Monday, June 30, 2025

The Bensons vs the Renzos

 


"

Chapter 1

"Now Renzo we're going to tie you up. Don't make it harder than it has to be."

"Fuck you Benson! When I break free of your ropes you and your boys are dead meat!"

Jake Benson stepped back and nodded to his brothers. "Get the rawhide."


Two hours earlier

Jason Renzo guided his horse toward the water station at the north pasture, checking his watch. The cattle should be bunched up there by now, and with the drought lasting into its third week, every head needed monitoring. At 26, he'd learned to read the land like his father had taught him before the accident took both parents five years ago.

The three Benson brothers appeared from behind the storage tank like ghosts.

"Morning, Jason." Jake Benson's voice carried that fake neighborly tone that never fooled anyone.

"Boys." Jason kept his hand casual near his rifle scabbard. "Little far from your spread, aren't you?"

"Could say the same about you." Pete Benson moved to flank him while Tommy circled wide. Ranch boys, all of them. They knew how to cut out a steer.

Jason saw it coming a heartbeat too late. The rope caught him clean around the shoulders, yanking him from the saddle as his horse shied. He hit the ground hard, rolling, reaching for his sidearm before Tommy's boot caught his wrist.

"Should've taken our offer last month," Jake said, pulling the rope tight. "Five times you cost us that contract. Five times."

They hogtied him with practiced efficiency - wrists to ankles, professional ranch work turned ugly. By the time they loaded him in the truck bed, Jason knew this wasn't about money anymore.


Chapter 2

The abandoned line cabin sat twenty miles from anywhere, generator humming outside. Jake positioned the propane heater while Pete set up the phone to record.

"Strip him down to shorts," Jake ordered. "Then get the rawhide wet."

Jason's chest gleamed with sweat as they bound him - wrists behind his back first, then elbows pulled together until his shoulders screamed. The rawhide went around his biceps, creating a web that trapped his arms completely. His legs got the same treatment: ankles, above and below the knees, thighs.

"You sons of bitches," Jason gasped as they soaked the rawhide. "My brothers will—"

"Your brothers will what?" Jake held up the phone, recording. "Watch you beg?"

Tommy positioned the heater six feet away. The propane flame roared to life, filling the cabin with dry heat.

"See, the thing about rawhide," Jake said conversationally, "is how it shrinks when it dries. Real slow at first. Then faster."

Jason's eyes went wide as understanding hit.

Pete pressed record and Jake smiled at the camera. "Tell your brothers hello, Jason. And tell them they better come quick."

The rawhide was already starting to tighten. make it harder than it has to be."

"Fuck you Benson, When I brake free of your ropes you and your boys are dead meat!"

Chapter 3

The barn fell silent as Marcus faced fifteen of the toughest cowboys in Texas. Rodriguez, the foreman, stepped forward first.

"How many of them bastards we talking about?" Rodriguez asked, adjusting his worn leather gloves.

"Three Benson brothers, maybe more," Marcus replied. "They got Jason trussed up like a calf for branding, using rawhide to slowly cut him apart."

A murmur of anger rippled through the group. These men had worked under Jason for years - he wasn't just their boss, he was family.

"Here's the play," Marcus continued. "Tony and I surrender like they want. You boys follow at a distance, radio silent. When you find where they're holed up, you wait for my signal."

"What signal?" asked Chavez, the youngest of the crew.

"Trust me, you'll know it when you hear it."

Rodriguez nodded slowly. "How long we got?"

Tony checked his watch. "Fifteen minutes to get to the water station."

"Mount up," Rodriguez ordered. "Half of you trail the trucks, half circle wide. Nobody moves until we know exactly where they're taking the bosses."


At the water station, the Benson brothers waited with coiled ropes and cold smiles. Marcus and Tony rode in with their hands visible, just like Jake had demanded.

"Smart boys," Jake said. "Step down slow."

The binding was swift and professional - hands behind backs, elbows pulled together, legs hobbled. They loaded the brothers into separate truck beds like livestock.

"Jason's waiting for you," Pete Benson called out as the trucks pulled away.

From a ridge two miles out, Rodriguez watched through binoculars as the convoy headed toward the old mining district. He keyed his radio.

"All units, targets moving northeast toward Devil's Canyon. Stay wide, stay quiet."

The abandoned line cabin came into view forty minutes later - generator running, smoke from a chimney, perfect isolation. Rodriguez smiled grimly as he counted the trucks.

"Found 'em," he whispered into his radio. "Everybody move in slow. We got some brothers to save."

Chapter 4

The line cabin reeked of sweat and fear. All three Renzo brothers lay on the rough wooden floor, stripped to their shorts, bound in webs of wet rawhide that bit deep into their flesh.

Jason had been suffering for over an hour now. The rawhide around his arms had shrunk so tight it ripped hair from his skin in bloody patches. His breathing came in short gasps through the gag.

Marcus and Tony had received the same treatment - wrists, elbows, biceps, ankles, knees, and thighs all wrapped in soaked rawhide pulled taut as guitar strings. The wet leather was already crushing into their bodies before the heat even began its work.

"Look at that," Tommy Benson said, kneeling beside Tony. "Rawhide's already pulling hair right out by the roots." He held up a clump of dark leg hair, blood still clinging to the follicles.

Pete positioned the propane heaters in a triangle around the three brothers. The roar of the flames filled the cabin with desert heat.

"Won't be long now," Jake said, testing a thick rope noose in his hands. "But we're not gonna let you die quick."

He dangled the noose over Marcus's face. "See, strangulation's an art. You can make it last... let you breathe just enough to stay conscious."

Tommy had his own noose, swinging it playfully over Jason's head. "Gonna be real interesting to see which one of you breaks first."

The rawhide was beginning its deadly work - shrinking, tightening, cutting circulation. Red welts appeared where the leather bit deepest, and the brothers' skin began turning pale beyond the binding points.

"Tell you what," Jake said, crouching between them. "First one to beg gets the quick death. The other two... well, we got all night."

Outside, Rodriguez and his men crept through the scrub brush, counting windows and exits. The rescue was fifteen minutes away.

The brothers just had to survive that long.

Chapter 5

"Time for the main event," Jake said, slipping the noose over Marcus's head. The rope settled around his neck like a deadly collar.

Tommy followed suit with Jason, while Pete took Tony. The three brothers lay helpless as the Bensons lifted the rope ends, taking up the slack.

"Easy now," Jake whispered, pulling just enough to tighten the noose around Marcus's throat. "Just a little pressure... let you know what's coming."

Marcus's eyes bulged as the rope bit into his neck. He could still breathe, but barely. Beside him, his brothers faced the same slow strangulation - enough pressure to terrify, not enough to kill. Yet.

"Look at them eyes," Tommy laughed, watching Jason's face turn red. "Like wild horses getting broke."

