Thursday, November 27, 2025

Laundry Day

 


Chapter 1: Morning Routine

Pops Benson's boots hit the hardwood floor at 5:15 a.m., same as every morning for the past fifty years. He scratched his gray stubble, pulled on his jeans, and shuffled out of his bedroom on the second floor. The hallway smelled like old wood and coffee already brewing downstairs—Tom must be up.

He stopped at the command center door, saw the glow of standby lights through the crack, then moved on to the frat house.

Pops didn't knock. He never knocked.

"Get your asses up!" He slammed his palm against the doorframe. "Sun's burnin' daylight and you sons of bitches are burnin' my time!"

A groan came from the top bunk on the left. Billy.

"Five more minutes, Pops," Jake mumbled from the bottom bunk, face buried in his pillow.

"Five more minutes my ass. Move it!"

Celeb sat up on the right top bunk, blinking. "Yes sir, Pops."

Billy Jr. rolled off his mattress between the two bunk beds, already half-dressed. The kid slept like a soldier—light and ready. "I'm up, I'm up."

"Good boy, Jr." Pops grinned. "Rest of you jackasses could learn somethin'."

Louisiana—nobody called Celeb's cousin by his real name—groaned from his own mattress between the bunks, on the other side of Jr.'s. "Lord have mercy."

"Lord ain't got mercy at 5 a.m., son. Get movin'."


By the time the five of them stumbled into the kitchen, Sarah was already at the stove, flipping eggs and frying bacon. Tom sat at the head of the long table with his coffee, reading something on his phone. Ray walked in behind them, clean-shaven and alert like he'd been up for hours. Josh was outside already—General Manager duties didn't wait for breakfast.

"Morning, boys," Sarah said without turning around. "Sit."

They sat.

Pops poured himself coffee, added a splash of brandy from the flask in his shirt pocket, and ignored Sarah's look.

"Pops, it's five-thirty in the morning," she said.

"And I'm seventy-six years old. I'll do what I damn well please."

Billy Jr. snickered. Jake grinned and reached for the orange juice.

Sarah turned, spatula in hand, and her eyes landed on Jake. She frowned.

"Jake Benson, is that the same undershirt you've been wearing for a week?"

Jake looked down at his white undershirt. It was tight across his chest and shoulders, the fabric stretched thin and gray at the collar. There were sweat stains under the arms and a smudge of grease near the hem.

"Uh…"

"It is," Billy said, grinning. "He ran out of clean ones four days ago."

"Three days," Jake muttered.

"A week," Sarah corrected, pointing the spatula at him. "I saw you in that same shirt last Sunday. Do your laundry, Jake."

"Yes ma'am."

"I mean it."

"Yes ma'am."

Pops chuckled into his coffee. "Boy smells like a work site."

"I don't smell," Jake said.

"You do," Celeb said.

"Little bit," Louisiana added.

Billy Jr. wrinkled his nose. "Yeah, you kinda do."

Jake scowled and grabbed a piece of bacon off the plate Sarah set down. "Y'all can kiss my ass."

"Language," Sarah said sharply.

"Sorry, ma'am."

Tom looked up from his phone. "Jake, you're at the north fence line today. Alone. Fixing posts."

Jake nodded. "Yes sir."

"Billy, you and Jr. are checking the irrigation system on the east pasture. Celeb, Louisiana, you're with Josh moving cattle."

"Yes sir," they all said in unison.

Pops leaned back in his chair, cigar unlit between his teeth. "And I'm supervising. From the porch. With my brandy."

"Damn right you are," Tom said with a grin.

Sarah set down plates of eggs, bacon, and toast. The boys dug in like they hadn't eaten in days. The kitchen filled with the sounds of forks scraping plates, coffee mugs clinking, and low conversation about the day's work.

It was a morning like any other.

Jake finished his eggs, drained his orange juice, and stood. "I'm headin' out."

"Take your radio," Tom said.

"Always do."

"And for the love of God," Sarah called after him, "do your laundry tonight!"

Jake waved over his shoulder as he walked out the door, the screen slamming behind him.

Pops watched him go, then took a long sip of his spiked coffee.

"That boy's gonna get himself in trouble one of these days," he muttered.

Nobody disagreed.

Chapter 2: The Abduction

Jake's truck bounced over the rough trail to the north fence line, kicking up dust in the morning heat. He had his radio clipped to his belt, a thermos of coffee in the cup holder, and a toolbox rattling in the truck bed. The fence posts out here had been leaning for weeks—wind damage from the last storm—and Tom wanted them fixed before they lost any cattle.

He parked near the damaged section, killed the engine, and stepped out into the Texas sun. It was already pushing ninety degrees and it wasn't even eight o'clock yet.

The surveillance camera mounted on his truck dashboard blinked its steady red light—standard equipment for all consortium vehicles. Jake didn't give it a second thought.

Jake grabbed his tools, set them down by the first post, and got to work. He dug around the base, reset the angle, packed in fresh dirt. Sweat soaked through his already-dirty white undershirt within minutes. He should've brought more water.

An hour passed. Maybe two. The sun climbed higher.

He didn't hear the truck approaching until it was close.

Jake looked up, squinting. A white pickup he didn't recognize rolled to a stop about thirty yards out. Two men got out. Both wearing jeans, work boots, and ball caps pulled low. One was tall and lean. The other shorter, stockier, with a thick beard.

"Help you?" Jake called out, wiping sweat from his forehead.

"Yeah, actually," the tall one said, walking closer. "We're lost. Looking for Route 9?"

Jake frowned. Route 9 was nowhere near here. "You're about fifteen miles off. Head back the way you came, take a left at the—"

The shorter one rushed him from the side.

Jake barely had time to turn before the man tackled him hard into the dirt. He threw an elbow, connected with something solid, heard a grunt. But then the tall one was on him too, pinning his arms.

"Get off me!" Jake roared, thrashing.

A fist slammed into his ribs. Then another. The air left his lungs in a rush.

They flipped him onto his stomach, wrenched his arms behind his back. Jake bucked and twisted, but the stocky one had his full weight on Jake's shoulders. Rough rope bit into his wrists, looping tight, cutting off circulation.

"Son of a bitch!" Jake snarled through gritted teeth.

The tall one grabbed his ankles, yanked them together, and wrapped more rope around his boots. Jake kicked hard, caught him in the knee. The man swore and punched Jake in the kidney. Pain exploded up his spine.

"Hold still, cowboy," the bearded one growled.

They rolled him onto his side. Jake opened his mouth to yell—and a filthy rag was shoved between his teeth. He gagged, tried to spit it out, but they wrapped duct tape around his head, sealing it in.

Jake's chest heaved, his breath coming hard through his nose. His eyes burned with rage.

The tall one leaned down, holding up a syringe.

"Nighty-night."

Jake's eyes went wide. He thrashed harder, but bound hand and foot, there was nothing he could do. The needle plunged into his forearm. The plunger went down.

His vision started to blur almost immediately. His body went slack despite every instinct screaming at him to fight.

They hauled him up, dragged him toward their truck. His radio lay in the dirt beside his tools. His truck sat there, door still open, dashboard camera recording everything.

The last thing Jake saw before the world went black was the dusty Texas sky spinning above him.


When Jake's eyes cracked open again, the first thing he felt was pain.

His shoulders screamed. His arms were wrenched behind him, elbows and forearms bound together so tight he couldn't feel his fingers. His wrists were lashed to his lower back, a rope around his waist keeping them pinned there. His upper arms were tied a few inches apart, and a rope ran between them, pulling him upward.

He was hanging.

His boots dangled a few inches off the concrete floor, all his weight pulling on his shoulders. The gag was still in his mouth, tape still wrapped around his head. His white undershirt had been pulled up over his head, exposing his bare chest and stomach, already slick with sweat.

Jake blinked hard, trying to focus through the haze.

The room was small. Concrete walls. A single overhead bulb. And directly in front of him—a video camera on a tripod, red light blinking.

Streaming.

His heart hammered against his ribs. He tried to twist, to get his feet under him, but the rope held him fast. Every movement sent fire through his shoulders.

The tall man stepped into view, smirking.

"Welcome back, cowboy," he said, looking straight at the camera. "Your boy's gonna hang here till we get our money. Half a million dollars. You got twenty-four hours."

He turned to Jake, still grinning.

"Say hello to your family."

Jake's blood ran cold.

They were watching.

Chapter 3: 911

Billy and Jr. finished checking the irrigation system on the east pasture by noon. The heat was brutal, the kind that made your shirt stick to your back and your throat feel like sandpaper.

"Let's swing by the north fence line," Billy said, wiping sweat from his face. "See if Jake needs help."

Jr. nodded and climbed into the passenger seat. They drove the twenty minutes across the property, windows down, radio off. Something felt wrong. Billy couldn't put his finger on it, but his gut was tight.

When they crested the hill and saw the empty space where Jake's truck should have been, Billy's stomach dropped.

Tools scattered in the dirt. A thermos lying on its side. No Jake. No truck.

"Jake!" Billy yelled, jumping out before the truck even stopped. "Jake!"

Nothing.

Jr. was already on the ground, circling the scene. His face went hard.

"Billy."

Billy turned. Jr. held up a piece of cut rope. Then another. A discarded syringe lay in the dirt near Jake's scattered tools. His radio was half-buried in the dust.

"No," Billy breathed.

Jr.'s hand went to the emergency button on his belt. He pressed it hard.

"911 Billy Jr. 911 Billy Jr. 911 Billy Jr." The automated voice blasted out three times across the encrypted frequency, followed by a sharp tone.

Within seconds, voices crackled over the radio.

"Jr., what's wrong?" Tom's voice, sharp and urgent.

"Jake's gone," Jr. said, his voice steady but cold. "His truck's gone. Tools are here. Radio's here. We found cut rope and a syringe."

Silence.

Then Pops: "Where are you, boy?"

"North fence line. Near the old ridge."

"Stay put," Tom ordered. "We're coming to you."

"No sir," Jr. said. "We're heading back to the command center. We need to track Jake's truck GPS and pull any satellite we can get. Now."

Billy stared at Jr., his chest tight, his fists clenched. His twin brother was gone.

"Move," Jr. said quietly.

They didn't speak on the drive back.


By the time they pulled into the ranch house, vehicles were already converging. Tom and Ray. Josh from the south pasture. Sheriff Wade Nelson and his sons, Wilson and Ryan, arrived in their patrol trucks. The Beaumonts pulled up right behind them. Robert and Caroline looked grim.

Inside, the command center was already lit up. Jr. and his three buddies—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez—were at the consoles, fingers flying over keyboards. Louisiana stood behind them, arms crossed, watching the screens.

"Got the truck's GPS," Renzo said. "Signal's still active. Moving south on County Road 47."

"How far?" Wade asked.

"Twenty miles out and increasing."

"Launch the drones," Jr. said. "Thermal and visual. I want eyes on that truck."

Mattern and Rodriguez were already on it. Two drones lifted off from the back of the property within minutes.

