

Marcus's voice: "Should hit his email in about two minutes."

Tyler crouched down—Billy could feel him close, could smell cigarette smoke. "How you boys feeling? Ready for round three?"

Billy couldn't answer. The gag prevented it. His body was still shaking, trying to recover. Beside him, Jake had gone quiet except for ragged breathing.

Dwayne: "We'll give 'em a little break. Let Tom sweat for a while. Then we'll see if he's ready to pay up." The click of a lighter. "If not? We got plenty more bags."

Marcus's phone dinged. "It's sent. Video's live."

"Good." Dwayne: "Bet you Tom Benson's having a real bad day right about now."


Billy lay on the filthy floor, hogtied, gagged, and blindfolded, every breath still painful through his nose. Beside him, Jake shifted slightly—the only movement he could manage.

In the darkness behind the blindfold, Billy focused on the sounds. The Crawfords celebrating. Passing around a bottle. Congratulating themselves.

They were getting sloppy. Confident.

Good.

Billy could still feel the slight bulge in his back pocket, pressed against his bound hands.

His phone. Still there.

If they could just hold on long enough for someone to find them.

Chapter 4: 911

Billy Jr checked his watch for the third time. "They should've checked in by now."

Colton—everybody called him Louisiana, or just Colton when they were working—looked up from mucking the stall. "Maybe their radios are out of range?"

"Nah. The north forty's well within range." Billy Jr pulled out his satellite phone and tried Billy's number. Straight to voicemail. He tried Jake's. Same thing.

"That's weird," Colton said, leaning on his pitchfork.

Billy Jr's gut tightened. Something wasn't right. He'd grown up around these men, knew their habits. Billy and Jake always checked in. Always.

"Come on," Billy Jr said, dropping his pitchfork. "We're going out there."

"Josh said—"

"I don't care what Josh said. Something's wrong."

They took one of the ATVs, Colton driving while Billy Jr scanned the horizon. The ride to the north forty took fifteen minutes, bouncing over ruts and dodging mesquite.

The mule quad came into view first, sitting empty by the fence line.

Then Billy Jr saw them.

Two hats lying in the dirt. Two radios, smashed and scattered.

"Oh hell," Colton breathed, pulling up beside the quad.

Billy Jr jumped off before the ATV fully stopped. He picked up Billy's hat, then Jake's. The radios were destroyed—stomped on, maybe run over. He scanned the ground. Tire tracks. Boot prints. Signs of a struggle.

"Billy Jr..." Colton was staring at the fence. The wire was cut clean through, but that wasn't what caught his attention. There were skid marks in the dirt, leading off toward the old access road.

Billy Jr's hand went to his satellite phone. His fingers found the emergency button—the one he and Pops had programmed together. The 911 system.

He pressed it three times.

The mechanical voice echoed from every phone, every radio, every device on the consortium network:

"911. Billy Jr. 911. Billy Jr. 911. Billy Jr."

Within seconds, the encrypted frequency crackled to life.

Josh's voice: "Junior, what's your status?"

"North forty. Found Billy and Jake's hats and radios. Signs of struggle. Tire tracks heading toward the old Miller access road. They're gone."

A pause. Then Tom's voice, hard and cold: "On our way. Don't touch anything else. Hold position."

"Copy that."

Ray: "Scrambling the frequency now. Going encrypted."

Wilson Nelson's voice: "I'm ten minutes out with Ryan."

Sheriff Wade: "En route with Mary. Calling in the deputies."

Robert Beaumont: "Caroline and I are coming. The Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes are mobilizing."

Pops: "Junior, you armed?"

"Yes sir. Sidearm and rifle on the ATV."

"Good. Keep your head on a swivel. Whoever did this might still be around."

Billy Jr and Colton waited, scanning the horizon, rifles ready. The tire tracks were fresh. Deep impressions from a heavy truck, maybe an F-250 or similar. Heading west toward the abandoned properties on the far side of the county.

Fifteen minutes later, the first vehicles started arriving. Tom's truck, followed by Josh and Ray. Then the Nelsons—Sheriff Wade, Wilson, Ryan, all armed and grim-faced. The Beaumonts. The Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes with their boys. Within half an hour, the north forty looked like a staging ground.

Tom knelt by the tire tracks, jaw set. Wade examined the smashed radios. Pops stood off to the side, cigar clenched between his teeth, eyes scanning the landscape like he was back in the jungle.

"Kidnapping," Wade said finally. "Professional enough to cut the fence as a diversion, wait for them, take them quick."

"Ransom?" Ray asked.

"Most likely." Wade straightened up. "They'll make contact soon. Probably already have."

As if on cue, Tom's phone buzzed. He pulled it out, and his face went white.

"What is it?" Sarah asked, coming up beside him.

Tom didn't answer. He just turned the phone around.

A video. Billy and Jake, hogtied on a filthy floor. Bags over their heads. Thrashing. Suffocating.

Sarah's hand flew to her mouth. "Oh my God."

"Send it to the command center," Pops said, his voice like gravel. "Get the wiz kids on it. Now."


Twenty minutes later, they were all back at the ranch house, crowded into the command center—the room next to the frat house where Billy and Pops had set up all the comm equipment.

Billy Jr, Colton, Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez were already at the monitors, fingers flying over keyboards. The video played on the main screen, and every adult in the room watched in silent fury.

"Can you trace it?" Tom asked.

"Working on it," Billy Jr said, not looking up. "They sent it through an encrypted email server, routed through three different IPs."

"We can break it," Daniel said, pulling up another screen. "Give us ten minutes."

Colton was examining the video frame by frame. "Look at the background. Old house. Boarded windows. Wood paneling from the seventies, maybe eighties."

"Abandoned property," Ryan Mattern said, zooming in on another section. "There's rot on the walls. Nobody's lived there in years."

"How many abandoned houses are in Kings County?" Wilson asked.

"Dozens," Wade said grimly. "But most are on the west side, near the old Miller and Crawford properties."

Pops's eyes sharpened. "Crawford?"