The rawhide continued its relentless work, cutting deeper into their flesh with each passing minute. Blood trickled from where the leather had torn skin, and their extremities were turning purple from lost circulation.

Jake released the pressure on Marcus's noose, letting him gasp for air. "That's just a taste. Next time we pull harder."

He was reaching for the rope again when the cabin door exploded inward.

Rodriguez came through first, rifle raised, followed by eight cowboys with murder in their eyes. "Drop them ropes NOW!"

The Bensons froze, hands still holding the nooses.

"I said DROP THEM!"

The ropes fell. Rodriguez kicked Jake away from Marcus while his men swarmed the other Bensons. Within seconds, the tables had turned - the kidnappers face-down on the floor, hands roped tight behind their backs with the same rawhide they'd used on the brothers.

"Get these boys free," Rodriguez ordered, pulling out his knife to cut the remaining restraints. The wet leather had bitten so deep it took careful work to avoid cutting flesh.

Once the brothers were freed and helped to their feet, Marcus stumbled over to where Jake hung from the rafter, noose tight around his neck, standing on his toes.

"How's it feel, you piece of shit?" Marcus spat directly in Jake's face. "Scared now?"

Tony joined him, still weak but full of rage. "Should've killed us quick," he wheezed, spitting on Tommy. "Now you get to hang here and think about it."

Jason, barely able to stand, managed to hawk and spit on Pete. "Tell me again about breaking horses, you bastard."

The three brothers stood there for a moment, looking at their tormentors strung up helpless.

"Load up," Rodriguez finally said. "Sheriff can find them like this."

Twenty minutes later, the Renzo brothers sat in the back of pickup trucks, wrapped in blankets, heading for the hospital. Behind them in the cabin, the Benson brothers hung from the rafters - nooses around their necks, standing on their toes, waiting for justice.

Cowboy justice.

Chapter 6

The smoke from the barbecue pits drifted across the Renzo ranch like incense, carrying the scent of mesquite and celebration. Three weeks had passed since the rescue, long enough for the brothers' rope burns to heal into pink scars and their voices to return to normal.

Children ran between the picnic tables, their laughter mixing with fiddle music from the makeshift stage. Maria Rodriguez bounced her baby on her hip while chatting with the other wives, all of them stealing glances at their husbands - the men who'd risked everything for the Renzo boys.

"Hell of a turnout," Sheriff Williams said, accepting a beer from Tony. His weathered face cracked into a rare smile. "Half the county's here."

"They should be," Marcus replied, his arm still stiff from the rope damage. "These people are family."

The sheriff nodded toward the crowd. "Speaking of family business - got word this morning. Judge sentenced all three Benson brothers. Jake got twenty-five to life for kidnapping and torture. His brothers got twenty each." He took a long pull from his beer. "Won't be seeing daylight for a very long time."

Jason, still moving carefully but grinning wide, raised his bottle. "To justice."

"To family," Marcus corrected.

The toast rippled through the crowd as Rodriguez climbed onto the stage, tapping the microphone. "Ladies and gentlemen, if I could have your attention."

The music died down as conversations hushed. Children found their parents' legs to hide behind.

"The Renzo brothers got something they want to say," Rodriguez announced.

Marcus stepped forward, Tony and Jason flanking him. The crowd of nearly two hundred people - cowboys and their families, neighbors, townspeople - all focused on the three young men who'd become local legends.

"Three weeks ago," Marcus began, his voice carrying across the silent gathering, "my brothers and I learned what family really means." His voice cracked slightly. "Not just blood family, but the family you choose."

He gestured to the cowboys scattered throughout the crowd. "These men didn't have to risk their lives for us. They had their own families to think about, their own safety to consider."

A baby cried softly in the distance, quickly hushed.

"But they came anyway," Tony continued, stepping forward. "Because that's what family does."

Jason, still hoarse from the noose damage, managed to add, "We can never repay what you did. But we can try."

Marcus reached into his jacket and pulled out a thick envelope. "Rodriguez, front and center."

The foreman looked confused but walked over. Marcus pressed the envelope into his weathered hands.

"Open it," Jason encouraged.

Rodriguez's eyes went wide as he peered inside. His wife gasped from the crowd - she could see his expression even from thirty feet away.

"Fifty thousand dollars," Marcus announced to the stunned crowd. "For every man who rode out that night."

The silence stretched for a heartbeat before erupting into cheers and tears. Women embraced their husbands while children, not understanding the money but sensing the joy, danced in circles.

Chavez, the youngest cowboy, openly wept as he hugged his pregnant wife. Old Pete Sanchez, who'd worked ranches for forty years, sat down hard on a hay bale, staring at his envelope in disbelief.

"This is what loyalty looks like," Marcus called out over the celebration. "This is what family looks like."

As the sun set over the Texas hills, painting the sky the color of hope, the music started up again. Children played, families laughed, and the Renzo brothers stood together, watching their chosen family celebrate.

They'd learned the hard way that some bonds are stronger than blood - they're forged in courage, loyalty, and love.

The scars on their arms would fade, but this moment would last forever.

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Who's first?

 


Chapter 1

Brian Benson, 21, stood talking with his brother Cody, 20, in the warehouse they were taken to. "They took the fuckin' truck," Brian said, "why did they not just leave us at the construction site?"

"Yeah," Cody replied, "and why did they make us strip to the waist and take our shirts?"

"Maybe they will send them to dad as proof they have us."

"Shit, just had a bad thought...what if they decided to hold us as hostages or for ransom?"

"Yeah and what if they tie us up or something...could that be why we're shirtless, so if they tie us with rope it will hurt our skin?"

"Don't even say that! If we're tied up we're fucked!!!"

It was then the door slid open and three men came in carrying coils of hemp rope and duct tape.

This is it, Brian thought, his muscular chest tightening as he watched the men approach. Just like every challenge we've ever faced. Who's first to figure a way out? Who's first to show strength? Always been me.

The first man, tall with weathered hands, motioned for Brian to turn around. "You first."

Of course me first, Brian thought with bitter satisfaction. Just like first across the finish line in high school track, first to finish the math homework, first to bench 200. Even kidnappers know who's the alpha.

Typical, Cody's mind raced as he watched Brian being grabbed. Big brother always has to go first. Well, just like when we raced to the bus stop every morning, or competed for Dad's attention, or tried to see who could hold their breath longest—we'll see who comes out ahead this time.

The rope was rougher than anything they'd ever used in their escape competitions. The man began with Brian's wrists, wrapping the hemp in tight figure-eights, the coarse fibers already biting into his skin. Brian's wrists were thick from years of construction work, but the kidnapper compensated by adding layer after layer, cinching each wrap tighter than the last.