Then Jr.'s tablet buzzed. All their tablets buzzed at once.

A notification. A link.

Jr. opened it.

The screen filled with live video.

Jake. Hanging by his arms. Shirt pulled up. Sweating. Gagged. A man's voice off-camera.

"Your boy's gonna hang here till we get our money. Half a million dollars. You got twenty-four hours."

The feed didn't cut. It stayed live. Jake's chest heaving. His boots dangling. His face twisted in pain.

Sarah turned away, her hand over her mouth. Tom's knuckles went white on the back of Jr.'s chair.

Billy stared at the screen, his jaw locked, his breath coming hard.

Pops stepped forward, cigar clenched between his teeth.

"Find him," he growled. "Find my boy. Now."

Chapter 4: Escalation

Jake's shoulders were on fire. Every breath sent jolts of pain through his chest and back. He'd tried twisting, tried getting his feet under him, but the rope held him suspended, boots swinging uselessly above the concrete.

The camera's red light blinked steadily. Watching. Recording. Streaming.

The tall one walked into frame, holding something. Scissors.

Jake's eyes went wide.

"Let's give 'em a better view," the man said, grinning at the camera.

He grabbed the hem of Jake's already-filthy white undershirt and started cutting. The fabric gave way easily, tearing up the front, exposing Jake's sweat-soaked chest and stomach. The man yanked the remains of the shirt higher, bunching it around Jake's neck and face.

Jake tried to yell through the gag, but it came out muffled and useless.

"There we go," the man said. "Now they can really see you sweat."


Command Center, Benson Ranch

"Drone One has visual on the truck," Mattern said, his eyes locked on the screen. "Abandoned warehouse, south side of County Road 47. No movement outside."

"Thermal?" Jr. asked.

Rodriguez pulled up the thermal feed. "Three heat signatures inside the building. Two moving. One stationary."

"That's Jake," Billy said, his voice tight.

Wade leaned over Jr.'s shoulder. "Can we get closer?"

"Not without tipping them off," Jr. said. "We need to know the layout first."

Tom paced behind them, his jaw set. Ray stood with his arms crossed, watching the live feed on the tablet. Sarah had left the room—she couldn't watch anymore.

Robert Beaumont stood beside Josh, both men's faces grim. Wilson and Ryan Nelson flanked their father, hands on their duty belts.

Pops stood in the corner, cigar unlit, flask in hand. His eyes never left the screen showing Jake.

"How long till we move?" Wilson asked.

"We're not moving till we know what we're walking into," Wade said. "These boys are armed. If we spook them—"

"They'll kill him," Tom finished.

Billy's fists clenched. "So we just sit here and watch?"

"We work," Jr. said quietly. "We find the angle. Then we move."


The Warehouse

The bearded one came back with more rope.

Jake's heart hammered. What now?

The man grabbed Jake's ankles and bent his legs back sharply. Jake grunted in pain, his body arching. The rope looped around his ankles, then pulled taut, connecting to the bindings at his wrists.

Hogtied. While hanging.

The pressure on his shoulders doubled. His back screamed. He couldn't straighten his legs without yanking his arms. He couldn't relax his arms without his legs pulling them tighter.

He was trapped in his own body.

Sweat dripped off his nose, his chin, pooling on the concrete below. His chest heaved with each breath, ribs straining against the unnatural position. The dirty undershirt bunched around his head half-blinded him, soaked through with sweat.

The tall one stepped into view again, holding something small. Wires. Electrodes.

No.

Jake thrashed, but there was nowhere to go. The man pressed the sticky pads onto Jake's bare chest. One on each side of his ribcage. Another just above his navel. A fourth lower on his stomach.

"Let's see if this gets their attention," the man said, holding up a small battery pack.

Jake's eyes went wide above the gag. He shook his head violently, tried to twist away. The ropes bit deeper.

The man flipped the switch.

The shock hit Jake like being kicked by a horse.

Every muscle in his body locked. His back arched violently, straining against the hogtie. His fingers splayed. His toes curled in his boots. The scream that tore from his throat was swallowed by the gag, coming out as a strangled, animalistic sound.

His vision whited out.

Three seconds. Five. Ten.

When it stopped, Jake's body went limp, swinging slightly on the rope. His chest heaved, gasping for air through his nose. Sweat poured off him in sheets. His muscles twitched involuntarily.

The camera kept recording.

"That's one," the tall man said to the camera. "You got twenty-three hours and fifty-nine minutes. Every hour, he gets another."


Command Center

The room exploded.

"Those sons of bitches!" Billy roared, lunging toward the screen.

Josh caught him, held him back. "Easy, Billy. Easy."

"I'm gonna kill them," Billy snarled. "I'm gonna kill them both."

Sarah had come back to the doorway. When Jake's body convulsed on screen, she let out a choked sob and turned away. Caroline Beaumont put an arm around her, leading her out.

Tom's face had gone pale, then red, then stone-cold. His hands gripped the back of Jr.'s chair so hard his knuckles were white.

"Tell me we have something," Tom said, his voice deadly quiet.

Robert Beaumont spoke up, his Texas drawl tight with anger. "We got guns. We got men. Let's go get him."

"And walk into what?" Wade said, his sheriff's training overriding his fury. "We don't know how many are in there. We don't know their positions. We go in hot, Jake's dead."

"He's gonna be dead if we sit here and watch!" Billy shouted.

Ryan Nelson stepped forward. "Dad's right. We need intel first. Then we move fast."

"Working on it," Renzo said, his voice tight. He was pulling satellite images, cross-referencing with the drone footage. "Building's got two entry points. Front and back. Windows are boarded."

"Power lines?" Wade asked.

"Active," Rodriguez said. "But we can cut them if needed."

Jr. pulled up a schematic on his tablet. "If we cut power, we lose the feed. We lose eyes on Jake."

"And they panic," Ray added. "We need them calm. Thinking they're in control."

Wilson crossed his arms. "So we play along. Make them think they're winning."

Pops finally spoke, his voice low and deadly. "Then we give 'em what they want."

Everyone turned.

"We send the money," Pops said. "Or make 'em think we did."

Tom nodded slowly. "A fake transfer."

"Ray, can you do it?" Wade asked.

Ray was already on his phone. "I'll call the bank. We can set up a dummy account, make it look like half a million moved. It'll buy us time."

"How much time?" Billy demanded.

"Enough," Jr. said, his eyes still on the screen where Jake hung limp, chest still heaving. "Enough to get him out."

On the tablet, the tall man walked back into frame. Reached for the battery pack again.

"No," Tom breathed.

The shock hit. Jake's body seized again, harder this time. His muffled scream filled the audio. His muscles strained so hard against the ropes that blood appeared at his wrists where the bindings cut into skin.

When it stopped, Jake didn't go limp. He hung there shaking, head down, chest pumping like a bellows.

Josh looked away. "Jesus Christ."

Robert's jaw was set. "I'm in. Whatever you need. My guns, my truck, my life. I'm in."

"We all are," Wilson said quietly.

Billy stared at the screen, tears running down his face, his whole body trembling with rage.

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

Chapter 5: The Gambit

Ray hung up his phone and looked at Tom. "It's done. Dummy account's active. Transfer shows half a million moved from the consortium's holdings to an offshore account. Soon as they check, they'll see it."

"How long before they realize it's fake?" Wade asked.

"Long enough," Ray said. "Bank says maybe two, three hours before anyone could verify the funds aren't really there."

Tom nodded. "Send them the confirmation."

Jr.'s fingers flew across the keyboard. "Sending now."

On the screen, Jake hung motionless, his body still trembling from the last shock. His chest rose and fell in shallow, rapid breaths. Blood dripped from his wrists onto the concrete below.

Billy couldn't look away. His brother. His twin. Hanging there like a piece of meat.

"Come on," Billy muttered. "Take the bait. Take it."


The Warehouse

The tall man's phone buzzed. He pulled it out, glanced at the screen, then grinned.

"We got it," he said to his partner. "Transfer's confirmed. Half a million."

The bearded one stepped closer, looked at the phone. "You sure?"

"Look for yourself. It's there."

They both turned to look at Jake, still hanging, still shaking.

"Cut him down," the tall one said.

"What?"

"We got the money. Cut him down and let's go."

The bearded one pulled out a knife and sawed through the rope between Jake's upper arms. Jake's body dropped hard to the concrete floor with a sickening thud. He landed on his side, still hogtied, still gagged, unable to break his fall.

Jake grunted, the air forced from his lungs. His vision blurred. Pain screamed through every nerve.

The tall one kicked Jake's shoulder, rolling him onto his back. "Enjoy the concrete, cowboy."

They grabbed their gear, unplugged the camera, and headed for the door. Within minutes, the sound of their truck engine roared to life outside, then faded into the distance.

Jake lay alone in the silence, his body a mass of pain, still bound hand and foot.


Command Center

"Truck's moving," Rodriguez said, watching the GPS tracker. "Heading west on County Road 47, picking up speed."

"They took it," Wade said. "They actually took it."

"Drones, stay on them," Jr. ordered. "I want eyes the whole way."

"On it," Mattern confirmed.

Tom was already moving. "Everyone, load up. We're going to that warehouse. Now."

"What about the thermal?" Billy asked.

Rodriguez checked. "Still one signature inside. On the ground. Minimal movement."

Billy's stomach dropped. "Minimal?"

"He might be unconscious," Wade said grimly. "Or worse. We need to move."

They grabbed weapons—rifles, shotguns, sidearms. Wade and his sons checked their duty weapons. Robert Beaumont pulled a hunting rifle from his truck. Even Pops strapped on a pistol.

"Let's go get our boy," Tom said.


The Warehouse

Jake lay on his side in a pool of his own sweat, his body screaming. But his mind was clearing. The shock of hitting the floor had jolted him awake.

They were gone.

He was alone.

Get free. Get up. Move.

Jake's eyes scanned the room through the sweat and blood. Concrete walls. Nothing. Wait—there. A nail jutting from the wall about two feet up, rusty and bent.

He rolled onto his stomach, cursing through the gag—muffled sounds of rage and pain. His arms were still bound behind him: elbows and forearms lashed together, wrists tied to his lower back, upper arms roped a few inches apart. His ankles were still bound tight.

But the hogtie was cut. He could move his legs.

Jake inched himself across the concrete like a worm, every movement sending fresh agony through his shoulders. Sweat poured off him, mixing with the blood from his wrists. He reached the wall, rolled onto his side, and positioned his bound elbows against the nail.

He started sawing.

The rope was thick. The nail was dull. But Jake worked it back and forth, back and forth, his face contorted with effort. Sweat dripped into his eyes. His muscles trembled. Through the gag, he cursed—wordless, furious sounds.

Come on. Come on, you son of a bitch.

A strand frayed. Then another.

Jake sawed harder, ignoring the screaming in his shoulders. The rope at his elbows started to give. One loop loosened. Then another.

His elbows separated.

Jake gasped through his nose, nearly blacking out from relief and pain. His forearms were still bound, but his elbows were free. That meant he had some play in his upper arms.