Wade nodded slowly. "The Crawford family went bankrupt six months ago. Blamed the consortium for pricing them out."

"Dwayne Crawford," Tom said, his voice cold. "Marcus and Tyler."

"That's them," Wade confirmed. "Three brothers. All desperate, all pissed off, and all got nothing left to lose."

Billy Jr looked up from his screen. "Got it. Email originated from a burner phone, but there's metadata embedded in the video file." He pulled up a map. "Signal pinged off a cell tower twenty miles west of here."

"That narrows it down," Ray said, leaning over the map. "Old Crawford territory."

Pops ground out his cigar. "Then that's where we're going."

Wade held up a hand. "Hold on. We do this smart. If we spook them, they'll kill Billy and Jake before we get close."

"So what do you suggest?" Tom asked.

"We find them first. Then we move."

Billy Jr's fingers flew over the keyboard again. "If they're using phones, we can track them. I just need to—"

His screen blinked. A new message.

Everyone froze.

Tom opened it.

Another video. Worse than the first.

Chapter 5: The Search Begins

Tom's hands shook as he opened the second video.

The screen filled with Billy and Jake, still hogtied on the floor. Still gagged and blindfolded.

Marcus knelt beside Billy first, pulling out more rope—thick, coarse hemp. He grabbed Billy's bound wrists and started adding rope, wrapping it around his forearms, cinching them together. Billy's body tensed, a muffled sound through the gag.

"Jesus," Ray whispered.

Marcus kept going, looping rope around Billy's elbows, pulling them closer together. Billy's shoulders rolled back, his chest thrust forward. Even through the screen, they could see the strain, the unnatural angle.

"That's gonna dislocate his shoulders," Wilson said quietly.

Marcus added another loop around Billy's biceps, a few inches apart, creating constant tension. Billy's whole upper body was now locked in rope torture, every breath making it worse.

Then Marcus moved to Jake. Same process. Forearms cinched together. Elbows pulled close. Biceps bound. Jake thrashed harder than Billy, his body fighting the ropes, but it was useless.

"Stop," Sarah sobbed. "Please stop—"

"Just getting started," Dwayne's voice on the video. He stepped into frame holding two plastic bags. "Let's see how long they can really last this time."

Tom's fist slammed into the table. "No. No!"

Dwayne pulled the bag over Billy's head. Marcus did the same to Jake.

Both brothers immediately started thrashing—harder than before, more desperate. The rope torture made it worse. Every movement pulled on their bound arms, their shoulders, adding agony to the suffocation.

"Thirty seconds," Dwayne said, watching them with a grin.

Billy's body bucked and twisted. Jake was worse—arching against the hogtie, his bound arms screaming in pain, unable to get any air through his nose past the gag.

"Forty-five."

"Turn it off," Sarah begged. "Tom, turn it off—"

But Tom couldn't look away. None of them could.

"One minute."

Billy's movements were getting weaker. Slower. Jake's too.

"One minute fifteen."

Josh grabbed a chair and hurled it across the room. It shattered against the wall. "Those motherfuckers!"

"One minute thirty."

Both brothers had stopped moving. Completely still.

"That's enough," Marcus said. "They're out."

Dwayne and Marcus ripped the bags off. Billy and Jake didn't move. Didn't react.

"Come on," Dwayne said, slapping Billy's face. "Wake up."

Nothing.

Marcus slapped Jake harder. "Hey!"

Finally—finally—Billy gasped. A huge, desperate inhale through his nose. Beside him, Jake did the same, both brothers coughing and choking behind their gags, bodies convulsing as they came back.

"There we go," Dwayne said to the camera. "One million dollars, Tom. Twenty-four hours. Or next time, we see how long it takes before they don't wake up."

The video cut out.

The room exploded.

Josh punched the wall hard enough to put a hole through the drywall. "I'm gonna kill them! I'm gonna fucking kill all three of them!"

Ray kicked over a trash can, sending it flying. "Goddammit!"

Tom stood frozen, his face white, hands trembling.

Pops didn't move. Didn't speak. But his hands gripped his cane so tight his knuckles were white, and his eyes—his eyes looked like they had back in Vietnam. Cold. Dead. Lethal.

Sarah was sobbing into her hands. Rebecca held her, tears streaming down her own face.

Wade's jaw worked. "We find them. Now."

Billy Jr was already typing, tears streaming down his face. "I'm on it. I'm—" His voice cracked. "They almost killed them. They almost—"

"Easy, Junior," Tom said, his voice shaking. "I need you focused."

"They're dying!" Billy Jr shouted. "They're fucking dying and we're just sitting here—"

"Which is why we need you to find them." Tom gripped his grandson's shoulders. "Can you do that?"

Billy Jr wiped his face, nodded. "Yeah, Gramps. Yeah, I can do that."

Colton pulled up the video file, his hands shaking. "There's audio metadata. Background noise. Give me a second."

Daniel was already running searches. "Crawford family lost their ranch eight months ago. Foreclosure. They blamed the consortium in court documents."

"I don't give a shit about court documents," Pops said quietly. "They're dead men. They just don't know it yet."

Billy Renzo looked up from his screen. "Got something. The video file has GPS coordinates embedded. Sloppy. They didn't scrub it."

"Where?" Wade asked, moving to his station.

"Twenty-two miles west. Old Crawford property." Billy Renzo pulled up satellite imagery. "Abandoned farmhouse. Hasn't been occupied in five years."

The room went silent.

Tom's voice was steel. "That's where they are."


The command center had transformed into a tactical staging area. Maps covered the walls, satellite imagery on the screens. The wiz kids worked their stations while the adults gathered around the main table.

Tom stood at the head, murder in his eyes. Beside him, Pops leaned on his cane, but his posture was pure soldier. Sheriff Wade spread out detailed maps of the Crawford property.

"Alright," Wade said. "Single access road, overgrown. House is set back from the main road, probably a quarter mile. Trees and scrub provide cover, but also means they'll see us coming if we're not careful."

"Drone first," Wilson Nelson said. "Get eyes on the property."