Jesus, this is tight, Brian thought as the rope bit into his flesh. Way tighter than our games. But I've always been stronger than Cody, always lasted longer in every contest. I'll handle this better than him.

"Your turn," the second man said, grabbing Cody.

Finally, Cody thought, his competitive instincts kicking in despite the terror. Been waiting my turn since we were kids. Who finished their chores first, who got the higher SAT score, who could do more push-ups—let's see who handles this better.

Both brothers were spun to face each other as their captors worked. Cody was already being bound by the second kidnapper, who ran extra rope around Cody's massive arms. The rope went around his wrists first, then up to his forearms, binding them together. But it didn't stop there. More rope circled his elbows, forcing them closer together behind his back, making his chest muscles bulge forward.

This isn't like our practice sessions, Cody thought, panic starting to mix with his lifelong competitive drive. But Brian's watching me. Just like when we'd see who could take a harder hit in football, or who could work longer without complaining at the construction site. Can't show weakness first.

The third man stepped forward with more rope. Working on Brian now, he began wrapping hemp around the muscled biceps, pulling Brian's arms tighter against his back. The rope went around his arms, then through the elbow binding, creating an intricate web that made any movement impossible.

My arms are going numb, Brian realized with growing alarm. But look at Cody—he's trying not to wince. Same face he made when we'd compete to see who could hold ice cubes longest, or take cold showers, or finish Dad's brutal workout routines. This is just another contest.

Both brothers watched each other as their captors moved to their torsos, each measuring the other's reaction like they had through countless competitions. The rope went around Brian's chest, above his pecs, then below, cinching tight against his ribcage. Each wrap was methodical, calculated.

Can barely breathe, Brian thought desperately. But Cody's getting the same treatment. Who's going to break first? Who's going to show they can't handle it? Same question we've been asking since we were five years old.

Cody received identical treatment, the rope biting into his muscular torso. Even in terror, his mind catalogued Brian's responses. Big brother's sweating more than me. Just like when we'd see who could run farther, lift more, stay awake longer cramming for exams. Maybe I'm finally going to be first at something that matters.

"On the floor," the tall man ordered. "Face down."

Both brothers were pushed down onto the cold concrete, their eyes meeting with that familiar competitive intensity. The hogtie began—rope around their ankles, then pulled up to connect with their arm bindings, forcing them into agonizing arches.

Oh God, Brian's mind screamed as the rope cut into his chest with every breath. But I'm not giving Cody the satisfaction of seeing me break first. Same as every wrestling match, every endurance test, every stupid challenge we've ever done.

Brian's arch looks worse than mine, Cody noted even through his own agony. His feet are pulled higher. Finally—maybe I'm handling something better than the golden boy. Who's first to tap out? Who's first to show they can't take it?

The tall man approached with duct tape, sealing Brian's mouth first, then Cody's. Even gagged, both brothers' eyes burned with that same competitive fire that had driven them through twenty years of rivalry.

Can't even trash talk now, Brian thought, staring at his brother across the warehouse floor. But the question's still there. It's always been there. Who's stronger? Who's first to find a way out? Who's first to prove themselves?

Even tied up by kidnappers, Cody realized, meeting Brian's gaze, we're still asking the same damn question we've been asking our whole lives: Who's first?

The three men gathered their remaining rope and headed for the door. The tall one paused, looking back at the two bound figures.

"Don't bother struggling," he said matter-of-factly. "That's military-grade rope work. You ain't getting out of that."

The door slammed shut, leaving the Benson brothers alone in the darkness, more helplessly bound than they'd ever been in their lives, but still locked in the same competition that had defined them since childhood.

This changes everything, both brothers thought simultaneously. But if we do get out... who's first?

Chapter 2: The Struggle

The first hour was all about proving who was stronger.

Brian tested his bonds methodically, the way he'd approached every challenge since childhood. Just like when we'd time our escape games, he thought, working his wrists against the hemp. Start with the weakest point, work systematically.

He tried rotating his shoulders, feeling for any give in the elbow ropes. Nothing. The chest harness only seemed to tighten when he expanded his ribcage. Cody's probably panicking by now. I'll be out of this before he figures out where to start.

Across the warehouse floor, Cody was taking a different approach. Brian always overthinks everything, he reasoned, throwing his body weight against the hogtie rope. Sometimes you just have to muscle through it.

The rope bit deeper into his ankles as he strained, his muscular back arching even further. The chest bindings cut into his pecs with each desperate pull. Come on, something's got to give. There's always a weak spot.

What the hell is Cody doing over there? Brian watched his brother's violent struggling. He's going to hurt himself. This takes finesse, not brute force. Same as when we'd race to solve Dad's puzzles—I think, he just attacks.

But after two hours, neither approach was working.

Brian's wrists were raw now, the hemp fibers embedded in his skin. Every movement sent fresh pain shooting up his arms. This isn't like our games, the thought crept in despite his determination. We always tied knots we could eventually work loose.

My shoulders are on fire, Cody realized, finally stopping his thrashing. His chest was heaving against the rope harness, each breath a struggle. And look at Brian—his wrists are bleeding. Maybe brute force isn't the answer this time.

The third hour brought the first real fear.

I can't feel my fingers, Brian's panic began to build. The circulation had been cut off so long that his hands were numb, useless. How am I supposed to work knots if I can't even feel what I'm doing?

He tried a different technique, using his body weight to create slack, but the hogtie system was too well-designed. Every movement that might loosen one rope only tightened another. Whoever tied this knew exactly what they were doing. This isn't some amateur job.

Cody was having his own revelation. The ropes are getting tighter, he realized with growing horror. Every time I struggle, they cut deeper. But I can't just lie here doing nothing. That's not who I am.

Look at us, Brian thought, watching his brother's increasingly desperate movements. Twenty-one years of competing, and we're both losing to some rope.

By the fourth hour, blood was seeping through the hemp.

The rope around Brian's biceps had rubbed his skin raw, then deeper. Each movement now left red stains on the coarse fibers. I'm bleeding, he realized with shock. Actually bleeding. This has never happened before.

Jesus, Brian's arms are torn up, Cody noticed, his own competitive instincts momentarily forgotten. But mine probably look just as bad. Can't see my own back.

The rope around Cody's chest was the worst. Where it crossed between his shoulder blades, the constant pressure and movement had worn through skin to raw flesh. The hemp was now dark with blood, sticking to his wounds.

We always said the tightest tie wins, Cody thought bitterly. Well, congratulations to us. We're both losing.

My whole torso is on fire, Brian's thoughts were becoming fragmented with pain. Every breath hurts. The rope's cutting deeper every time I try to expand my chest.

The fifth hour brought desperation.

What if they don't come back? The thought hit Brian like a physical blow. What if they just left us here to die? People don't survive being tied up this tight for days.