He worked his shoulders, twisting, pulling. The rope binding his upper arms started to loosen. Inch by inch, he worked it down, his muscles burning, fresh sweat pouring off him.

The upper arm ropes came free.

Now his hands. Still bound at the wrists, still tied to his lower back by the waist rope. But with his elbows and upper arms free, he had mobility.

Jake took a breath, then did something he'd learned as a kid on the ranch—the back flip escape.

He brought his knees up to his chest, threaded his bound hands under his boots, and rolled backward. His body flipped, his bound wrists passing under his feet. He landed hard on his back, his hands now in front of him.

"Mmmph!" The sound through the gag was half-curse, half-triumph.

Jake sat up, his hands shaking in front of him, still bound at the wrists but finally where he could see them. His fingers were bloody, slick with sweat, barely responsive. But they could move.

He attacked the knot at his wrists with his teeth and fingers. It was tight, soaked with sweat and blood. He pulled. Twisted. Cursed through the gag.

The knot shifted. One loop came free.

Jake worked faster, his fingers fumbling, slipping. More sweat poured down his face, dripping onto his bound wrists.

Another loop. Another.

The rope fell away.

His hands were free.

Jake ripped the tape off his head in one savage motion, then yanked the gag from his mouth. He sucked in huge gulps of air, coughing, spitting out the taste of oil and sweat.

"Sons of bitches," he rasped.

He bent forward and attacked the rope around his ankles. His fingers worked fast now, fueled by rage. The knot came loose. The rope fell away.

Jake stood. His shoulders screamed. His wrists throbbed. But his legs—his legs were strong. Ranch work, years of riding, running fence lines—his legs held.

He heard engines. Multiple trucks. Close.

Jake ran for the door.


Outside the Warehouse

Six trucks skidded to a stop fifty yards from the building. Doors flew open. Men poured out, weapons raised.

"Wade, you and your boys take the back," Tom ordered. "Robert, Josh, with me on the front. Billy, Jr., stay with—"

"I'm going in," Billy said, chambering a round.

Tom didn't argue.

They moved fast and low, fanning out. Wade, Wilson, and Ryan circled around back. Tom, Robert, Josh, and Billy approached the front door, weapons up.

"On three," Tom whispered. "One... two—"

The warehouse door burst open.

Jake ran out—shirtless, bloody, rope burns around his wrists and ankles, sweat pouring down his face—but running hard, running strong.

Every gun swung toward him.

"Don't shoot!" Billy screamed. "Don't shoot! It's Jake!"

Jake kept coming, eating up the ground between them. Billy dropped his rifle and ran to meet him.

They collided hard, Billy catching his brother in a fierce embrace.

"I got you," Billy said, his voice breaking. "I got you, brother."

Jake held on for a moment, breathing hard, then stepped back. His eyes were clear. Hard. Furious.

Tom reached them, his hand gripping Jake's shoulder. "Son—"

"I'm okay," Jake said, his voice rough but strong. "I'm okay."

Wade and his sons came running from the back of the building. Sarah appeared from one of the trucks with water and a blanket. She draped it over Jake's shoulders. He drank deep, then wiped his mouth.

Pops stepped forward, cigar in his mouth, eyes wet. "Tough son of a bitch."

Jake looked up at Jr., who stood nearby with his tablet.

"Where are they?" Jake asked.

Jr. met his eyes. "We're tracking them. Drones have eyes on their truck. They're heading west on 47."

Jake's jaw set. Blood and sweat still dripped down his face, but his stance was solid. Strong.

"Good," he said. "Then let's go get those bastards."

Billy looked at him. "Jake, you just—"

"I'm going," Jake said, his voice like iron. "They hung me up like an animal. Shocked me. Streamed it to my family."

He looked around at the men—his father, his brothers, Pops, the consortium.

"I'm going," Jake repeated. "And I'm bringing the ropes."

Tom looked at his son—battered, bloody, unbroken—and nodded slowly.

"Then let's finish this."

Chapter 6: The Hunt

Jake sat in the passenger seat of Billy's truck, wrapped in Sarah's blanket, water bottle in hand. His wrists were wrapped in gauze—Sarah had insisted on at least that much. The rest of the convoy followed behind: Tom and Ray, Josh and Robert, Wade and his sons, Pops riding shotgun with Wilson.

Jr. was in the back seat with his tablet, coordinating with the other three wiz kids back at the command center.

"Drone Two has them," Jr. said. "They stopped at a gas station off Highway 83. Filling up."

"How far?" Tom's voice came through the radio.

"Twenty-two miles. They're not in a hurry. They think they're free and clear."

Jake's jaw tightened. His hands gripped his knees, knuckles white despite the gauze.

Billy glanced at his brother. "You sure you're good?"

"I'm good," Jake said flatly.

"Drone feed shows two subjects," Jr. continued. "White Chevy Silverado, plates covered. They're inside the station now. Buying snacks."

"Snacks," Billy muttered. "Sons of bitches."

"ETA twelve minutes at current speed," Jr. said. "What's the play?"

Tom's voice came back. "We box them in. No shooting unless they shoot first. Wade, you're taking point on the arrest."

"Copy that," Wade said.

Jake leaned forward. "I want first contact."

Silence on the radio.

"Jake—" Tom started.

"I want first contact," Jake repeated, his voice cold and hard. "They see me walk up to that truck, they'll know it's over."

Billy looked at his brother, then keyed his radio. "Dad, he's right. They think Jake's still tied up in that warehouse. They see him standing, they'll fold."

Another pause.

"Fine," Tom said. "But Wade's boys stay on him. Anything goes sideways, they pull Jake out."

"Yes sir," Wilson and Ryan said in unison.

Jr. looked up from his tablet. "They're back in the truck. Pulling out. Heading south on 83."

"We'll intercept at the junction," Tom said. "Three trucks front, three trucks back. Nowhere to run."

"Copy," everyone responded.

Jake stared out the windshield, his breathing steady, his eyes burning with cold fury.

"Jake," Billy said quietly.

"What."

"You did good back there. Getting yourself out."

Jake didn't respond for a moment. Then: "They made a mistake leaving me alive."


Highway 83, Junction with County Road 47

The white Silverado rolled down the empty highway, the two men inside laughing, music playing. The tall one drummed his fingers on the steering wheel. The bearded one scrolled through his phone, checking the bank transfer again.

"Half a million," he said, grinning. "Easiest money we ever made."

"Told you these ranch boys would pay," the tall one said. "Probably sitting around crying right now."

They didn't see the trucks until it was too late.

Three vehicles came from the north, three from the south, converging fast. The Silverado was boxed in before the driver could even hit the brakes.

"What the—"

Doors flew open. Men poured out, weapons drawn. Sheriff's deputies, ranchers, all armed, all advancing.

"Hands! Let me see your hands!" Wade shouted, his service weapon aimed at the driver's side window.

The tall one froze, hands raised. The bearded one reached for something under the seat.

"Don't do it!" Ryan Nelson yelled.

The bearded one stopped.

"Out of the truck! Now! Driver first!"

The tall one opened the door slowly, hands up. He stepped out, eyes wide, scanning the armed men surrounding him.

Then he saw Jake.

Walking forward. Shirtless under a blanket draped over his shoulders. Rope burns visible on his wrists. Blood still streaked across his chest. But walking. Standing. Staring.

The tall one's face went white.

"No," he breathed. "No way. You were—"

"Tied up?" Jake said, his voice like gravel. "Yeah. I was."

He let the blanket drop to the ground.

The tall one saw the rope burns, the electrode marks, the bruises. All of it.

"Passenger, out!" Wade ordered.

The bearded one climbed out, hands raised, his eyes locked on Jake.

"How did you—"

"Doesn't matter," Jake said, stepping closer. Wilson and Ryan flanked him, weapons trained on the kidnappers. "You made a mistake."

"We got the money," the bearded one said, his voice shaking. "The transfer went through. We were leaving. We weren't gonna hurt—"

"You already hurt him," Billy said, stepping up beside Jake. "We all watched."

Tom moved forward with zip ties. "On your knees. Hands behind your head."

The tall one dropped to his knees. The bearded one hesitated.

"Now," Wade said, his voice deadly calm.

He knelt.

Tom zip-tied their hands behind their backs, then stepped back.

Jake looked at Jr. "You bring the rope?"

Jr. held up a coil of rope—the same rope they'd found at the work site, cut from Jake's body.

Jake took it.

"Jake," Wade said carefully. "They're in custody. We'll take them in."

"I know," Jake said. "But first—"

He knelt in front of the tall one, held up the rope so the man could see it.

"This look familiar?" Jake asked.

The tall one's face went pale.

Jake looped the rope around the man's upper arms, pulled it tight, then lashed his elbows together behind his back. The man grunted in pain.

"That's what you did to me," Jake said quietly. "Remember?"

He moved to the bearded one, did the same. Elbows bound. Arms wrenched back. Both men gasped as the ropes bit into their flesh.

"Wait," the bearded one said, panic rising in his voice. "Wait, we gave him back. The money's transferred. We—"

Pops stepped forward, cigar clamped between his teeth, grinning like a wolf.

"About that money," Pops said.

The tall one looked up. "What about it?"

"It was fake," Pops said, taking the cigar from his mouth. "Dummy account. Not a penny of real money in it."

The color drained from both men's faces.

"What?" the bearded one whispered.

"You heard me," Pops said, leaning down. "Fake. Bank set it up special for us. By now, it's already been flagged and frozen. You got nothing."

"No," the tall one said. "No, I saw it. I checked the account—"

"You saw what we wanted you to see," Ray said, stepping forward. "Takes about three hours for anyone to verify funds that size are actually real. You boys took the bait and ran before you checked."

The bearded one's mouth opened and closed. "But... but we..."

"You kidnapped a rancher's son," Tom said, his voice cold. "Tortured him. Streamed it. Demanded ransom. That's aggravated kidnapping, assault, extortion." He looked at Wade. "What's that carry in Texas, Sheriff?"

"Life," Wade said flatly. "Without parole if the DA wants to push it. And trust me, he will."

The tall one's face went slack. "No. No, this can't—"

"Oh, it can," Pops said, grinning wider. "And it will. You boys are gonna spend the rest of your miserable lives in Huntsville. And you won't see a dime for it."

He took a long pull from his flask, then leaned down close to the tall one's face.

"How's it feel, son?" Pops asked. "Getting nothing but rope and hard time?"

The tall one's eyes filled with tears. The bearded one hung his head, his body shaking.

Pops straightened up, chuckling. "Dumb sons of bitches."

Jake stood, looking down at the two men bound with the same rope they'd used on him. His face was hard, but there was satisfaction in his eyes.

"Wade," Jake said. "They're yours."

Wade nodded. "Wilson, Ryan, load them up."

The Nelson brothers hauled the two men to their feet and marched them toward the patrol truck. Both kidnappers stumbled, their arms bound painfully behind them, the reality of their situation sinking in.

"No money," the bearded one muttered. "No money. Oh God, no money..."