"Already launching," Ryan Mattern said from his station. "Should have visual in ten minutes."

Robert Beaumont checked his rifle. "How many entry points?"

"Front door, back door, two windows on the east side," Wade said. "But the place is falling apart. Could probably breach anywhere."

Pops ground out his cigar. "What about when we find them?"

The room went quiet.

"We assess," Wade said carefully. "See what we're dealing with. Then—"

"Then we go in and get our boys," Pops said, his voice cold and flat. "With or without badges."

Wade met his eyes. "I didn't say otherwise. But if we go in guns blazing and they panic, Billy and Jake die. We need to be smart."

Tom nodded slowly, his jaw tight. "Wade's right. We do this clean. Fast. No mistakes."

"And if they resist?" Josh asked, his hands still shaking with rage.

Pops smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "Then they resist."


Twenty-two miles away, in the abandoned house, Billy lay on the filthy floor, still hogtied, still gagged and blindfolded. The new rope binding his forearms, elbows, and biceps made every breath agony. His shoulders felt like they were tearing apart.

His lungs still burned from the suffocation. A minute and a half. He'd almost died. He knew it. Felt the darkness closing in before they'd ripped the bag off.

Beside him, Jake hadn't moved much since they came to. Billy could hear his breathing—shallow, ragged, pained.

Footsteps. Heavy boots on rotted wood.

"Well, well," Dwayne's voice. "You boys awake?"

Billy's body tensed. The rope torture made even that small movement excruciating.

"Bet you thought you were gonna die, huh?" Dwayne crouched down. Billy could feel his breath. "Came real close. Real close."

A hand grabbed Billy's face, squeezing. "But we need you alive. For now. So you better hope your daddy pays up."

Tyler's voice: "What if he doesn't?"

"Then we find out how long they can last at two minutes," Dwayne said.

Billy's heart hammered. Two minutes. That would kill them. No question.

"Give it a few more hours," Marcus said. "Let Tom Benson sweat. Then we'll send another video. Really turn the screws."

"I like the way you think," Dwayne said. "Besides, I need another drink. And I wanna watch that last video again. See their faces when they realize they're dying."

The brothers laughed. The door slammed.

Billy lay in the darkness, arms screaming in rope torture, gagged and blind, and prayed that someone—anyone—would find them before the Crawfords decided to make their next video.

Chapter 6: Breath Control

Billy had no idea how much time had passed. Minutes? Hours? In the darkness behind the blindfold, gagged and hogtied with his arms screaming in rope torture, time had lost all meaning.

He could hear Jake beside him. Breathing. Still alive.

That's all that mattered.

Billy tested the ropes again—carefully, so the Crawfords wouldn't notice if they were watching. Wrists: no give. Ankles: locked tight. The hogtie rope connecting them: solid. And the new rope binding his forearms, elbows, and biceps together—that was pure agony, pulling his shoulders back at an angle that made every breath hurt.

Jake shifted slightly. Billy heard him grunt through the gag—soft, barely audible.

Billy made a sound back. Not words. Just a grunt. A signal.

You okay?

Another grunt from Jake. Stronger.

Still here. Still fighting.

Even now, even hogtied and tortured and suffocating in an abandoned house, the competitive fire between them burned. It always had. Since they were kids racing horses, wrestling in the dirt, seeing who could hold their breath longest in the swimming hole.

If Jake could survive this, Billy could survive this.

The door creaked open. Footsteps.

"They're still out," Tyler's voice.

"Good," Dwayne said. "Means they're learning."

Billy stayed perfectly still. Beside him, Jake did the same.

"When we sending the next video?" Marcus asked.

"Soon," Dwayne said. Billy could hear him moving around the room. "But this time, we're gonna do it right. Two minutes. See if they can handle it."

Billy's heart hammered.

"Two minutes might kill them," Tyler said.

"That's the point," Dwayne said. "If Tom Benson don't pay up, we make good on our threat. Simple."

"And if he does pay?"

"Then we let 'em go. Eventually." Dwayne laughed. "After we have a little more fun."

The footsteps retreated. The door slammed.

Billy lay in the darkness, pulse racing. Two minutes. That would kill them. He'd barely survived a minute and a half.

Another grunt from Jake. This one different. Angry.

Billy grunted back. He knew what Jake meant.

Don't you dare quit on me.

Not a chance.


Back at the ranch, the command center buzzed with activity.

"Drone's in position," Ryan Mattern said, adjusting the controls. On the main screen, thermal imaging showed the abandoned Crawford house. "I've got three heat signatures inside the structure. Moving around. Alive."

"That's the Crawfords," Wade said.

"And two more signatures," Ryan continued, zooming in. "On the floor. Not moving much. But they're warm. They're alive."

Tom leaned forward, gripping the back of Billy Jr's chair. "That's them. That's Billy and Jake."

Sarah's hand flew to her mouth, tears streaming. "Oh thank God."

"They're alive," Josh breathed.

"For now," Pops said quietly. His eyes never left the screen. "We need to move. Now."

"Hold on," Wade said. "We go in half-cocked, the Crawfords panic and kill them before we breach the door."

"So what do we do?" Ray demanded.

"We plan it," Wade said. "Fast and surgical. Wilson, Ryan—you're with me on entry team. Robert, you and the Renzos cover the back exit. Tom, Josh, Ray—you're second wave. Pops—"

"I'm going in," Pops said, his voice flat.

Wade looked at him. "You sure?"

"Those are my great-grandsons in there," Pops said. "I'm going in."

Wade nodded. "Alright. You're with Tom's team."

Billy Jr pulled up another screen. "I'm tracking their phones. They've made three calls in the last hour—all local. Probably celebrating."

"Good," Wade said. "Means they're distracted. Colton, can you kill their cell service?"

Colton's fingers flew over the keyboard. "Give me two minutes."

"Do it," Wade said. "I want them blind and deaf when we hit them."