He looked across at Cody, really looked at him for the first time since their capture. His brother's muscular frame was streaked with blood, the ropes dark and wet where they cut into his flesh. Cody's eyes above the duct tape were wide with the same realization.

We're not getting out of this, Cody's mind reeled. Not individually. Not with our usual tricks. This isn't about who's faster or stronger or smarter.

Look at what we've done to ourselves, Brian thought, seeing his own blood mixing with Cody's on the concrete floor beneath them. Five hours of trying to prove who's better, and we're both just... bleeding out.

For the first time in their lives, neither brother was thinking about winning.

I don't want to die here, Brian's internal monologue had lost all its competitive edge. I don't want Cody to die here either. What the hell have we been doing?

We're idiots, Cody realized, his body finally going limp with exhaustion. Tied up by professionals and we're still trying to one-up each other. While we're bleeding to death.

The warehouse fell silent except for their labored breathing through swollen noses, the sound of blood slowly dripping onto concrete, and the creak of rope that had been pulled too tight for too long.

This isn't a competition anymore, both brothers understood simultaneously. This is survival. And we're both losing.

Chapter 3: The Breaking Point

The sixth hour began with a sound that made both brothers' blood run cold—their own labored breathing echoing off the warehouse walls, punctuated by the steady drip of blood onto concrete.

We're dying, Brian realized with crystalline clarity. Actually dying. Not in some dramatic movie way, but slowly, pathetically, tied up on a warehouse floor.

His arms had gone completely numb hours ago. The rope around his biceps had cut so deep that he could feel warm blood pooling beneath his chest on the concrete. Every breath was a struggle against the chest harness that seemed to constrict tighter with each passing minute.

Look at Cody, Brian thought, forcing himself to focus on his brother across the floor. He's not moving anymore. Just lying there. His back is covered in blood.

Cody's muscular frame was streaked with dark stains where the ropes had worn through skin. The hemp around his chest was so soaked with blood it looked black in the dim warehouse light. His eyes above the duct tape were glazed, unfocused.

He's going into shock, Brian realized. We both are.

It was then that something shifted in Brian's mind. Not the competitive drive that had pushed him his entire life, but something deeper. Something that had nothing to do with being first.

I can't watch him die.

The thought hit him with surprising force. Not I can't let him beat me or I have to get out first—just the simple, devastating realization that his brother was dying in front of him.

Move, Brian commanded himself. Move toward him.

The first attempt to shift his position sent white-hot agony through his torn shoulders. The hogtie rope pulled tighter, forcing his spine into an even more severe arch. Blood flowed fresh from the rope burns on his biceps.

Jesus Christ, his mind screamed, but he didn't stop. Using his knees and what little leverage he could get from his bound feet, Brian began the agonizing journey across the warehouse floor.

Each movement was torture. The rope around his chest cut deeper with every attempt to inch forward. His torn wrists left smears of blood on the concrete as he dragged himself, foot by foot, toward his brother.

Ten feet, Brian counted desperately. Maybe twelve. Come on.

The sound of his movement—the scrape of his knees on concrete, the creak of overstretched rope, his muffled grunts of pain through the duct tape—finally reached Cody's consciousness.

Cody lifted his head, blinking through the haze of pain and blood loss. What the hell is Brian doing?

Then he saw it—his brother, torn and bleeding, dragging himself across the floor. Not away from the door, not toward some imagined escape route, but toward him.

He's coming to me, Cody realized with shock. He's making himself worse, tearing himself up more, just to get to me.

And suddenly, like a switch being flipped, Cody understood.

It's not a game.

The realization hit him with physical force. Twenty years of competition, of measuring himself against his brother, of needing to be first, to be better, to prove himself—and none of it mattered. None of it had ever mattered.

We're going to die here, Cody thought, watching Brian's agonizing progress. And he's trying to reach me. Not to beat me. Not to show he's stronger. Just to... be with me.

Tears mixed with blood on Cody's face above the duct tape.

I'm such an idiot, he realized. We're both such idiots.

Brian had covered maybe six feet when Cody began his own movement. It was every bit as agonizing—rope cutting deeper into his already torn flesh, his hogtie pulling tighter with each desperate shift of position.

But for the first time in his life, Cody wasn't thinking about beating his brother to something. He was thinking about meeting him halfway.

Back to back, Brian's mind was working through the pain. If we can get back to back, we can work each other's knots. Like we used to do in practice, but for real this time. For survival.

The brothers' eyes met across the diminishing distance, and something passed between them that had nothing to do with competition. Understanding. Desperation. And something else—something that had always been there but had been buried under twenty years of sibling rivalry.

Love, Cody realized. Jesus, I love this stubborn bastard. And he's going to get himself killed trying to save us both.

Almost there, Brian thought, his vision blurring from pain and blood loss. Almost to him. We can do this. Not me first, not him first. Both of us. Together.

When they finally reached each other, both brothers were gasping through their noses, their bodies slick with blood and sweat. They maneuvered with agonizing slowness until they were positioned back to back, their bound hands almost touching.

This is it, both brothers thought simultaneously. Not a competition. A partnership.

For the first time in their lives, Brian and Cody Benson were truly on the same team.

The question wasn't who would get free first anymore. The question was whether they could get free at all.

And they would find out together.

Chapter 4: Working Together

Back to back, the brothers could feel each other's labored breathing, the warmth of blood seeping through torn skin, the tremor of exhausted muscles. For the first time in hours, they weren't alone.

His hands are right there, Brian realized, feeling Cody's numb fingers brush against his own bound wrists. But we're both so torn up. Can we even do this?

Brian's fingers were swollen and nearly useless from the tight bindings, but he forced them to work, feeling along Cody's wrist ropes. The hemp was slick with blood, the knots pulled impossibly tight from hours of struggling.

Feel for the working end, Brian's mind focused despite the pain. Every knot has a working end. Find it.

Behind him, Cody was doing the same, his own damaged fingers exploring Brian's bindings. There, he found a loose end of rope. The chest harness. If I can work this loose, maybe the whole system will give.

They worked in silent coordination, each brother feeling for weak points in the other's bonds. Brian found where the hogtie rope connected to Cody's arm binding—a complex knot, but one with a clear working end.

Pull here, Brian thought, using what little strength remained in his fingers. Loosen this, and his whole hogtie might release.

The rope was embedded with blood and skin, making it difficult to grip. Brian's torn wrists screamed with every movement, but he didn't stop. Not about me anymore. About both of us.

Cody felt the tension in his hogtie rope shift slightly. Brian's doing it. He's actually loosening something. The small change allowed Cody to arch his back less severely, giving him better access to Brian's bindings.

The duct tape, Cody realized. If we can get our mouths free, we can use our teeth.