"Shut up," Wilson said, shoving him forward.

Jake watched them go, his chest heaving, his fists slowly unclenching.

Billy put a hand on his shoulder. "It's over."

Jake nodded slowly. "Yeah. It's over."

Pops walked up, flask in hand, still grinning. "That was fun."

Tom shook his head but couldn't hide a slight smile. "You enjoyed that way too much."

"Damn right I did," Pops said. He offered the flask to Jake.

Jake took it, drank deep, then handed it back.

"Proud of you, boy," Pops said, his tone softening. "Damn proud."

Tom stepped forward, pulled Jake into a rough embrace. "Let's go home."

Jake nodded against his father's shoulder.

"Yeah," he said. "Let's go home."

Chapter 7: Home

The sun was setting by the time the convoy rolled back onto Benson Ranch. Orange and purple streaked across the Texas sky, and the air had finally started to cool.

Jake sat in Billy's truck, still wrapped in Sarah's blanket, but his eyes were clearer now. Sharper. The shock was wearing off, replaced by exhaustion and a bone-deep weariness.

"You need the hospital?" Billy asked as they pulled up to the house.

"No," Jake said. "I need a shower. And a beer."

Billy grinned. "I can work with that."


Inside, Sarah had already started cooking. The smell of pot roast, potatoes, and fresh bread filled the kitchen. She looked up when Jake walked in, her eyes immediately going to his bandaged wrists, the rope burns on his arms, the bruises on his chest.

"Jake—"

"I'm okay, Mom," Jake said quietly.

She crossed the room and pulled him into a tight hug. He stood there for a moment, then wrapped his arms around her.

"I'm okay," he repeated.

She held him a moment longer, then stepped back, wiping her eyes. "Go clean up. Supper's in thirty minutes."

Jake nodded and headed upstairs. Billy followed.


In the frat house, Jr., Celeb, and Louisiana were already there, sitting on the bunks. They looked up when Jake and Billy walked in.

Pops was there too, leaning against the doorframe, cigar in his mouth.

"Jake," Jr. said, standing.

Jake looked at his nephew—sixteen years old, but he'd handled the command center like a veteran today. "You did good, Jr. Real good."

Jr. nodded, his jaw tight. "I'm glad you're okay."

"We all are," Celeb said quietly.

Louisiana just nodded, his usual easy grin replaced with something more serious.

Jake moved toward his bunk to grab clean clothes, but Billy stopped him.

"Hold up," Billy said. He went to his own drawer and pulled out a crisp, clean white undershirt. He held it up, grinning. "Here."

Jake stared at it.

"What, you thought you were gonna wear another dirty one?" Billy said. "You wore that last one for a week. Then you got kidnapped in it. Then they cut it off you on camera. I think it's time for a fresh start."

Jr. snorted. Louisiana covered his mouth, trying not to laugh.

Jake reached for the shirt. "Thanks."

"Don't thank me yet," Billy said. "This means you gotta do your own laundry from now on. I'm not giving you any more of mine."

"I'll do my damn laundry," Jake muttered.

"Will you though?" Celeb asked, grinning now.

"Because you said that last week," Louisiana added.

"And the week before," Jr. said.

Pops chuckled from the doorway. "Boy went and got himself kidnapped in a dirty undershirt. Sarah about had a heart attack when she saw it on that video feed."

Jake's face reddened. "I was gonna wash it."

"When?" Billy demanded. "Next month?"

"Today, actually," Jake shot back. "If I hadn't been, you know, tied up."

The room went silent for a beat.

Then Pops barked out a laugh. "Tied up. That's good, boy."

Jr. started laughing. Then Celeb. Then Louisiana. Then Billy, shaking his head.

"Too soon?" Jake asked, but he was grinning now too.

"Way too soon," Billy said, still laughing. "But I'll allow it."

Jake took the clean undershirt and grabbed jeans from his bunk. "I'll be back in ten."

"And Jake?" Billy called after him.

Jake turned.

"Seriously. Do your laundry."

"Yeah, yeah."

Jake headed for the bathroom. Behind him, he could hear them still laughing, the sound mixing with Pops' rough chuckle.

The shower ran for a long time.


By the time everyone gathered around the long table in the kitchen, the whole consortium was there. Tom and Sarah at the head. Pops in his usual spot, flask and cigar nearby. Ray, Josh, and Rebecca. Billy, Jake, Jr., Celeb, and Louisiana. Wade and Mary Nelson. Wilson, Ryan, and Edna. Robert and Caroline Beaumont.

The Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes had been invited but declined—they knew this was a family moment. But they'd sent word: they were glad Jake was home.

The table was loaded with food. Pot roast, mashed potatoes, green beans, fresh bread, gravy. Sarah had cooked enough to feed an army.

Jake sat between Billy and Jr., his wrists still bandaged, wearing the clean white undershirt under a flannel shirt.

For a moment, no one spoke.

Then Pops stood up. He disappeared into the other room and came back carrying a bottle—Jack Daniel's Single Barrel, the expensive stuff he kept hidden for special occasions.

"Pops," Sarah said, eyeing the bottle.

"Hush, woman," Pops said, but his tone was gentle. "Today calls for it."

He started pouring shots, moving around the table. Small glasses for everyone. Even the ladies. Sarah opened her mouth to protest, then closed it. Mary Nelson looked at Wade, who just nodded. Caroline Beaumont smiled and accepted hers.

When everyone had a glass, Pops raised his own.

"Seventy-six years on this earth," Pops said, his voice carrying across the table. "I've seen a lot. Done a lot. Lost people. Found people. But today—"

His voice caught. He cleared his throat.

"Today we got our boy back. Not because we paid. Not because we begged. But because we're smarter, tougher, and meaner than the bastards who took him. And because Jake here—" he looked at his grandson, "—refused to quit."

Jake's jaw tightened, his eyes glistening.

"So here's to Jake," Pops continued, raising his glass higher. "Who got himself free. To the wiz kids who tracked him down. To Wade and his boys for taking those sons of bitches into custody. To Tom and Sarah for raising boys with backbones. And to all of us—" he gestured around the table, "—for being the kind of family that shows up armed and ready when one of our own is in trouble."

He paused, then grinned.

"And here's to those two dumbasses spending the rest of their lives in Huntsville with nothing but rope burns and regret."

Laughter rippled around the table.

"To family," Pops said. "To Jake. And to never backing down."

"To Jake!" everyone echoed.

They drank. The whiskey burned going down—smooth and expensive and worth every penny.

Sarah wiped her eyes. Mary Nelson squeezed Wade's hand. Caroline smiled at Robert. Tom nodded at his father, pride in his eyes.

Jake set down his glass, overwhelmed.

"Thank you," he said quietly. "All of you."

Billy clapped him on the back. Jr. raised his glass again. The table erupted in conversation—relief and joy mixing with the food and the whiskey.

Sarah finally passed the pot roast. Plates filled. Forks moved. And for the first time all day, it felt like everything might actually be okay.


After supper, the boys retreated to the frat house. Jr. pulled out the hidden beers from under the floorboards. Celeb grabbed the Jack Daniels from the back of the closet—not the expensive stuff, just the regular. Louisiana found clean glasses.

They sat on the bunks and the mattresses, passing the bottle, sipping beers, not saying much.

Finally, Jr. spoke. "I watched the whole thing. On the feed. I couldn't... I couldn't do anything but watch."

Jake looked at him. "You found me. You tracked the truck, launched the drones, set up the fake transfer. You did plenty."

"We all wanted to go in sooner," Billy said. "But we had to wait. Had to be smart."

"You were smart," Jake said. "You got me out alive."

Celeb raised his beer. "To the wiz kids. And to Jake getting free."

They drank.

Louisiana leaned back against the bunk. "Man, when you came running out of that warehouse, I about lost it. Thought you were gonna collapse."

"I almost did," Jake admitted. "But I wasn't gonna let them win. Not after what they did."

Billy looked at his brother. "You scared the hell out of me today."

"I know," Jake said quietly. "I'm sorry."

"Don't be sorry. Just... don't get kidnapped again."

Jake managed a small grin. "I'll try."

They sat in comfortable silence for a while, passing the bottle, the exhaustion of the day finally catching up.

Jr. looked at Jake. "You gonna be okay?"

Jake nodded slowly. "Yeah. I will be."

"You need anything—" Billy started.

"I know," Jake said. "I got you. I got all of you."

He looked around the frat house—at Billy, his twin in everything but blood. At Jr., the nephew who was more like a little brother. At Celeb and Louisiana, who'd become family in just over a year.

"We're good," Jake said.

Pops appeared in the doorway, cigar in hand, flask in the other.

"You boys got room for an old man?" he asked.

"Always," Jr. said, making space on the bunk.

Pops settled in, took a pull from his flask, and passed it to Jake.

Jake drank, then handed it back.

They sat together—five boys and an old war vet—passing the bottle and the flask, talking about the day. About the warehouse. About the look on those kidnappers' faces when they realized the money was fake.

"You should've seen it," Billy said, grinning. "That tall one started crying."

"Like a baby," Pops said, chuckling. "Dumb son of a bitch."

Jr. leaned back. "I still can't believe they fell for it. The fake transfer."

"Greed makes men stupid," Pops said. "Always has."

Jake took another sip of beer. "I'm just glad it's over."

"Amen to that," Louisiana said.

The door suddenly swung open.

Sarah stood there, hands on her hips, eyes scanning the room—the beers, the Jack Daniels bottle, the flask making its rounds.

Everyone froze.

"Mom—" Jake started.

Sarah picked up the empty laundry basket sitting just outside the door and hurled it at Jake. It bounced off his chest and landed at his feet.

"If you can drink," Sarah said, her voice sharp but not without humor, "you can run a washing machine."

She turned on her heel and walked out.

The room was silent for three full seconds.

Then Billy burst out laughing. He jumped up, grabbed his pile of dirty clothes from under his bunk, and dumped them in the basket at Jake's feet.

"She's right," Billy said, grinning. "You heard the woman."

Jr. snickered and added his own dirty shirt to the pile.

"Me too," Celeb said, tossing in a pair of jeans.

Louisiana threw in socks. "Can't argue with Sarah."

Jake stared at the growing pile of laundry in the basket, then looked up at his roommates.

"You're all assholes."

"And you're doing our laundry," Billy shot back.

Pops was laughing so hard he had tears running down his face. He slapped his knee, cigar clamped between his teeth, wheezing with laughter.

"That woman," Pops gasped between laughs, "is a goddamn national treasure."

Jake looked down at the basket, then back up at Billy, then at Pops still howling with laughter.

And despite everything—despite the kidnapping, the torture, the fear, the pain—Jake started laughing too.

They all did.

The frat house filled with the sound of it—five boys and an old war vet, laughing until their sides hurt, until they couldn't breathe, until the day's darkness finally lifted.

Jake picked up the laundry basket, still grinning.

"Fine," he said. "But you're all helping fold."

"Deal," Billy said.

And for the first time since that morning, Jake felt like he could breathe.