Daniel pulled up blueprints of the house—old county records, decades out of date, but better than nothing. "Front door's here. Back door here. Two windows on the east side, boarded up. If we breach simultaneously—"

"They'll still have time to hurt Billy and Jake," Wilson said.

"Not if we're fast enough," Wade said. "We flashbang the entry points, go in hard, neutralize the threats before they know what hit them."

Tom's jaw was tight. "How long until we move?"

Wade checked his watch. "Thirty minutes. Enough time to gear up and get in position. Then we go."

"Thirty minutes," Sarah whispered. "They could send another video in thirty minutes."

"Then we better move fast," Pops said, already heading for the door.


In the abandoned house, Dwayne stood over Billy and Jake, phone in hand.

"Alright boys," he said. "Time for the grand finale."

He positioned the tripod camera, hitting record.

"Let's see how long you can really last."

Marcus grabbed the plastic bags.

Billy's body tensed. Beside him, Jake did the same.

Here it comes.

The bag went over Billy's head.

In the darkness, blind and gagged and hogtied, Billy's last thought before the suffocation began was simple:

Hold on. Just hold on.

Chapter 7: The Ping

Tom's phone rang.

He looked down at the screen. His blood went cold.

"Billy. It's Billy's number."

The room went silent. Everyone stared.

Tom answered, putting it on speaker. "Billy? Billy, can you hear me?"

Static. Muffled sounds. Heavy breathing.

Then Dwayne Crawford's voice, crystal clear: "Alright boys, let's talk about what's coming next."

Tom's hand tightened on the phone. "He butt-dialed. Billy's phone is in his back pocket—his struggles must've triggered it."

"Open line," Wade said immediately. "Don't hang up. Record everything."

Billy Jr was already on it, routing the audio through the command center speakers, hitting record.

Marcus's voice came through: "You sure two minutes won't kill them?"

"Maybe it will," Dwayne said, laughing. "But that's Tom Benson's problem, not ours. He should've paid up when he had the chance."

Sarah's hand flew to her mouth, stifling a sob.

Tyler: "What if they die before we get the money?"

"Then we send Tom their bodies," Dwayne said casually. "Either way, we're done with this shithole county. We take the money and disappear, or we make an example and disappear. I'm good either way."

Tom's jaw clenched so tight it might crack. Beside him, Pops's knuckles were white on his cane.

"Before we do the next video," Marcus said, "I wanna add more rope. Really fuck up their shoulders. Make it so they can't even move without screaming."

"I like that," Dwayne said. "Do it. And maybe we use the cattle prod again after. See how much they can take."

A muffled sound came through the line—Billy or Jake, impossible to tell which, making a desperate noise through their gags.

"Shut up," Tyler's voice, followed by the sound of a kick. A grunt of pain.

Josh punched the wall. "I'm gonna kill them. I'm gonna fucking kill them."

"Not if I get there first," Ray said, his voice shaking with rage.

Wade was already moving. "That's it. We're done waiting. Full mobilization. Now."

"Gear up!" Tom shouted. "Everyone, full kit. We leave in five minutes."

The room exploded into motion.

Josh and Ray ran for the armory. Wilson and Ryan Nelson right behind them. The Beaumonts, Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes mobilized like a military unit.

Pops grabbed his old Vietnam gear bag from the closet—the one he'd kept packed for forty years. He pulled out his service pistol, checked the magazine, then grabbed his rifle.

"Junior," Pops called. "You and the boys ready?"

Billy Jr stood up, wiping tears from his face, grabbing his sidearm. "Yes sir."

"Good. You're with me and Celeb. We're going in first wave."

Celeb appeared in the doorway, already armed, face set like stone. "I'm getting them out of there."

"Damn right you are," Pops said. "Soon as we clear the room, you go straight for Billy and Jake. Get those ropes off them."

"Got it."

Colton, Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez were packing up the portable command center—laptops, satellite phones, signal boosters, all loaded into hard cases.

"We're going mobile," Colton said, checking his sidearm. "GPS routing, real-time intel, communications—we'll have everything in the field. And we'll keep that call live. Monitor everything they're saying."

"Who are you paired with?" Wade asked.

"I'm with Wilson and Ryan Nelson," Colton said.

"I'm with my dad and Robert Beaumont," Billy Renzo said.

"I'm with my family," Ryan Mattern added.

"Same," Daniel Rodriguez confirmed.

Wade nodded. "Good. Keep your heads down, stay behind cover, and for God's sake, don't get shot."

"Yes sir," they said in unison.

Through the phone's open line, Dwayne's voice: "Alright, let's get started. Marcus, add that rope. Make it tight. I want them screaming."

The sound of movement. Hemp rope being unwound. Then a muffled scream through a gag.

Sarah broke down sobbing. Rebecca held her.

"We're coming," Tom said quietly, staring at the phone. "Hold on, boys. We're coming."


The convoy formed up in the ranch yard. Trucks, ATVs, armed men and women moving with deadly purpose. The portable command center loaded into the lead technical vehicle—a modified pickup with comm equipment and a weapons mount.

Tom stood at the front, rifle slung over his shoulder, the open phone line still active in his pocket. "Listen up! We go in fast, we go in hard, but we go in smart. Wade's team breaches front and back simultaneously. Second wave secures the perimeter. Wiz kids provide overwatch and comms. Nobody fires unless fired upon—but if they fire, you put them down. Understood?"

"Understood!" the group shouted back.

Pops climbed into his truck, Billy Jr in the passenger seat, Celeb in the back. All three armed. All three ready.

"You scared, Junior?" Pops asked, starting the engine.

Billy Jr checked his magazine. Through the open line on Tom's phone, they could hear the Crawfords laughing, hear Billy and Jake's muffled sounds of pain. "No sir. I'm pissed."

"Good. Fear makes you stupid. Anger makes you focused." Pops looked at him. "You focus on getting your uncles out alive. Everything else is noise."

"Yes sir."

Sarah ran up to the truck, tears streaming down her face. She grabbed Billy Jr through the window. "You be careful. You hear me? You bring them home, but you come home too."

"I will, Grandma. I promise."