Cody worked his torn fingers up toward the back of Brian's head, feeling for the edge of the tape. The adhesive had bonded with Brian's hair and skin, but there was a small section where it had pulled away slightly.

There, Cody found the edge and began working it loose with his fingernails. The tape came away slowly, painfully, taking hair and skin with it.

Brian felt the pressure around his mouth begin to ease. When enough tape was loose, he worked his jaw, forcing his mouth open against the remaining adhesive. The tape fell away with a wet sound.

"Jesus," Brian gasped, his first word in seven hours coming out as a hoarse whisper. "Cody, your turn."

Brian immediately began working on the tape around Cody's head, his movements more urgent now. When Cody's mouth was finally free, both brothers were breathing hard.

"Can you feel your hands?" Brian whispered.

"Barely," Cody replied, his voice cracked and raw. "But I got your hogtie loose a little. Can you reach the knot on my chest rope?"

Brian stretched his fingers as far as the bindings would allow, feeling along Cody's torso until he found the complex knot between his shoulder blades. "Got it. But it's tight as hell."

"Use your teeth," Cody whispered. "I'll try to create slack."

This was the moment that required complete trust. Brian had to lean forward, pressing his face against Cody's blood-soaked back, and bite down on the rope knot. One wrong move, and he could make the binding worse.

Taste of blood and hemp, Brian thought as he carefully gripped the rope with his teeth. The working end was buried deep in the knot, but he could feel it with his tongue.

Cody held perfectly still, fighting against his body's instinct to move as his brother's teeth worked at the rope cutting into his flesh. "There," he whispered. "I felt it move."

Brian pulled with his teeth, his neck muscles straining. The knot began to loosen, and suddenly several inches of rope were free. The pressure around Cody's chest eased dramatically.

"My turn," Cody said, already moving to attack the knot on Brian's elbow binding. The position was awkward, forcing him to crane his neck at a painful angle, but he bit down on the hemp.

Coordination, both brothers realized simultaneously. Like we're finally playing on the same team.

Working together, they created a rhythm. One brother would use his teeth to loosen a knot while the other created slack by shifting his position. Then they would switch roles, attacking a different binding.

"Wrist rope," Brian whispered, feeling circulation beginning to return to his hands. "If we can get our wrists free..."

Cody was already on it, biting through the figure-eight pattern that had held Brian's wrists for seven hours. The rope was deeply embedded with blood and swollen flesh, but it began to give way.

"Almost," Cody whispered around the rope in his mouth. "One more strand."

When Brian's hands finally came free, he nearly cried with relief and pain as blood rushed back into his fingers. But there was no time to rest. He immediately began working on Cody's wrist binding with his newly freed hands.

"Both of us," Brian whispered as he worked the knots. "We're both getting out of this."

"Together," Cody agreed, feeling his own hands come free moments later.

With their hands free, the rest of the escape went faster. They worked methodically through each other's bindings—elbow ropes, chest harnesses, ankle bindings. Each rope that fell away brought them closer to freedom.

We did it, Brian realized as the last of the rope fell to the warehouse floor. We actually did it.

Both brothers lay on the concrete, breathing hard, their bodies a map of rope burns and torn skin. But they were free.

"Can you stand?" Cody whispered.

"We'll find out together," Brian replied.

For the first time in their lives, getting up wasn't about who could do it first. It was about making sure they both could do it at all.

Chapter 5: Freedom and Flight

Standing took everything they had left.

Brian pushed himself up first, his legs shaking from hours of being bound. But instead of feeling triumphant about being first to his feet, his immediate thought was different. Is Cody okay? Can he make it up?

Cody struggled to rise, his torn back screaming as he straightened. Brian's hand was there instantly, steadying him. "Easy," Brian whispered. "We've got time."

He waited for me, Cody realized with surprise. Brian actually waited.

They moved toward the warehouse door together, both limping, both leaving bloody footprints on the concrete. Brian tested the handle—unlocked. Amateurs, he thought. They figured we'd never get free.

"You check left, I'll check right," Brian whispered as they eased the door open.

The warehouse sat in an industrial area, darkness stretching in all directions except for distant highway lights. No kidnappers in sight.

"There," Cody pointed toward the glow on the horizon. "Highway's maybe two miles."

They began walking, staying in the shadows between buildings. Every step was agony—their rope-burned skin rubbing against itself, muscles cramped from hours of immobility.

"Can you make it two miles?" Brian asked quietly.

"Can you?" Cody shot back, but there was no edge to it. Just concern.

We can, both brothers thought simultaneously. We can make it together.

Halfway there, Cody stumbled, his legs giving out. Brian caught him without hesitation.

"Rest," Brian said, helping his brother sit against a concrete barrier.

"No, we keep moving," Cody protested weakly. "What if they come back?"

"Then we'll deal with it," Brian said firmly. "Both of us. But you need a minute."

Both of us, Cody noticed. Not I'll deal with it or you better keep up. Both of us.

They rested for five minutes, then continued toward the highway lights. When Brian started favoring his left leg from where the hogtie rope had cut his ankle, Cody slowed his pace without being asked.

We're moving as fast as we can both go, Brian realized. Not as fast as the stronger one can go.

The highway finally came into view—four lanes of late-night traffic, bright lights, civilization. They emerged from the industrial area, two blood-covered, shirtless young men stumbling toward the road.

The first car that saw them pulled over immediately.

"Jesus Christ!" the driver, a middle-aged woman, jumped out. "What happened to you?"

"Kidnapped," Brian managed. "Need police."

The woman was already dialing 911, speaking rapidly into her phone. Within minutes, sirens filled the night air.

As the first police car arrived, followed by ambulances, both brothers found themselves surrounded by paramedics, officers asking questions, the chaos of rescue.

"We need to separate them for questioning," one detective said, approaching the paramedics working on the brothers.

"No," Brian said immediately, gripping Cody's arm. "We stay together."

"It's standard procedure—" the detective began.

"We're not going anywhere without each other," Cody interrupted, his voice stronger than it had been all night.

The detective looked between them, seeing something in their faces that made him reconsider. "Fine. We'll interview you together."

We're first, both brothers thought as they were loaded into the same ambulance. Not Brian first, not Cody first. We're first.

At the hospital, they insisted on being treated in the same room. When nurses tried to separate them for different procedures, they refused.

"We've been apart enough for one night," Brian told the frustrated medical staff.

Look at us, Cody thought, watching Brian argue with a doctor about staying together. Twenty-four hours ago we would have competed over who got the better doctor, who got treated first, who handled the pain better.

Now they just wanted to make sure they were both okay.

"Your parents are here," a nurse announced hours later, after they'd been cleaned, stitched, and bandaged.

Their father burst into the room, their mother right behind him, both of them crying.

"We got the ransom call," their dad said, pulling both sons into a careful embrace. "We thought we'd lost you."