He was home.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Brotherhood

 


Chapter 1: Morning at the Frat House

The door to the frat house slammed open at 5:47 AM.

"Get your lazy asses out of those goddamn beds before I drag you out by your fuckin' ears!"

Pops stood in the doorway of the second-floor bedroom, silhouetted by the hallway light, a cigar already clamped between his teeth and a coffee mug in his gnarled hand. He was seventy-six years old and meaner than a rattlesnake before breakfast. His bedroom was right next door, and the command center was on the other side—he could hear everything that went on in the frat house, and he made sure the boys knew it.

Jake groaned from the top bunk near the window. "Jesus Christ, Pops."

"Don't you take the Lord's name, boy. Your mama will have my hide." Pops took a long pull from his coffee. "Now move it. Breakfast in fifteen and Josh has assignments."

Billy swung his legs off the bottom bunk and rubbed his face. Across the room on the other bunk, Celeb was already sitting up, grinning. Jr. was on the top bunk above him, still buried under his blanket—sixteen years old and convinced sleep was a constitutional right.

Between the two bunk beds, on a mattress thrown directly on the floor, Louisiana groaned and pulled a pillow over his head. His Baton Rouge drawl came out muffled. "Y'all are too damn loud."

"Get up, Louisiana," Pops barked. "I ain't running a hotel."

"Feels more like a prison," Louisiana muttered, but he sat up, his dark hair sticking up at wild angles.

"Prisons got worse coffee," Pops said. "Now move it. All of you."

Jr. hadn't moved. Billy could see the lump under the blanket on the top bunk, completely still.

"Jr., you dead over there?" Billy called.

"Wish I was," came the muffled reply.

Pops walked over and slapped the side of Jr.'s bunk hard enough to rattle the frame. "Up. Now. Or I'm getting the hose."

"You wouldn't."

"Try me, boy."

Jr. sat up, hair sticking in every direction, squinting against the hallway light. "I'm up, I'm up."

"Damn right you are." Pops turned and headed for the door. "Fifteen minutes. Don't make me come back."

When the door closed, Jake dropped down from the top bunk and stretched. "Man, he's in a mood."

"He's always in a mood," Billy said, pulling on his jeans.

"Fair point."

Louisiana sat up on his mattress, rubbing his eyes. "Does he ever wake y'all up like a normal person?"

"Nope," Jr. said from his bunk. "This is normal."

Celeb laughed. "You get used to it."

They dressed quickly—jeans, work shirts, boots. Billy pulled on a clean white undershirt and buckled his belt with the large silver buckle he'd won at a rodeo two years back. He grabbed his black cowboy hat off the bedpost and set it on his head.

Jake glanced over. "Looking fancy."

"Just dressed," Billy said.

"You're wearing the good buckle."

"It's the only one I wear."

"Still counts as fancy."

They stumbled out into the hallway, past Pops' bedroom door and the command center, and headed downstairs. The smell of flapjacks and coffee drifted up from the kitchen, along with the sound of Sarah and Rebecca's voices working in tandem. The Benson ranch house was never quiet in the morning.

By the time they made it downstairs, the kitchen was full. Sarah was at the stove flipping flapjacks while Rebecca poured coffee into a line of mugs. Tom sat at the table reviewing something on a clipboard. Ray was already dressed like he had a meeting with a congressman, scrolling his phone. Josh leaned against the counter, arms crossed, looking like a man with a long list and a short day.

Pops was at the head of the table with his coffee, cigar, and a plate already stacked with flapjacks and bacon.

"About damn time," Pops said. "Thought I was going to have to eat your shares."

"You'd eat all of it and still ask for seconds," Jake said, sliding into a chair.

"Damn right I would."

"Dad, language," Sarah said without turning around from the stove.

"Woman, I'm seventy-six years old. If I can't cuss in my own house, what the hell did I fight a war for?"

"You fought so you could say the F-word at breakfast?"

"Among other freedoms, yes."

Billy grinned and reached for the bacon. Jake nudged him. "Wait for everyone."

"I'm starving."

"You're always starving."

"Boys," Tom said, his voice calm but final. They both settled. Tom Benson didn't raise his voice often, but when he did, you listened. "Sit. Eat. Josh has the day's work."

They sat.

Rebecca brought over a platter of flapjacks and set it in the center of the table. Sarah followed with bacon and a bowl of scrambled eggs. For a few minutes there was only the sound of forks and chewing. Then Josh cleared his throat.

"All right. Ray, you're on the books today. We've got the feed supplier coming by at ten, and I need you to go over the new contract."

Ray nodded, still scrolling his phone.

"Jake, you and Celeb are on the north pasture. We've got fence repair from last week's storm, and I want it done before the cattle rotation tomorrow."

"Got it," Jake said.

"Jr., you and Louisiana are with me and your dad. We're moving equipment."

Jr. perked up. He loved anything involving the big machines. Louisiana nodded, shoveling flapjacks into his mouth.

Josh turned to Billy. "Billy, I need you to run into town. We've got parts waiting at Nelson's, and I need them picked up and brought back by noon. Fuel injectors for the big tractor."

Billy nodded. "No problem."

"Take your truck. It's a straight shot, but don't screw around. I need those parts."

"I won't."

Jake grinned. "Just don't get distracted."

"When do I ever get distracted?"

"You want me to make a list?"

Billy smirked. "Shut up."

Pops chuckled and stubbed out his cigar in the ashtray. "You two are like a married couple."

"We're brothers," Billy said.

"Same damn thing," Pops said. "Now finish your food and get to work. Daylight's burning."

They finished breakfast, cleared their plates, and headed out. Billy grabbed his keys off the hook by the door and walked out into the cool Texas morning. His truck—white, beat to hell, but reliable—was parked near the barn.

Jake followed him out, pulling on his work gloves. "Hey."

Billy turned. "What?"

"Don't forget the fuel injectors. Josh'll have your ass."

"I'm not gonna forget."

"Just saying."

Jake grinned. "See you at lunch, goldfish."

Billy flipped him off, climbed into his truck, and turned the key. The engine rumbled to life.

He didn't know it would be the last normal thing he'd do for a long time.

Chapter 2: The Ambush

Billy made it about thirty miles before he saw the truck on the side of the road.

It was an old Chevy, hood up, hazards blinking. A man stood next to it, waving his arms. Billy's first instinct was to keep driving—Josh wanted those parts by noon, and he wasn't about to get sidetracked. But the man looked desperate, and out here on County Road 47, you didn't just leave people stranded.

Billy slowed and pulled over onto the shoulder, dust kicking up behind his tires.

The man jogged over before Billy even had the door open. He was maybe forty, weathered face, sweat-stained cap, work boots. "Thank God. My radiator's shot and I got no signal out here."

Billy climbed out, leaving the engine running. "Where you headed?"

"Just into town. I can pay you for gas if you can give me a lift."

Billy hesitated. Something felt off, but he couldn't place it. The guy seemed harmless enough. "Yeah, all right. Hop in."

"Appreciate it, son." The man turned and whistled toward the truck. "Come on!"

Two more men emerged from behind the Chevy.

Billy's stomach dropped.

They moved fast. The first one was on him before he could react, grabbing his arm and twisting it behind his back. Billy tried to pull free, but the second man slammed into him from the side, driving him against his truck.

"Don't fight it, kid," the first man said, his voice low and calm. "You do what we say, nobody gets hurt."

Billy's heart hammered. "What the hell—"

"Shut up." The man shoved him toward the driver's side door. "You're gonna drive. Nice and easy."

"I'm not—"

The second man pulled a knife from his belt and held it where Billy could see it. "You are. Get in the truck."

Billy's mouth went dry. He looked at the knife, then at the empty road stretching in both directions. No cars. No help.

"Get in," the first man said again.

Billy got in.

The man with the knife climbed into the passenger seat. The other two piled into the back, one directly behind Billy. The first man—the one who'd flagged him down—leaned forward from the back seat.

"Here's how this works," he said. "You drive where I tell you. You don't try anything stupid. You do that, and in a few hours, you'll be back home telling your buddies about the crazy day you had. Understand?"

Billy's hands gripped the wheel. "What do you want?"

"Drive."

"Where?"

"East. I'll tell you when to turn."

Billy's mind raced. He could try to crash the truck. Jump out at a stoplight. But the guy in the passenger seat still had the knife, and the two in the back were big enough to snap him in half if they wanted to.

He put the truck in gear and pulled back onto the road.


They drove in silence for the first twenty minutes. Billy kept his eyes on the road, but his brain was working overtime. These guys weren't random. They knew who he was. They'd been waiting.

"Why me?" Billy finally asked.

The man in the back—the leader—chuckled. "You're a Benson, ain't you?"

"So?"

"So your family's got money. Lots of it."

Billy's stomach twisted. "You're gonna ransom me?"

"Smart kid."

"You're insane. My family's not gonna—"

"Your family's gonna do exactly what we tell them," the man said. "Because if they don't, you're not coming home."

The guy in the passenger seat grinned. "Relax, kid. It's just business."

Billy's hands tightened on the wheel. "They'll find you."

"Maybe. But by the time they do, we'll be long gone with the cash."

"You don't know my family."

"I know enough." The man leaned back. "I know your granddaddy's got a temper. I know your brother Josh runs a tight ship. And I know your old man's got more cattle than half the county combined. That's enough."

Billy didn't respond. His mind was spinning through options, but every one ended badly.

"Turn here," the man said, pointing to a side road.

Billy turned.


An hour into the drive, the guy in the passenger seat lit a cigarette and cracked the window. "You play football?"

Billy blinked. "What?"

"Football. You look like a football player."

"I rode rodeo."

"No shit? You any good?"

Billy didn't answer.

"Come on, kid. We're gonna be here a while. Might as well talk."

"I don't want to talk."

The guy shrugged. "Suit yourself."

From the back seat, one of the other men spoke up. "How old are you?"

"Twenty-one," Billy said.

"Jesus. You're just a kid."

"Shut up, Darrell," the leader said.

"I'm just saying—"

"I said shut up."

Darrell went quiet.

Billy glanced in the rearview mirror. The guy who'd spoken—Darrell—looked uncomfortable. The leader, on the other hand, looked calm. Too calm.

"What's your name?" Billy asked.

The leader smiled. "You can call me Hank."

"That your real name?"

"Does it matter?"

Billy didn't answer.

"Didn't think so," Hank said. "Now keep driving."


By the time they hit the ninety-minute mark, Billy's hands were cramping from gripping the wheel. They'd turned off the main roads half an hour ago, winding through back country Billy didn't recognize.

"Slow down," Hank said. "Next left."

Billy turned onto a gravel road that cut through a stretch of scrubland. A quarter mile in, a building came into view—an old warehouse, half-collapsed, rusted metal siding peeling away from the frame.

"Pull around back," Hank said.

Billy's chest tightened. This was it. Whatever was going to happen, it was going to happen here.

He pulled around the side of the building and stopped.

"Turn it off," Hank said.