She kissed his forehead, then moved to the next truck where Tom sat. She didn't say anything. Just held his hand for a moment.

Tom squeezed back. "I'm bringing our boys home."

"I know you will."

Wade's voice crackled over the radio. "All units, comms check."

One by one, the trucks called in. Twelve vehicles. Thirty-two armed men and women. Five wiz kids with enough tech to run a military operation.

"Route's programmed," Billy Jr said, pulling up the GPS on the portable system. "Twenty-two minutes at speed. I'll guide us in."

Through Tom's phone, Dwayne's voice: "Alright, that's enough rope. Now let's see how long they last. Get the bags."

"Oh God," someone whispered over the convoy radio.

"Move out NOW," Wade commanded.

The convoy roared to life, headlights cutting through the dusk. Engines growling. Dust rising.

They were coming.


Twenty-two miles away, Dwayne Crawford held up the plastic bag, grinning at the camera.

"Two minutes this time, Tom. Let's see if your boys can handle it."

He moved toward Billy and Jake, both still hogtied, gagged, and blindfolded on the filthy floor. Even more rope now binding their arms, pulling their shoulders back at an agonizing angle.

Marcus stood ready with the timer.

Tyler filmed it all.

None of them knew about the open phone line.

None of them knew the convoy was coming.

Dwayne pulled the bag over Billy's head. Marcus pulled one over Jake's.

"Start the clock," Dwayne said.

Through the phone in Billy's back pocket, pressed against his bound hands, the convoy heard everything.

The timer starting.

Billy and Jake thrashing, suffocating.

The Crawfords laughing.

"Twenty-two minutes out," Billy Jr said, his voice breaking. "Drive faster."

Chapter 8: The Ride

The convoy tore through the night, headlights bouncing over the dirt roads, engines roaring.

In the lead truck, Tom gripped the wheel, foot pressed to the floor. Beside him, Josh had his rifle across his lap, checking and rechecking the magazine.

Through the phone on speaker between them, they could hear everything.

Billy and Jake thrashing. The plastic bags suffocating them. The Crawfords counting.

"Thirty seconds," Dwayne's voice.

"Faster," Josh said through gritted teeth.

"I'm doing eighty on a dirt road," Tom said. "Any faster and we flip."

In Pops's truck, Billy Jr monitored three screens at once—GPS routing, thermal imaging from the drone still overhead, and the open phone line's audio waveform.

"Nineteen minutes out," Billy Jr said into the radio.

Wade's voice: "All units maintain speed. Stay tight. We hit them all at once."

"Forty-five seconds," Dwayne's voice through the phone.

Pops's jaw was clenched so tight his teeth might crack. Celeb sat in the back, hands white-knuckled on his rifle.

"They're not gonna make it," Celeb said. "Two minutes—they can't—"

"Yes they can," Pops said. His voice was steel. "Those boys are Bensons. They can hold on."

But even he didn't sound convinced.

"One minute," Dwayne said.

Through the phone, the sounds of Billy and Jake's struggles were getting weaker. Desperate, fading movements.

Sarah's voice crackled over the radio from back at the ranch, listening to the same open line. "Please. Please don't let them die."

"One minute fifteen."

Billy Jr's screen showed the Crawford house—still three heat signatures moving around, two on the floor. Not moving.

"They're still alive," Billy Jr said, his voice breaking. "Thermal shows they're still—"

"One minute thirty."

Complete silence through the phone now. No movement. No sounds from Billy or Jake.

"They're out," Marcus's voice.

"Let 'em go a little longer," Dwayne said.

"NO!" Josh roared. He grabbed the radio. "Wade, we need to be there NOW!"

"Seventeen minutes," Wade said back. "We're moving as fast as we can."

"One minute forty-five."

"That's enough," Marcus said. "They're gonna die."

"Fine." The sound of plastic ripping. "Come on, wake up."

Silence.

"Hey!" A slap. "Wake up!"

More silence.

Then—finally—a huge gasping sound. Coughing. Choking. Billy or Jake, impossible to tell, sucking in air through their nose.

Another gasp. Both of them. Both alive.

"There we go," Dwayne said, laughing. "Thought we lost you boys for a second."

The convoy didn't slow down.


In the technical vehicle with the portable command center, Colton was running countermeasures.

"Killing their cell service now," he said, fingers flying. "They won't be able to call for backup or post anything online."

"Good," Wilson Nelson said from the driver's seat. "What about the phone line? Can they hear us?"

"No," Colton confirmed. "It's one-way. They have no idea we're listening."

Through the open line, Tyler's voice: "You think Tom's actually gonna pay?"

"Doesn't matter," Dwayne said. "We already sent the ransom demand. If he doesn't pay in..." A pause. "Eighteen hours, we do another video. But this time, we don't take the bags off."

Rage exploded over the convoy radio.

Josh: "I'm gonna put a bullet in his fucking head."

Ray: "Get in line."

Robert Beaumont: "We all are."

Wade's voice cut through: "Radio discipline. Save it for when we breach."

Billy Jr pulled up the tactical map. "Fifteen minutes out. Drone shows no movement outside the structure. All five heat signatures still inside."

"Entry teams, final check," Wade said. "Ryan, Wilson, you're with me on the front. Tom, Josh, Ray—you secure the perimeter and come in behind us. Pops, you and your team go through the back door. Celeb, soon as we clear, you get those boys untied."

"Copy that," Pops said.

Through the phone, they could hear the Crawfords moving around, bottles clinking. Celebrating.

"They think they've won," Pops said quietly. "They have no idea what's coming."

Marcus's voice: "How much you think we can get for them if Tom doesn't pay? Could sell 'em to someone who wants revenge on the consortium."

"Now there's an idea," Dwayne said. "Plenty of folks got beef with the Bensons."

Billy Jr's hands shook on the keyboard. Beside him, Pops put a steady hand on his shoulder.

"Focus, Junior. We're almost there."

"Twelve minutes," Billy Jr said into the radio.

Wade: "All units, go dark. Kill your headlights. We approach silent."