"How did you get away?" their mother asked, examining their bandaged arms and torsos.

Brian and Cody looked at each other. The whole story was too complicated, too raw.

"We worked together," Brian said simply.

"For the first time in our lives," Cody added, managing a weak smile.

Their parents exchanged glances. In twenty-one years, they'd never heard their sons describe anything as teamwork.

Three weeks later, they were back at work on the construction site. The rope burns had healed into thin scars across their arms and chests, visible reminders of that night.

"Race you to the top of the scaffold," Cody said, the old competitive grin creeping across his face.

"You're on," Brian replied automatically, then paused. "But we both better make it up there safe."

They climbed the scaffold quickly, each pushing the other to go faster, but when Cody's grip slipped on a wet rung, Brian's hand was there instantly to steady him.

"Thanks," Cody said.

"We're first," Brian replied, and they both knew exactly what he meant.

At the top of the scaffold, they looked out over the construction site below. Still competitive, still pushing each other, still asking who's faster, stronger, better.

But now they were asking it together.

We're first, had become their new answer to every challenge. Not individually, but as a team that happened to be made up of two people who would never stop trying to outdo each other.

And somehow, that made them both stronger than they'd ever been alone.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Backwoods Redneck Justice

 


Chapter 1

The first gunshot shattered the windshield.

Billy's hands jerked the steering wheel hard left as glass sprayed across the dashboard. Through the spider-webbed windshield, he could see them emerging from the treeline—four men with rifles, flanking their truck on both sides.

"What the hell—" Jesse started, but his words were cut off by a voice booming through the woods.

"Get out! Now! Hands where we can see 'em!"

Billy's eighteen-year-old hands trembled on the wheel. This was supposed to be his birthday hunting trip. Just him and Jesse, finally getting some real time together like Jesse had promised.

"Do what they say," Jesse whispered, his twenty-seven-year-old composure cracking. "Just do exactly what they say, Billy."

The truck doors opened with metallic groans. Billy raised his hands above his head, feeling the October air bite at his skin. Jesse did the same, stepping out slowly with his palms facing the armed men.

"You boys are on private property," growled the largest of the four, a bearded man whose rifle never wavered from Jesse's chest. "Didn't you see the signs?"

"We—we didn't see any signs," Jesse stammered. "We're just passing through. This is my little brother's birthday, we're going hunting—"

"Shut up." The rifle barrel swung toward Billy. "Strip to the waist. Both of you."

Jesse's eyes met Billy's for a split second—a look that said everything would be okay, that he'd handle this. But his hands were already pulling his flannel shirt over his head, revealing the tattoos that covered his arms and chest.

Billy followed, his bare torso pale and unmarked compared to his brother's inked skin. The cold air raised goosebumps across his shoulders.

"You first," the bearded man nodded toward Jesse. "Get him to that oak."

Two of the men grabbed Jesse's arms, dragging him toward a massive tree twenty feet away. The thick hemp rope appeared from somewhere—coarse, yellow strands that looked like they'd been used for this before.

"Please," Jesse said, his voice breaking. "We'll leave. We'll never come back."

They forced his arms around the thick trunk, his chest pressed against the rough bark. The hemp rope wrapped around his wrists, binding them tight on the other side of the tree. Jesse was trapped, embracing the oak, unable to pull away.

Billy tried to look away, but a rifle barrel against his temple turned his head back.

"You watch," the man hissed. "You watch every second."

The whip came down across Jesse's back with a wet crack. His body jerked against the ropes, a strangled sound escaping his throat. Sweat beaded instantly across his shoulders despite the cold air.

Another lash. Jesse's back arched, his face pressed against the bark, and Billy could see the tears streaming down his brother's face.

"Stop!" Billy screamed. "Please, just stop!"

But the whip kept falling. Jesse's back began to bloom with angry red welts, then split open in thin lines that sent rivulets of blood down his spine. His breathing became harsh pants, punctuated by involuntary grunts of pain.

After twelve lashes, they untied Jesse's limp form and dragged him aside. His legs could barely support him.

"Your turn, birthday boy."

The hemp rope burned Billy's wrists as they forced his arms around the same tree trunk, still warm and wet with his brother's blood. He could smell Jesse's sweat, could see his own hands shaking as they were bound tight.

As the first lash fell across his unmarked back, Billy's scream echoed through the woods. But through his tears, he could see Jesse watching him—forced to witness every stripe, every cry, every moment of his little brother's breaking

.Chapter 2

After Billy's twelfth lash, they cut the hemp rope binding his wrists around the tree. He collapsed forward, his face scraping against the bark as his legs gave out. Jesse tried to crawl toward his brother, but a boot to his ribs sent him sprawling.

"Move," the bearded man growled, shoving them toward a rusted pickup truck parked in the shadows.

They threw Jesse into the truck bed first, his raw back hitting the metal with a wet slap. Billy landed beside him, both of them too weak to resist as their wrists were bound behind their backs with fresh rope.

The truck bounced over rutted dirt roads, each jolt sending fresh waves of pain through their torn backs. Jesse's face was pressed against the truck bed, his eyes finding Billy's in the growing darkness.

I'm sorry, his look seemed to say. This is my fault.

Billy tried to shake his head, tried to tell his brother it wasn't his fault, but the gag they'd forced into his mouth made speech impossible. All he could do was stare back, sharing his brother's pain through their locked gaze.

Twenty minutes later, the truck stopped.

The barn loomed against the night sky, its weathered boards and rusted metal roof promising nothing good. Yellow light spilled from gaps in the walls, and Billy could hear voices inside—more men waiting.

They dragged the brothers from the truck, Jesse stumbling, Billy trying to stay upright. The barn doors opened with a screech of protest.

Inside, the air was thick with dust and the smell of old hay. Overhead beams stretched across the space, hung with chains and ropes that had clearly been used before. A single bare bulb cast harsh shadows across the rough wooden floor.

"Welcome to school, boys," the bearded man said, his voice echoing in the cavernous space. "You got twenty-four hours of learning ahead of you."

Jesse and Billy were positioned facing each other, maybe ten feet apart. Close enough to see every detail of each other's faces, close enough to watch every moment of what was coming.

"First lesson," the man continued, "is about respect."

He nodded to his companions, and they began arranging ropes and chains with practiced efficiency. This wasn't their first time.

Billy's eyes found Jesse's again, and in that look was everything they'd never said to each other—all the love, all the regret, all the fear of what the next day would bring.

The real punishment was just beginning.

Chapter 3

"Cut 'em loose," the bearded man ordered.

One of his men sliced through the ropes binding the brothers' hands behind their backs. Jesse and Billy's arms fell forward, numb and tingling from the restricted circulation.

"Arms up," the bearded man commanded. "Both of you."