Billy turned off the engine. His hands stayed on the wheel.

Hank leaned forward. "Here's the deal, kid. We're gonna tie you up, take a few pictures, and send them to your family with instructions. You cooperate, this goes smooth. You don't, and it gets messy. Your call."

Billy's jaw clenched. "You're making a mistake."

"Maybe," Hank said. "But it's our mistake to make."

The guy in the passenger seat opened his door. "Let's go."

They pulled Billy out of the truck and marched him toward the warehouse.

He didn't look back.

Chapter 3: The Warehouse

The inside of the warehouse was worse than the outside. Concrete floors cracked and stained, rusted beams overhead, and the smell of mold and decay hanging in the air. Sunlight filtered through gaps in the metal siding, cutting sharp lines through the dust.

They marched Billy toward the back, boots echoing in the empty space. His heart was pounding so hard he could hear it in his ears.

"There," Hank said, pointing to a doorway in the far corner.

The room was small—maybe four feet wide, six feet deep. More of a closet than a room. The walls were cinderblock, the floor bare concrete. A single bare bulb hung from the ceiling, unlit.

"Inside," Hank said.

Billy stopped. "Wait—"

"Inside. Now."

The guy with the knife gave him a shove. Billy stumbled through the doorway.

"Turn around," Hank said. "Hands behind your back."

Billy's mind raced. This was his last chance to fight, to run, to do something. But the knife was still out, and Darrell was blocking the doorway, and the third guy—the one who hadn't said a word—was the size of a linebacker.

Billy turned around and put his hands behind his back.


The rope was rough and tight. Hank worked quickly, binding Billy's wrists together first, then his forearms, then his elbows. Billy winced as the rope pulled his shoulders back, forcing his arms into an unnatural position.

"Too tight," Billy said.

"It's supposed to be tight," Hank said.

He wrapped more rope around Billy's torso, looping it over his shoulders and under his arms, cinching it tight enough that it pressed deep into his white undershirt. Billy felt the fabric bunch and stretch as Hank pulled the ropes tighter, lashing his upper arms to his sides.

"Jesus," Billy muttered.

"Don't move," Hank said, tying off the knots.

Billy tested the ropes. His arms were useless, locked in place behind his back. He couldn't move his shoulders. Couldn't twist. Couldn't do anything.

Hank stepped back and looked him over. "Good. Now open your mouth."

"What?"

"Open. Your. Mouth."

Billy clenched his jaw.

The guy with the knife stepped forward. "You want me to make him?"

"No," Billy said quickly. He opened his mouth.

Hank shoved a wadded-up rag between his teeth and tied another strip of cloth around his head, knotting it tight at the back of his skull. Billy gagged, the cloth pressing against his tongue, the taste of oil and dirt filling his mouth.

"Good boy," Hank said. "Now against the wall."

Billy didn't move.

Darrell grabbed his shoulder and shoved him backward. Billy stumbled, his bound arms slamming into the cinderblock wall. He grunted, the impact jarring his shoulders.

"Stay there," Hank said.

He crouched down and wrapped rope around Billy's ankles, cinching them tight. Then he looped more rope around Billy's thighs, just above his knees, pulling them together until Billy could barely shift his weight.

Billy's breathing was coming fast now, panic rising in his chest. He was standing, but he couldn't move. Couldn't use his arms. Couldn't sit. Couldn't do anything but stand there, pressed against the wall.

Hank stood and wiped his hands on his jeans. "All right. Let's get the pictures."

The guy with the knife pulled out a phone and stepped back. "Say cheese, kid."

Billy glared at him.

The flash went off. Once. Twice. Three times.

"Got it," the guy said, checking the screen. "Looks good."

"Perfect." Hank turned to Billy. "Here's the deal. We're gonna send these to your family with our demands. If they cooperate, you'll be out of here by tonight. If they don't..." He shrugged. "Well, let's hope they cooperate."

Billy tried to speak, but the gag turned it into a muffled grunt.

"Save your breath," Hank said. "Nobody's gonna hear you out here anyway."

He walked to the door. Darrell and the other guy followed.

"Wait," Darrell said, glancing back at Billy. "What if—"

"What if nothing," Hank said. "He'll be fine. It's just a few hours."

"But—"

"Move."

Darrell hesitated, then stepped out into the warehouse.

Hank grabbed the door—a heavy metal thing that scraped against the concrete—and started to close it.

Billy made a noise, a desperate sound muffled by the gag.

Hank paused. "Relax, kid. There's air." He pointed up.

Billy looked. At the top of the wall, just below the ceiling, there was a small sliding window. It was open, maybe six inches, letting in a thin sliver of light and a faint breeze.

"See?" Hank said. "You'll be fine."

He closed the door.

The space went dark except for the dim light from the window above. Billy heard the sound of a lock clicking into place. Then footsteps. Voices, muffled and distant. Then the sound of his truck starting up.

Then nothing.


Billy stood in the dark, his back pressed against the cold cinderblock wall, his arms useless behind him, his legs bound tight.

The room was so small. Too small. The walls felt like they were closing in.

He tried to shift his weight, but the ropes around his thighs made it nearly impossible. He tried to move his arms, but they were locked in place, the ropes biting into his skin.

He tried to breathe slowly, evenly, but the gag made it hard. His mouth was dry. His jaw ached.

The walls pressed in.

He was alone.

And no one knew where he was.

Chapter 4: The Slow Panic

The first few minutes, Billy tried to think.

He stood against the cinderblock wall, his breathing loud in his ears, muffled by the gag. The ropes bit into his shoulders and wrists. His legs ached from standing locked in one position.

Think. Focus.

Josh would notice when he didn't come back by noon. Jake would call. Jr. would check the GPS in his truck. The consortium had systems for this. Protocols. They'd find him.

He just had to wait.

Just wait.

Billy shifted his weight, trying to ease the pressure on his legs. The ropes around his thighs dug deeper. He leaned back against the wall, but his bound arms made it awkward, painful.

He looked up at the small window near the ceiling. Light filtered in, pale and weak. He couldn't tell what time it was. How long had it been? Twenty minutes? An hour?

Stay calm. They'll come.


Time stretched.

Billy tried counting in his head to keep track, but he kept losing count. One hundred. Two hundred. What did that even mean? Minutes? Seconds?

His legs were cramping. He tried to bend his knees, but the ropes held them too tight. He tried to sit, to lower himself to the floor, but with his arms bound behind him and his legs tied together, he couldn't control his balance. He'd just fall and hurt himself worse.

So he stood.

The walls seemed closer now. Had they always been this close?

Billy's breathing quickened. The gag made every breath feel insufficient. Not enough air. His chest tightened.

Calm down. Breathe through your nose. Slow.

He forced himself to inhale through his nose. Hold. Exhale.

Again.

Again.

His heart was still racing.


The room was so small.

Billy could almost touch both walls if his arms were free. Four feet wide. Maybe less. The cinderblock pressed in on either side of him. The door in front. The wall behind.

A closet. They'd locked him in a closet.

His pulse hammered in his throat.

Don't think about it. Think about something else.

He thought about Jake. About the stupid argument this morning over—what was it? He couldn't even remember. Something pointless.

He thought about Jr. and Louisiana loading equipment with Josh and his dad.

He thought about Pops at the kitchen table with his coffee and cigar.

He thought about his truck. White. Beat to hell. Reliable.

Gone now.

They took it.

And nobody knew where he was.


Panic crept in slowly, like water rising.

Billy's legs were shaking now. How long had he been standing? Hours? It felt like hours.

The light from the window had shifted. Or maybe it hadn't. Maybe he was imagining it.

The gag was suffocating him. He tried to work his jaw, to push the cloth out with his tongue, but it was tied too tight. His mouth was so dry. He couldn't swallow.

I can't breathe.

The thought came suddenly, sharp and cold.

I can't breathe. There's not enough air.

Billy sucked in through his nose, fast and hard. The air felt thin. Wrong.

The walls pressed closer.

No. Stop. You're fine. There's air. The window—

But the window was so small. Just a six-inch gap. What if it wasn't enough? What if the room was sealed everywhere else and that tiny crack wasn't enough and he was going to suffocate in here, alone, standing against a wall in the dark—

Stop.

Billy squeezed his eyes shut and tried to control his breathing, but it was coming too fast now, shallow and ragged.

His heart slammed against his ribs.

The ropes were too tight. His arms were going numb. His shoulders screamed.

He had to get out.


Billy twisted, throwing his weight forward, trying to pull his arms free.

The ropes didn't budge.

He twisted harder, wrenching his shoulders, feeling something pop. Pain shot down his arm, but he didn't stop. He pulled and yanked and thrashed, his boots scraping against the concrete, his bound legs barely keeping him upright.

The ropes bit deeper.

He tried to scream, but the gag turned it into a choked, muffled sound.

Get out. Get out. GET OUT.

He slammed his shoulder into the wall, then the other shoulder, trying to force his arms free. The cinderblock scraped his skin through his shirt. He felt the ropes cutting into his wrists, warm and wet.

Blood.

He didn't care.

He kept fighting.

Twisting. Pulling. Thrashing.

The room was shrinking. The walls were closing in. He couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. Couldn't—

His legs gave out.

Billy collapsed, his knees hitting the concrete hard. With his arms bound behind him and his legs tied together, he couldn't catch himself. He pitched forward, slamming his shoulder into the floor.

The impact knocked the wind out of him. He lay there, gasping through his nose, the gag choking him, his vision swimming.

He couldn't get up. Couldn't move. Couldn't do anything.

The darkness pressed down.

And Billy Benson, twenty-one years old, began to break.

Chapter 5: "911 Billy Jr."

Jake wiped the sweat from his forehead and checked his watch. 12:47 PM.

Billy should have been back by now.

He and Celeb had finished the fence repair on the north pasture an hour ago. They'd driven back to the ranch house for lunch, expecting to see Billy's white truck parked by the barn.

It wasn't there.

Jake walked into the kitchen where Sarah and Rebecca were cleaning up from lunch. "Billy back yet?"

Sarah looked up. "No. Hasn't come in."

"He say anything to you?"

"Just that he was going to Nelson's for the parts." Sarah frowned. "Why? What time was he supposed to be back?"

"Noon. Josh wanted those fuel injectors by noon."

Rebecca dried her hands on a dish towel. "Maybe he stopped somewhere."

"Billy doesn't stop," Jake said. "Not when Josh gives him a time."

Sarah's frown deepened. "Try calling him."

Jake already had his phone out. He dialed Billy's number and waited. It rang four times, then went to voicemail.

"Nothing," Jake said.

"Try again," Sarah said.

Jake did. Same result.

A knot formed in his stomach.


Jake found Jr. in the equipment barn with Tom and Josh, helping Louisiana secure a tarp over one of the tractors.

"Jr.," Jake called. "You got your iPad?"

Jr. looked up. "Yeah, why?"

"Billy's not back. Can you check the GPS in his truck?"

Jr.'s expression shifted immediately. He pulled the iPad from his back pocket and swiped it open. His fingers moved quickly across the screen.