One by one, the convoy's lights went out. They were twelve trucks moving through the darkness, guided only by moonlight and GPS.

"Ten minutes," Billy Jr said.

Through the phone, Dwayne: "Alright, I'm bored. Let's do another round. But first..." The sound of rope being cut. "Let's add some more bondage. Really make this interesting."

A muffled protest through a gag.

"Shut up," Tyler said. A kick. A grunt of pain.

Tom's voice over the radio, cold as ice: "The second we breach that door, the Crawfords are done. No warnings. No mercy."

Wade: "Tom—"

"No mercy," Tom repeated.

A chorus of affirmatives from the convoy.

"Eight minutes," Billy Jr said. On his thermal screen, he could see the Crawfords moving around Billy and Jake, adding more rope.

"Seven minutes."

The convoy slowed, engines dropping to idle as they approached the access road.

"Six minutes. Half mile out."

Wade: "All units, dismount and approach on foot. Wiz kids, hold position with the vehicles. Provide overwatch."

"Roger," Billy Jr said. But he looked at Pops. "I'm going in."

"Damn right you are," Pops said, grabbing his rifle. "Celeb, you ready?"

"Ready," Celeb said.

They climbed out of the truck. Thirty-two armed men and women, moving through the darkness toward the abandoned house.

Through Tom's phone, still transmitting from Billy's back pocket, they could hear everything.

Dwayne: "Alright, that should do it. Now, let's make this one really count. Three minutes this time."

"Three minutes will kill them," Marcus said.

"I know," Dwayne said. "That's the point. If Tom Benson's listening to his voicemail later, he'll get to hear his sons die."

The convoy moved faster.

Four minutes out.

Three.

Two.

Wade's voice, barely a whisper over the radio: "Entry teams in position. On my mark."

Through the phone, the sound of plastic bags being pulled out.

"No," Sarah sobbed from back at the ranch.

"Mark," Wade said. "GO GO GO!"

The doors exploded inward.

Chapter 9: The Shootout

The front door exploded inward in a shower of rotted wood. Wade, Wilson, and Ryan Nelson poured through, flashlights mounted on their rifles cutting through the darkness.

"SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT! HANDS UP!"

The back door crashed open simultaneously. Pops, Billy Jr, and Celeb came through, weapons raised.

Dwayne Crawford spun around, plastic bag still in his hand, his other hand going for his rifle.

"DON'T!" Wade shouted.

But Dwayne was already bringing the rifle up.

Wade fired twice. Center mass. Dwayne went down hard, the rifle clattering across the floor.

Marcus dove for his weapon leaning against the wall. Tom and Josh came through behind Wade's team.

"DROP IT!" Tom roared.

Marcus grabbed the rifle anyway, swinging it toward the door.

Josh and Ray fired simultaneously. Marcus jerked backward, hit the wall, and slid down, leaving a red streak.

Tyler was closest to Billy Jr's entry point. He had his rifle in his hands, eyes wild, swinging it toward Pops.

Billy Jr didn't think. Didn't hesitate.

He fired.

Three rounds. Just like Pops had taught him on the range.

Tyler's chest erupted red. He stumbled backward, rifle dropping from his hands, and collapsed.

The room went silent except for ragged breathing and the ringing echo of gunshots.

Billy Jr stood frozen, his pistol still raised, staring at Tyler's body. The body of a man he'd just killed. His hands started to shake.

"CLEAR!" Wade shouted, checking the other rooms.

"CLEAR!" Wilson called back.

"Celeb, NOW!" Pops said.

Celeb was already moving, dropping his rifle and pulling out his knife. He fell to his knees beside Billy and Jake, both still hogtied on the floor, plastic bags over their heads, not moving.

"No no no," Celeb said, ripping the bag off Billy's head. "Come on, Billy. Come on."

Billy's face was pale, lips blue. Not breathing.

"Jake!" Tom was there, tearing the bag off Jake's head. Jake wasn't breathing either.

"Get those ropes off them!" Josh shouted. "And get the oxygen!"

Robert Beaumont was already rushing in with the oxygen tanks and masks from the volunteer fire company. "Here!"

Celeb's knife worked frantically, cutting through the hogtie rope, then the rope binding Billy's forearms, elbows, biceps. The rope torture came off in pieces. Then wrists, then ankles. Deep rope burns marked every place the hemp had cut in.

"Billy, breathe!" Celeb rolled him onto his side, pulled the gag out of his mouth, ripped off the blindfold. Billy's eyes were closed. "Come on, brother. BREATHE!"

Tom was doing the same with Jake—cutting ropes, pulling off the gag and blindfold, rolling him over. Jake's wrists and arms were raw and bleeding from the rope burns.

Wade pressed the oxygen mask over Billy's face, turning the valve. "He's got a pulse. Come on, kid."

Wilson did the same for Jake. "Pulse here too. Strong."

Five seconds. Ten.

Then Billy gasped. A huge, desperate inhale through the oxygen mask. His eyes flew open, unseeing, panicked. He coughed, choking, his body convulsing.

"That's it!" Wade said, keeping the mask in place. "Easy, easy. You're safe. You're safe now."

Billy kept coughing, gasping, his whole body shaking. The oxygen helped—his color started coming back, his breathing evening out. His eyes focused on Wade, then on Celeb kneeling beside him.

"Celeb?" Billy's voice was barely a whisper, muffled by the mask, raw from the gag.

"Yeah, brother. I got you. You're safe."

Jake gasped next, coming back the same way—violent, desperate, coughing. The oxygen mask helped him too, his breathing steadying faster with the pure O2. Tom held him, tears streaming down his face.

"That's my boy. That's my boy."

Josh pulled out his satellite phone. "Ambulance is fifteen minutes out."

"No hospital," Billy croaked, pushing the oxygen mask aside for a moment. "Home. We're going home."

"Billy, you need—" Wade started.

"Home," Billy said, his voice stronger. "We're fine. Just... rope burns. We're going home."