Jesse and Billy were forced to raise their hands above their heads. Ropes dropped from the overhead beams, and within minutes their wrists were secured to the barn's ceiling. Their feet barely touched the rough wooden floor.

The stress position was immediate agony. Their shoulders screamed as their full body weight pulled at their arms. The whip wounds on their backs stretched and reopened, fresh blood trickling down their spines.

"This here's called patience," the man said, walking between them. "You boys are gonna learn some patience."

Ten minutes in, Jesse's breathing became labored. Sweat poured down his face despite the cool air. Billy could see his brother's muscles trembling with the effort of trying to support his weight.

Fifteen minutes, and Billy's own arms felt like they were being pulled from their sockets. He tried to find Jesse's eyes, tried to draw strength from his brother's gaze, but Jesse's head was hanging forward, his chest heaving.

"Getting tired already?" The man laughed. "We got twenty-three hours left, boys."

Twenty minutes in, one of the other men appeared with a bottle of Jack Daniels. Billy's eyes widened in terror as he understood what was coming.

"This'll help wake you up," the man said, unscrewing the cap.

The whiskey hit Jesse's torn back first. His scream was muffled by the gag but his whole body convulsed against the ropes, every muscle rigid with agony. The alcohol seared into the open wounds like liquid fire.

Then it was Billy's turn. The bourbon felt like molten metal across his shredded back. His vision went white with pain, his body jerking so violently the ropes cut deeper into his wrists.

Through his tears, Billy could see Jesse watching him, his brother's eyes filled with helpless rage and grief. They were both shaking now, sweat and blood mixing on their tortured backs.

"That's just the beginning, boys," the bearded man said, setting the bottle aside. "We got a whole curriculum planned for you."

Chapter 4

An hour into the stress position, both brothers were barely conscious. Their arms had gone numb, their shoulders dislocated from their sockets. Sweat and blood painted streaks down their torsos.

"Time for lesson two," the bearded man announced, picking up a fresh whip. "This one's about respect for your elders."

He positioned himself in front of Jesse, the leather whip coiled in his hand. Jesse's head lifted slightly, his eyes finding Billy's across the space between them.

The first lash across Jesse's chest opened a line from his left shoulder to his right nipple. His body convulsed, a muffled shriek escaping around the gag. Billy watched in horror as blood began to flow across his brother's tattooed chest.

Another strike. This one caught Jesse's right pectoral, the whip wrapping around his ribs. Jesse's eyes rolled back, his body going limp in the ropes for a moment before consciousness returned.

"Your turn to watch your big brother learn," the man said to Billy, never taking his eyes off Jesse's bleeding chest.

Five more lashes across Jesse's chest and stomach. Each one drew a fresh scream, each one sent new rivulets of blood down his torso. Jesse's breathing became shallow, desperate gasps through his nose.

Then the man moved to Billy.

"Birthday present from your big brother," he said, raising the whip.

The leather bit into Billy's unmarked chest like a branding iron. His scream was so loud it seemed to shake the barn rafters. Through his agony, he could see Jesse straining against his ropes, trying desperately to reach him.

Strike after strike. Billy's chest bloomed with angry welts, then split open in jagged lines. The pain was beyond anything he'd ever imagined, but worse was watching Jesse's face—seeing his brother's soul breaking as he was forced to witness every moment of Billy's torture.

By the time they finished, both brothers hung limply from their ropes, their chests painted red, their breathing shallow and ragged.

"Almost halfway done, boys," the bearded man said, wiping blood from the whip. "Hope you're learning your lesson."

Chapter 5

Hours passed in increasingly brutal stress positions. Every hour, the bearded man would adjust their bondage, finding new ways to torture their bodies with rope alone.

First, they pulled Jesse's arms higher, adding a second rope that ran from his bound wrists to a higher beam. His shoulders stretched beyond their natural range, the joints popping audibly as they separated. His feet could barely touch the ground, forcing him to hang by his dislocated arms.

Then they began the systematic tightening. Additional ropes wrapped around Jesse's forearms, cinching tighter and tighter, cutting off all circulation. His hands swelled and turned purple, then went completely numb.

Billy watched in horror as they applied the same technique to him. The hemp rope burned as they wound it around his arms, each loop pulled tighter than the last. The pressure was crushing, like his arms were being squeezed in a vise.

"Higher," the bearded man ordered.

They adjusted the overhead ropes, pulling their arms even further above their heads. Jesse's feet now hung completely off the ground, his entire body weight suspended from his destroyed shoulders. The angle was so extreme his shoulder blades looked ready to tear through his skin.

More rope was added around their wrists, layered over the existing bonds until their hands disappeared in coils of hemp. The circulation was completely cut off, their arms going dead from the elbows down.

Jesse's breathing had become rapid, shallow pants. His face had gone deathly pale, his eyes unfocused and rolling. The position was destroying his body joint by joint.

Eighteen hours in, as they added a final rope around Jesse's chest and pulled it tight to the overhead beam, forcing his ribcage to bear additional weight, something inside him finally snapped.

His eyes rolled completely back, showing only the whites. His mouth opened impossibly wide around the gag, and from the very depths of his being came a sound that would haunt Billy forever.

It started as a low rumble in Jesse's chest, building like a freight train. Then it erupted—a deep, primal roar that was part scream, part howl, part death rattle. It was the sound of a soul being ripped apart, of every hope and dream and ounce of humanity being crushed at once. The sound was so raw, so utterly broken, that it seemed to come from some prehistoric part of the brain where language had never existed.

The sheer force of that inhuman bellow pushed the gag from his mouth, the cloth shooting out as if expelled by the power of his despair. The sound continued for what felt like minutes, echoing off the barn walls, a sound that seemed to contain every moment of agony they'd endured.

When it finally ended, Jesse hung limp in his bonds, his body broken, his spirit shattered completely.

Chapter 6

Through his own gag, Billy watched his brother's complete breakdown with a mixture of horror and heartbreak. Jesse hung motionless in his bonds, his chest barely rising and falling, his eyes staring at nothing.

Then something deep inside Billy snapped as well.

The sight of his brother's broken form, the memory of that inhuman scream, the eighteen hours of shared agony—it all converged into one moment of total surrender. Billy's mouth opened wide around his gag, and the same sound that had torn from Jesse's throat now erupted from his own.

The muffled roar was identical—that same prehistoric cry of a soul being destroyed. Even through the gag, the sound filled the barn, harmonizing with the echo of Jesse's scream that still seemed to hang in the air. Billy's body convulsed with the force of it, every muscle rigid with the effort of expelling his humanity through that one terrible sound.

Jesse's head lifted slightly at the sound, his glazed eyes finding Billy's. In that moment, as their identical cries of defeat echoed together, something passed between them—a recognition that they were no longer two separate people enduring separate hells, but one broken soul split between two tortured bodies.