Jake watched his face. Watched the frown deepen.

"What?" Jake said.

"His truck's not moving," Jr. said slowly. "Hasn't moved in..." He scrolled. "Three hours."

"Where is it?"

Jr. turned the iPad around. The map showed a blinking dot on a gravel road about forty miles east of the ranch, in the middle of nowhere.

"That's not anywhere near Nelson's," Jake said.

"No," Jr. said. "It's not."

Tom walked over, wiping grease from his hands. "What's going on?"

"Billy's truck," Jake said. "It's been sitting in the same spot for three hours. Out on County Road 47."

Tom's jaw tightened. "Call him."

"I did. He's not answering."

Josh came over, his face darkening. "Show me."

Jr. held up the iPad. Josh studied it for a long moment, then looked at Tom. "That's not right."

"No," Tom said quietly. "It's not."

Jake's chest tightened. "We need to go get him."

"Hold on," Josh said. "Let me think—"

Josh's phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out, glanced at the screen, and froze.

"What?" Tom said.

Josh didn't answer. He just stared at his phone, his face going white.

"Josh," Tom said sharply. "What is it?"

Josh turned the phone around.

The photo showed Billy—bound, gagged, pressed against a cinderblock wall. His arms were lashed behind him, ropes cutting deep into his white undershirt. The large silver buckle on his belt caught the light. His black cowboy hat was gone. His eyes were wide, terrified.

Jake felt like he'd been punched in the gut. "Jesus Christ."

Tom took the phone from Josh's hand. His jaw clenched so tight Jake could see the muscle jumping.

"There's a message," Josh said, his voice hollow.

Tom scrolled down. Read it. His face darkened.

"What does it say?" Jake demanded.

Tom looked up. His eyes were cold. "They want five hundred thousand dollars. They say if we call the cops, Billy dies. If we don't pay by midnight, Billy dies."

"Who?" Jake said. "Who sent this?"

"Unknown number."

Jr. was staring at the phone, his face pale. "Should I hit it?"

Josh hesitated for only a second. "Hit it."

Jr. tapped the screen three times.


The emergency alert went out across the entire consortium network.

Every radio. Every satellite phone. Every iPad.

A mechanical voice, calm and clear:

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

It repeated three times, then the encrypted frequency opened.

Jake grabbed the radio from his belt and keyed the mic. "This is Jake Benson. Billy's been taken. We've got a ransom demand and photos. His truck's been stationary for three hours on County Road 47. Everyone get to the ranch house. Now."

Static crackled. Then voices started coming in, one after another.

"This is Wade Nelson. On our way."

"Robert Beaumont. Rolling now."

"Renzo here. Coming in."

"Mattern. En route."

"Rodriguez. Moving."

Within minutes, trucks were firing up across half of Kings County. The consortium was mobilizing.


They started arriving within twenty minutes.

Wade Nelson's truck pulled up first, Sheriff Wade climbing out with his wife Mary right behind him. Horse and Ryan, his deputy sons, followed in their patrol vehicle.

Robert and Caroline Beaumont arrived next, their faces grim.

Then the Renzos—parents and their boys, Billy Renzo among them.

The Matterns. The Rodriguezes.

Trucks lined the driveway. Boots hit gravel. Doors slammed.

By the time everyone made it inside, the Benson kitchen and living room were packed. Men stood shoulder to shoulder around the table. The women gathered near the kitchen counter—Sarah, Rebecca, Mary Nelson, Caroline Beaumont, and the mothers from the other families, their faces pale but resolute.

Josh's phone sat in the center of the table, the photo of Billy still on the screen.

Nobody said anything for a long moment. They just stared at it.

Wade Nelson finally spoke. "Show me the message."

Josh scrolled down and handed him the phone. Wade read it, his face hardening. He passed it to Robert Beaumont, who read it and passed it to Mr. Renzo.

It made the rounds. Every man read it. Every face grew darker.

"Five hundred thousand by midnight," Wade said. "And no cops."

"You are a cop," Jake said.

"I'm also his neighbor," Wade said quietly. "And right now, I'm here as a neighbor."

Pops stood near the window, a cigar clenched in his teeth, his eyes fixed on the horizon. He hadn't said a word since everyone arrived.

Tom stood at the head of the table, his hands flat on the surface. "Here's what we know. Billy's truck has been sitting on County Road 47 for three hours. We've got GPS coordinates. We've got a ransom demand. We've got photos showing he's alive."

"Alive and tied up like an animal," Jake said, his voice shaking.

"He's alive," Tom said firmly. "That's what matters right now."

Jr. stood next to the table with his iPad, his fingers moving rapidly. "I've got the drones prepping. Thermal imaging's online. I can have them in the air in five minutes."

"Do it," Josh said. "Start with the truck location and expand outward."

"On it." Jr. glanced at his three friends—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, Daniel Rodriguez—who stood behind him. "Command center. Now."

The four boys disappeared up the stairs.

Wade looked at Tom. "What's the plan?"

"We find the truck," Tom said. "We find whoever took him. And we get Billy back."

"And the ransom?" Robert Beaumont asked.

"We'll pay it if we have to," Tom said. "But I want to know who we're dealing with first."

Jake was pacing, his hands clenched into fists. "We need to move. Now."

"We will," Tom said. "But we go smart. We go together. And we don't do anything that gets Billy killed."

Pops turned from the window. His voice was low, rough as gravel. "We find them. We get Billy. And then we make damn sure they never do this to anyone else's family."

Nobody disagreed.

The radio crackled. Jr.'s voice came through from the command center upstairs. "Drones are up. We've got visual on the truck location in ninety seconds."

Tom keyed his radio. "Copy that. Keep us posted."

He looked around the room at the assembled families—the consortium they'd built together. Neighbors. Friends. Brothers.

"All right," Tom said. "Let's go get my son."

Chapter 6: The Hunt

Jr.'s voice crackled over the radio from the command center. "Got them. Drone thermal picked up three heat signatures in an old equipment shed about twenty miles east of the truck location."

"Send coordinates," Tom said.

The convoy rolled out.


They found them thirty minutes later, exactly where Jr. said they'd be—a run-down building in the middle of nowhere. Billy's white truck was parked outside.

The consortium surrounded the place. Wade Nelson kicked in the door, service weapon drawn.

Inside, three men sat around a card table playing poker. Beer bottles scattered around. They looked up, startled.

"Hands up! Now!" Wade shouted.

The men raised their hands. One of them—Hank—knocked over his beer as he stood. "Easy, Sheriff. We ain't done nothing."

"On the ground. All of you."

They complied. Wade and his sons zip-tied their hands behind their backs and hauled them to their feet.

Tom walked in, Jake right behind him. Tom's face was carved from stone. "Where's my son?"

Hank shrugged. "Don't know what you're talking about."

"We got the photos you sent," Josh said, holding up his phone. "The ransom demand. Now tell us where he is."

"I want a lawyer," Hank said.

Darrell, the nervous one, shifted on his feet. "Man, maybe we should just—"

"Shut up," Hank snapped.

Tom looked at Wade. "Sheriff, I need a minute with these men. Privately."

Wade holstered his weapon. "I need to secure the perimeter. Horse, Ryan, come with me."

The deputies followed Wade outside. The other consortium men filed out behind them.

Jake hesitated. "Dad—"

"Outside, Jake," Tom said firmly.

Jake looked at his father, then at Pops, who stood in the corner with his arms crossed and murder in his eyes.

Jake left.

When the door closed, only Tom, Josh, and Pops remained with the three kidnappers.

Tom looked at his father. "They're all yours."

Pops stepped forward, rolling up his sleeves.

Hank's bravado cracked. "Wait—what are you—"

"Where's my great-grandson?" Pops said quietly.

"I'm not telling you shit."

Pops hit him.

Not a slap. A punch. Hard and fast, right to the gut. Hank doubled over, gasping.

"Where is he?"

"Go to hell," Hank wheezed.

Pops hit him again. Then the other one. Then Darrell, who yelped and tried to back away but had nowhere to go with his hands tied.

"Stop! Jesus Christ, stop!" Darrell shouted.

"Then talk," Pops said.

"He's at the warehouse!" Darrell blurted. "The old warehouse off County Road 51! Back room, locked in! That's where we left him!"

Pops grabbed Darrell by the collar. "If he's hurt worse than you showed in those pictures, I'm coming back for you. Understand?"

Darrell nodded frantically.

Pops let him go and turned to Tom. "Let's go get him."

Tom opened the door. "Wade! We've got the location!"

Wade came back in, eyeing the three men—Hank with a bloody lip, the other one nursing his ribs, Darrell pale and shaking. Wade looked at Tom. "They resist?"

"They resisted," Tom said flatly.

"Uh-huh." Wade gestured to his sons. "Load them up. We're taking them to lockup."

As the deputies hauled the kidnappers out, Jake grabbed his father's arm. "Where is he?"

"Old warehouse off 51," Tom said. "Let's move."

The convoy tore out of there, leaving Wade's sons to handle the prisoners.

They were going to get Billy.

Chapter 7: Finding Billy

The warehouse looked even worse in person than it had from the drone footage.

Rusted metal siding, half the roof caved in, surrounded by scrubland and nothing else for miles. The kind of place people forgot existed.

Tom brought the convoy to a stop fifty yards out. Men poured from the trucks, spreading out to secure the perimeter. Jr. stayed in the lead vehicle, monitoring the drone feeds, his face tight with worry.

"Thermal's still not picking up anything inside," Jr. said over the radio. "Those walls are too thick."

"We're going in," Tom said.

Jake was already moving toward the building, Celeb right behind him. Tom grabbed his arm. "Jake. Wait."

"He's in there—"

"And we're going to get him," Tom said. "But we do this right. Wade, Pops, you're with me. Everyone else holds position."

Jake looked like he wanted to argue, but Josh put a hand on his shoulder. "Let them go first."

"That's my brother in there."

"I know," Josh said quietly. "But if something's wrong, Dad needs to see it first."

Jake's jaw clenched, but he nodded.


Wade kicked in the main door, his weapon drawn. The three men entered the warehouse, sunlight cutting through the gaps in the walls, illuminating dust and decay.

"Billy!" Tom called out. "Billy, can you hear me?"

Silence.

They moved through the space, checking corners, clearing rooms. At the back, they found a heavy metal door with a padlock.

Tom's heart stopped.

"Here," he said.

Wade shot the lock off. It clattered to the concrete floor.

Pops grabbed the door handle and pulled. The door scraped open, metal grinding against concrete.

The smell hit them first—sweat, blood, fear.

The room was tiny. Four feet wide, maybe six feet deep. Barely enough space for a man to stand.

Billy was on the floor, crumpled against the far wall. His arms were still bound behind him, ropes cutting deep into his skin, dark with dried blood. His legs were tied together. The gag was still in his mouth. His white undershirt was soaked with sweat and streaked with blood where the ropes had cut into him.

His eyes were open but unfocused, staring at nothing.

"Jesus Christ," Wade breathed.