Jake nodded, pushing his own mask away enough to speak. "What he said. No hospital. Home."

Tom looked at Wade, who checked both brothers over—pulse, breathing, pupils. The oxygen had done its job. They were breathing normally now, color returning.

"Rope burns, shoulder strain, dehydration," Wade said. "They should get checked—"

"We're going home," Jake repeated, more forcefully.

Tom sighed. "Stubborn as hell, both of you." But there was relief in his voice. "Fine. But you're keeping those oxygen tanks for the ride, and Rebecca's checking you over the second we get there."

"Deal," Billy said.

Across the room, Billy Jr still stood frozen, staring at Tyler's body. His pistol had lowered, but his hands shook violently.

Pops walked over and gently took the pistol from Billy Jr's hands, engaging the safety. He holstered it for him.

"Junior. Look at me."

Billy Jr couldn't. His eyes were locked on Tyler.

"Look at me, son," Pops said, more firmly.

Billy Jr's eyes finally shifted to Pops. They were wet, wide, shocked.

Pops put both hands on Billy Jr's shoulders. "You saved my life. You understand that? Tyler had his rifle pointed at me. Another second and I'd be dead. You saved my life."

"I killed him," Billy Jr whispered.

"Yes, you did," Pops said. "And that's a hard thing. The hardest thing. But you did it for the right reason. Not out of anger. Not out of hate. You did it to protect someone you love. That's what good men do, Junior. Good men make hard choices to protect their families."

"But I—"

"Listen to me," Pops said, his voice gentle but firm. "I've killed men. In Vietnam. And it stayed with me. Every single one. But I'm here today because I made those choices. Your uncles are alive today because you made this choice. You hear me?"

Billy Jr nodded, tears spilling over.

"You're gonna feel this later. Tonight. Tomorrow. Maybe for a long time," Pops continued. "And that's okay. That means you're human. That means you have a conscience. But don't you ever doubt that what you did was right. You saved my life, Junior. My great-grandson saved my life. And I'll never forget that."

Pops pulled Billy Jr into a tight hug. Billy Jr broke down, sobbing into Pops's shoulder.

"It's alright, boy," Pops said quietly. "Let it out. You earned it."

Tom walked over, leaving Jake with Josh. He put his hand on Billy Jr's back.

"Your grandfather's right," Tom said. "You saved Pops. You helped save Billy and Jake. You're a hero, Junior. Whether it feels like it or not."

Billy Jr pulled back, wiping his face. He looked at Pops, then Tom, then across the room where Billy and Jake were being helped to their feet by Celeb and Ray, oxygen masks still on their faces, arms hanging awkwardly from the rope torture damage.

"They're okay?" Billy Jr asked.

"Thanks to you," Pops said. "Thanks to all of us."

Wade was already on his radio. "All units, suspects down. Victims recovered alive. We're coming home."

Celeb had his arms around Billy, supporting him. Billy's legs were shaky, but he was standing. Jake was the same, leaning heavily on Tom.

"Can you walk?" Celeb asked Billy.

"Yeah," Billy said, his voice still rough. "Get me the hell out of here."

They moved toward the door, stepping carefully around the bodies. Billy Jr couldn't help but glance at Tyler one more time.

"Don't look," Pops said quietly. "Remember why you did it, not what you did. There's a difference."

Billy Jr nodded and followed Pops out into the night.

The convoy was waiting, engines idling. Sarah's voice came over the radio, breaking with emotion.

"Are they alive? Please tell me they're alive."

Tom keyed his radio. "They're alive, Sarah. We're bringing them home."

Sarah's sob of relief echoed through every speaker.

Billy and Jake were loaded into Tom's truck, wrapped in blankets, oxygen masks back on. Celeb climbed in beside them, refusing to leave their side.

Pops kept his arm around Billy Jr as they walked back to their truck. "You ride with me. We're gonna talk on the way home."

"Okay," Billy Jr said quietly.

Wade stayed behind with Wilson and Ryan to secure the scene and wait for the coroner. The rest of the convoy formed up.

Tom looked back at the abandoned house one last time. Three dead men inside. Two living sons beside him.

"Let's go home," Tom said.

The convoy rolled out, heading back toward the ranch. Toward safety. Toward family.

In Pops's truck, Billy Jr stared out the window, silent.

"Talk to me, Junior," Pops said.

"I keep seeing his face," Billy Jr said. "Right before I pulled the trigger."

"You'll see it for a while," Pops said. "Maybe always. But every time you see it, I want you to remember something else. Look behind you."

Billy Jr turned. In the truck behind them, he could see Billy and Jake through the back window, oxygen masks on, alive.

"That's why you did it," Pops said. "That right there. Never forget that."

Billy Jr watched his uncles for a long moment, then nodded.

"Okay," he said. "Okay."

They drove on through the night, leaving the dead behind and carrying the living home.

Chapter 10: Coming Home

Three days later, the smell of mesquite smoke drifted across the ranch yard. Tom stood at the grill, flipping steaks while Sarah brought out potato salad and corn. Josh tended the ribs. Ray had commandeered the drink cooler.

It was just family today. The Bensons, Wade, and the wiz kids—Billy Jr, Colton, Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez. The boys who'd helped bring Billy and Jake home.

Billy and Jake sat at the picnic table, still moving carefully. The rope burns on their wrists and arms were bandaged, fading from angry red to purple. Their shoulders were still sore from the rope torture, but Rebecca had cleared them—no permanent damage. They'd been lucky.

Billy Jr sat with the other wiz kids, quieter than usual. He'd barely slept since the rescue. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw Tyler's face.

Pops noticed. Pops always noticed.

"Alright, listen up!" Pops stood, cigar clamped between his teeth, tapping a bottle of Jack Daniels against his glass. "Got something to say."

The yard went quiet. Everyone turned.

Pops looked at Billy Jr. "Junior. Get over here."

Billy Jr stood slowly, confused. The other wiz kids nudged him forward, grinning like they knew something he didn't.

Pops reached behind his chair and pulled out a long rifle case—leather, expensive, with brass fixtures. He set it on the table in front of Billy Jr.

"Open it," Pops said.

Billy Jr's hands shook slightly as he unlatched the case. Inside, nestled in velvet, was the most beautiful rifle he'd ever seen.

A custom precision rifle. Walnut stock, hand-carved and oiled to a perfect finish. Stainless steel barrel with intricate engraving. The scope alone probably cost more than most trucks. And on the stock, engraved in elegant script:

William "Billy" Benson Jr.
June 15, 2024
A life saved is a life earned.

Billy Jr stared at it, speechless.

"That's a Morrison custom build," Pops said quietly. "One of twelve he makes a year. Ordered it three months ago, but had him add the engraving last week." Pops put his hand on Billy Jr's shoulder. "Three days ago, you saved my life. You made the hardest choice a man can make, and you made it without hesitation. You're not a boy anymore, Junior. You're a man. And a man needs a rifle worthy of what he's done."

Billy Jr's eyes were wet. "Pops, I—"

"No need," Pops said. "You earned it."

Wade stood up, his voice thick. "That's my grandson. Damn proud of you, Junior."

Tom raised his beer. "To Billy Jr. The youngest man at this table, and one of the bravest."

"To Junior!" everyone shouted.

Billy Jr wiped his eyes, looking at the rifle, then at Pops. "Thank you."

"You're welcome, son." Pops grinned. "Now let's see if it shoots as good as it looks. Set up some targets!"

The yard exploded into motion.

Josh and Ray dragged out hay bales and set up targets at fifty, one hundred, and two hundred yards. Celeb grabbed his rifle. Jake carefully stood up, grinning despite the pain.

"I got twenty bucks says Junior can't hit center mass at two hundred," Jake said.

"Bullshit," Billy said, pulling out his wallet. "Kid just took down a moving target at fifteen feet under pressure. I'll take that bet."

"Fifty says he outshoot you, Jake," Colton said, slapping cash on the table.

"Hundred says he outshoots all of us," Billy Renzo added.

"Oh hell no," Ray said, throwing down bills. "I'll take that action."

Pops laughed, pulling out a bottle of Jack Daniels and pouring shots. "This is what I'm talking about! Billy Jr, show these sorry bastards what that rifle can do."

Billy Jr lifted the rifle from the case. It was perfectly balanced, the weight distributed like it was made for his hands. Which, he realized, it probably was. Pops would've given Morrison his measurements.

He loaded the magazine, chambered a round, and moved to the firing line.

"Two hundred yards," Josh called. "Center mass."

Billy Jr settled into position, the rifle stock against his shoulder. Breathed out. Squeezed.

CRACK.

The target at two hundred yards jerked. Dead center.

"GODDAMN!" Colton shouted.

"Pay up!" Billy said, grinning at Jake.

Jake laughed, wincing as it pulled his sore shoulders. "Beginner's luck."

"Double or nothing," Billy Jr said, his confidence growing. "Three shots, all center mass."

"You're on," Jake said.

Billy Jr fired three times in quick succession.

CRACK. CRACK. CRACK.

All three shots clustered in a group smaller than a fist.

The yard erupted in cheers and groans. Cash changed hands.

"My turn," Celeb said, grabbing his own rifle.

"Oh no," Billy Renzo said. "We're doing this tournament style. Everyone shoots, best grouping wins."

"Pot's at four hundred," Daniel Rodriguez said, counting the cash on the table.

"Make it six," Wade said, throwing in bills. "I got faith in my grandson."

Pops poured another round of Jack. "This is a proper celebration!"

One by one, they shot. Celeb, Billy, Jake (carefully, his shoulders still sore), Josh, Ray, Tom, Wade, and all the wiz kids. The bottles of Jack Daniels made the rounds. Sarah and Rebecca shook their heads but smiled, bringing out more food.

Billy Jr's grouping held at the top. But Billy came close—damn close.

"Final round," Billy said, grinning. "Me versus Junior. Winner takes the pot."

"Hell yes," Billy Jr said. The weight that had been pressing on him for three days was lifting. Here, with his family, competing and laughing and alive—this was what mattered.

They both fired five shots at two hundred yards.

When they checked the targets, Billy Jr's grouping was tighter by half an inch.

The yard exploded. The wiz kids mobbed Billy Jr, shouting and laughing. Colton poured Jack Daniels over Billy Jr's head like champagne.

Billy walked over, still moving carefully, and pulled Billy Jr into a careful hug. "That's my nephew. Damn fine shooting."

"Thanks, Uncle Billy," Billy Jr said, grinning.

Jake limped over, wincing but smiling. "You saved our asses, Junior. And you can outshoot me. I don't know whether to be proud or pissed."

"Both," Billy Jr said.

Pops stood watching it all, cigar smoke curling around him, a bottle of Jack in his hand. Tom came up beside him.

"You did good, Pops," Tom said quietly. "That's exactly what he needed."

"He's a good boy," Pops said. "Gonna be a hell of a man."

"Already is," Tom said.

Billy Jr sat back down at the table, the rifle beside him, surrounded by his family and friends. The wiz kids were already planning the next shooting competition, bets flying. Billy and Jake were arguing good-naturedly about who was the better shot before the kidnapping.

For the first time in three days, Billy Jr laughed. Really laughed.

Pops sat down beside him, pouring them both a shot of Jack.

"How you feeling, Junior?" Pops asked quietly.

Billy Jr looked at the rifle, then at his family. "Better. Still see his face sometimes. But..." He looked at Billy and Jake, alive and laughing. "I remember why I did it."

"Good," Pops said. He raised his shot glass. "To hard choices made for the right reasons."

Billy Jr clinked his glass against Pops's. "To family."

They drank.

The sun set over the ranch, smoke rising from the grill, laughter filling the yard. Billy and Jake were home. Billy Jr had his rifle and his family's respect. The Crawfords were gone.

Life went on.

And on a ranch in Kings County, Texas, the Bensons did what they always did—they survived, they competed, and they loved each other fierce as hell.

THE END