Tom moved first, dropping to his knees beside his son. "Billy. Billy, it's Dad. We're here. You're safe."

Billy didn't respond. His breathing was shallow, rapid.

Pops pushed into the small space, pulling a knife from his belt. "Hold him steady."

Tom held Billy's shoulders while Pops cut the ropes. First the gag—Billy gasped as it came free, his jaw working painfully. Then the ropes around his torso. Then his wrists.

The moment his arms were free, Billy cried out—a raw, broken sound. His shoulders had been locked in that position for hours. The circulation returning was agony.

"Easy, son. Easy," Tom said, his voice cracking. "We've got you."

Pops cut the ropes around Billy's legs. More blood. More rope burns.

Wade stepped back, giving them room. "I'll get the medics."

Billy's eyes finally focused. He looked at Tom, then at Pops, confusion and terror still written across his face.

"Dad?" His voice was hoarse, barely a whisper.

"I'm here," Tom said. "We're all here. You're safe now."

"I couldn't—I couldn't get out—the walls—"

"I know. I know. But you're out now."

Billy's face crumpled. Tears streaked down through the dirt and sweat. "I'm sorry. I'm sorry, I tried—"

"You've got nothing to be sorry for," Tom said, pulling his son against his chest. "Nothing."

Pops stood, his face hard as stone, but his eyes were wet. He looked at the tiny room, at the ropes on the floor, at the blood on the walls where Billy had torn himself trying to escape.

"We need to get him out of here," Pops said, his voice rough.

Tom nodded. "Can you stand?"

"I don't know," Billy said.

"We'll help you." Tom stood and lifted Billy with him, Pops supporting from the other side. Billy's legs nearly gave out, but they held him up.

They half-carried him out of the small room, out of the warehouse, into the sunlight.


Jake saw them coming and broke into a run.

"Billy!"

Billy looked up, saw his brother, and whatever was left of his composure shattered completely. "Jake—"

Jake reached them and threw his arms around Billy, careful of his injuries but unable to stop himself. "You're okay. You're okay. We got you."

Billy buried his face in Jake's shoulder and sobbed.

The rest of the consortium gathered around—Josh, Celeb, Louisiana, Robert Beaumont, the Renzos. Nobody said anything. They just stood there, a wall of men who'd come to bring one of their own home.

Jr. climbed out of the truck and ran over, his face streaked with tears. "Uncle Billy—"

"I'm okay," Billy managed, though he clearly wasn't. "I'm okay."

Rebecca was already there with the medical kit, Josh right behind her. "We need to get him to the hospital. Those wounds need cleaning and he's dehydrated."

"No hospital," Billy said quickly. "Just—just home. Please."

Rebecca looked at Tom. Tom nodded. "Home first. You can treat him there. If he needs more, we'll take him in."

"All right," Rebecca said. "But we need to move now."

They loaded Billy into the back of Tom's truck, Jake climbing in beside him, refusing to let go of his brother's hand.

As they pulled away, Pops stood in front of the warehouse, staring at the building that had held his great-grandson prisoner.

"You ready?" Tom called from the driver's seat.

Pops took one last look, then climbed into the passenger seat.

"Let's go home," he said.

The convoy headed back to the ranch, Billy safe among them.

But nobody was celebrating.

They all knew Billy had been found.

But whether he'd really made it out of that room—that would take longer to know.

Chapter 8: Brotherhood

They brought Billy home and Rebecca went to work.

She cleaned and bandaged the rope burns on his wrists and arms, gave him fluids, pain medication, and something to help him sleep. By evening, Billy was in his own bed in the frat house, Jake in the bunk above him refusing to leave, Jr. and Celeb and Louisiana keeping quiet vigil.

The whole consortium stayed for dinner—nobody wanted to leave until they knew Billy was really okay. Sarah and the women cooked enough food for an army. The men sat around the living room and kitchen, talking in low voices, drinking coffee that turned to whiskey as the night wore on.

Pops sat in his chair by the window, cigar lit, eyes on the stairs. Waiting for Billy to come down.

He didn't that night. He slept straight through until morning.


The next day, Billy woke up sore but clearer. The panic from the warehouse had faded to a dull ache in his chest—something he could push down, manage. He wasn't going to let it beat him.

He came downstairs for breakfast, and the whole family stopped talking when they saw him. Then Jake grinned and shoved a plate of flapjacks at him.

"About time, goldfish. Thought you were gonna sleep all day."

Billy took the plate and sat down. "How long was I out?"

"Sixteen hours," Rebecca said, checking his bandages. "Your body needed it."

"I feel like I got run over by a truck."

"You look like it too," Jr. said.

"Thanks."

Pops chuckled from the head of the table. "Boy's got color back. He'll live."

That afternoon, Wade Nelson showed up in Billy's white truck.

Billy was sitting on the porch when he saw it coming up the drive. His chest tightened—seeing his truck again brought everything back for a second. But then Wade climbed out, grinning, and tossed Billy the keys.

"Got it back from evidence," Wade said. "Cleaned it up for you. Good as new."

Billy caught the keys, turned them over in his hand. His truck. His life. Back.

"Thanks, Sheriff."

"Don't mention it." Wade clapped him on the shoulder. "You did good, kid. Real good."

After Wade left, Billy just sat there holding the keys. Jake came out and sat beside him.

"You all right?" Jake asked.

"Yeah," Billy said. And he meant it. "Yeah, I am."


That evening, Jr. came to Billy with an idea.

"Uncle Billy," Jr. said, sitting on the edge of Billy's bunk. "We should go hunting. All of us from the frat house. You, me, Jake, Celeb, Colt. And Pops said he'd come too."

Billy looked at Jake, who was leaning against the doorframe. "What do you think?"

"I think it's perfect," Jake said. "Get out of here for a couple days. Bring back a big pig. Have a roast with the whole consortium."

Billy felt something loosen in his chest. The idea of being out there, away from the house, away from the warehouse that still lived in the back of his mind—it sounded right.

"Let's do it," Billy said.


They left the next morning before dawn—Billy, Jake, Jr., Celeb, Louisiana, and Pops. Three trucks loaded with rifles, gear, and enough supplies for two days. It felt good to be behind the wheel of his own truck again, driving somewhere he chose.

They headed into the backcountry, twenty miles from the ranch, where the wild pigs ran thick. Set up camp in a clearing—tents, a fire, coffee. Pops took his chair out of the truck and set it up like he was holding court.

"You boys gonna hunt or just stand around looking pretty?" Pops said, lighting his cigar.

"We're waiting for instructions, sir," Celeb said with a grin.

"Instructions? Hell, go find a pig. Shoot it. Bring it back. What more do you need?"

Louisiana laughed. "You make it sound easy."

"It is easy," Pops said. "You're just lazy."

They split up into pairs—Billy and Jake, Jr. and Celeb, Louisiana with Pops. They'd cover more ground that way.


Billy and Jake worked a ridge line, glassing the valleys below. It was quiet except for the wind and the occasional call of a hawk. Billy felt himself breathing easier out here.

"You doing okay?" Jake asked after a while.

"Yeah," Billy said. "Better."

"Good." Jake lowered his binoculars. "Because if you're not, you can tell me. You know that, right?"

"I know." Billy looked at his brother. "I'm good, Jake. I promise."

Jake nodded. "All right. Then let's find this pig before Jr. does. Kid's been talking shit all morning about how he's gonna get it first."

Billy grinned. "He's sixteen. Let him talk."

"Hell no. I'm not losing to a sixteen-year-old."


They regrouped at camp for lunch. No sign of pigs yet, but plenty of tracks.

"They're here," Jr. said, studying a print near the creek. "Big ones too."

"How big?" Billy asked.

"Two-fifty, maybe three hundred pounds."

Pops took a pull from his coffee. "You boys better not miss. I didn't come out here to eat jerky for dinner."

"We won't miss," Jr. said confidently.

"That's what your uncle said last time," Pops said. "Missed a buck from forty yards."

"That was one time," Billy said. "And the wind shifted."

"Sure it did," Jake said, grinning.

"You missed a turkey last month," Billy shot back.

"That turkey was running."

"They all run when you shoot at them," Celeb said.

Louisiana laughed so hard he choked on his sandwich.

"All right, all right," Pops said. "Less talking, more hunting. Sun's burning."


They found the pig just before sunset on the second day.

Jr. spotted it first—a massive boar, easily two hundred and fifty pounds, rooting near a stand of oaks. He signaled silently, and the group moved into position. Billy, Jake, and Pops flanked right. Celeb and Louisiana flanked left.

Jr. took the center, dropping to one knee, rifle steady.

The boar lifted its head, sensing something.

Jr. didn't hesitate. One shot. Clean.

The boar dropped.

"Hell of a shot!" Jake called out.

Jr. stood, grinning ear to ear. "Told you I'd get it."

Pops walked over and clapped Jr. on the shoulder. "Good shooting, boy. Your daddy would be proud."

"Thanks, Pops."

They dressed the pig and loaded it in the truck. Billy stood back, watching Jr. and Jake joke about who'd done the most work. Louisiana was arguing with Celeb about something stupid. Pops supervised from his chair, cigar in hand.

Billy felt whole again.


By the time they rolled back into the ranch, the sun was setting and the whole consortium was waiting.

Word had spread. The boys were bringing back a pig. Time for a roast.

They set up in the big clearing near the barn—dug a pit, built a fire, got the pig on the spit. The Nelsons brought whiskey. The Beaumonts brought beer. The Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes brought sides—beans, cornbread, slaw.

By the time the pig was ready, it was full dark and the fire was roaring. Someone had set up lights. Music played from a truck radio. Kids ran around while the adults gathered in clusters, drinking and talking.

Billy stood near the fire with Jake and Jr., a bottle of Jack Daniels making the rounds. Pops walked over, cigar in hand, and looked at the pig.

"Nice work, boys," Pops said.

"Jr. shot it," Billy said. "Clean kill."

"That's my great-grandson," Pops said proudly. He looked at Billy, his eyes sharp. "You good?"

Billy met his gaze. "I'm good, Pops."

Pops nodded. "Good. Now get me some of that pig before Jake eats it all."

They ate and drank late into the night. Stories got told. Jokes got made. Someone started a poker game. The women sat together near the house, laughing about something the men would never know.

Billy sat with his back against a truck tire, Jake on one side, Jr. on the other, watching the fire burn down. Celeb and Louisiana were arguing about who'd carried more gear. Tom and Josh were talking with Wade and Robert. The whole consortium, together.

"You scared us, you know," Jake said quietly.

"I know," Billy said.

"Don't do it again."

"I won't."

Jr. nudged him. "You're still a goldfish, though."

Billy laughed. "Yeah. I am."

Jake handed him the bottle of Jack. Billy took a long pull and passed it to Jr., who did the same.

"To brotherhood," Jr. said.

"To brotherhood," Jake and Billy echoed.

The fire crackled. The stars came out. And Billy Benson, twenty-one years old, was home.

Brotherhood had healed all things.

THE END