The bearded man stepped back, nodding with grim satisfaction.

"Now you've learned your lesson," he said. "Cut them down. We're done here."

They cut the ropes with practiced efficiency. Both brothers collapsed to the barn floor, their arms useless, their bodies unable to support their own weight. Jesse and Billy lay crumpled on the hay, breathing in ragged gasps, their matching wounds and identical breaking making them appear like mirror images of destroyed humanity.

"Get them in their truck," the man ordered. "Deep in the woods. Let them find their own way out."

Billy felt rough hands lifting him, carrying him toward the barn doors. Through blurred vision, he could see Jesse being dragged alongside him, his brother's face pale and distant.

They were about to learn if their bond was strong enough to save them both.Chapter 7

They dragged the brothers to their own truck, parked now in a different location deep in the pine woods. The morning sun filtered through the canopy, casting dappled shadows across the forest floor.

"Back to back," the bearded man ordered.

Jesse and Billy were positioned in the truck bed, their destroyed backs pressed against each other. Fresh hemp rope wound around their torsos, binding them together at the chest and waist. Their wrists were tied behind them, Jesse's hands against Billy's back, Billy's hands against Jesse's.

The rope was pulled tight, forcing them to lean against each other for support. Every breath one took pressed against the other's wounded back. They could feel each other's heartbeat, each tremor of pain, each shallow gasp for air.

"Twenty miles deep," one of the men said, slamming the tailgate shut. "Good luck finding your way out."

The truck engine started, then faded into the distance, leaving them alone in the wilderness.

For long minutes, neither brother moved. They sat bound together in the truck bed, feeling the warmth of each other's blood seeping through the rope, listening to the sound of their synchronized breathing.

Finally, Jesse's voice broke the silence, barely a whisper.

"Billy... I'm sorry. This is all my fault."

Billy's response was equally soft, his lips close to his brother's ear.

"It's not your fault. We're alive. We're together."

Their fingers found each other behind their backs, Jesse's numb hands working at the knots binding Billy's wrists, Billy's swollen fingers fumbling with Jesse's bonds. Each movement sent waves of agony through their destroyed shoulders, but they kept working.

It took an hour. An hour of patient, agonizing work, their fingers barely functional, their arms screaming with each small movement. But finally, Jesse felt Billy's ropes give way.

"Got it," Billy gasped.

With his hands free, Billy could reach Jesse's bonds. Within minutes, both brothers were untied, collapsing forward in the truck bed, their arms hanging useless at their sides.

They looked at each other—really looked—for the first time since it had all begun. The matching wounds, the identical breaking, the shared trauma written across their faces.

"We need to get help," Jesse whispered.

Billy nodded, but neither moved. They just sat there, staring at each other, understanding that something fundamental had changed between them. The age difference, the distance, the polite brotherly affection—all of it had been burned away in that barn.

What remained was something deeper than blood, stronger than family.

They were no longer just brothers.

They were two halves of the same surviving soul.

Chapter 7

Three weeks later, Billy's phone rang while he was staring at his reflection in the bathroom mirror. The scars across his chest and back had faded to angry pink lines, but the marks would never fully disappear. Neither would the memories.

"Billy?" Jesse's voice was stronger now, filled with excitement. "Get your ass over to the office. We got news, and we got celebrating to do."

Billy drove the familiar route to Jesse's contracting headquarters, his hands steady on the wheel for the first time since their ordeal. As he turned into the gravel lot, he stopped the truck and stared.

The sign was enormous—eight feet tall, mounted on heavy steel posts. Where it used to read "MASON CONTRACTING" in bold letters, it now proclaimed "BENSON BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION" in matching script, Jesse's name and Billy's name in identical fonts underneath.

Every truck in the lot had been repainted. Every piece of equipment bore the new logo. Jesse must have worked around the clock to make this happen.

Billy sat in his truck, grinning despite himself, unable to process what he was seeing. Jesse emerged from the office trailer, followed by the entire fourteen-man crew and Sheriff Martinez in his uniform.

As Billy stepped out of his truck, the crew erupted in cheers.

"There's our new foreman!" shouted Mike, the senior carpenter.

"Hope you boys got justice!" called out Danny from the electrical crew.

Sheriff Martinez stepped forward, his face grim but satisfied. "Billy, Jesse—wanted to tell you both in person. We got all four of them sons of bitches. Found their little torture barn exactly where you said it'd be. They're looking at twenty-five to life for what they done to you boys."

The cheer that went up from the crew shook the trailer windows. Jesse pulled Billy into a fierce embrace, both brothers crying and laughing at the same time.

"Equal partners now," Jesse said loud enough for everyone to hear. "In everything. Forever."

Sheriff Martinez cracked open a cooler and pulled out a cold beer, walking it over to Billy with a mock-serious expression. "Now hold on there, son," he said, trying to keep a straight face. "You got some ID on you? Can't have minors drinking on my watch."

The entire crew burst into laughter, knowing the Sheriff was just messing with him. Billy played along, grinning and pulling out his wallet.

"Just turned eighteen three weeks ago," Billy said. "I know I'm not twenty-one yet, Sheriff."

Sheriff Martinez looked at the license, then broke into a wide grin and pressed the cold beer firmly into Billy's hands. "Hell, I was just joshing you, son. NOT TODAY!" he declared with a laugh. "After what you boys been through, you've earned this one. To the Benson Brothers!"

"To the Benson Brothers!" the crew roared back.

Billy looked at Jesse across the celebration, both their faces split with identical grins. They'd been broken in that barn, but they'd been reborn too.

They were no longer just siblings.

They were partners, equals, and two halves of one unbreakable whole.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Fun at the Frat

 


Chapter 1: The Setup

The Alpha Sigma house was loud with Friday night energy, beer flowing freely from the keg in the corner of the main room. Ryan had already downed three cups when the conversation turned to who was toughest in the pledge class.

"You think you're so badass," Marcus said, gesturing with his red solo cup. "But talk is cheap."

"Yeah?" Ryan shot back, the alcohol making him bolder than usual. "What's that supposed to mean?"

Jake leaned forward from his spot on the couch, eyes gleaming with mischief. "Means we could tie you up right now and you'd be crying to get loose in five minutes."

The room went quiet, all eyes on Ryan. He could feel the challenge hanging in the air, his pride on the line in front of his frat brothers.

"I'll do it," Ryan said, trying to keep the challenge out of his voice. "Tie me up however you want. I can handle whatever you guys throw at me."

The grin that spread across Marcus's face should have been his first warning, but Ryan's pride was already committed. He was nineteen, built like a linebacker, and hadn't backed down from anything yet. He wasn't about to start now.

"Hands and feet?" Jake asked, already heading upstairs where they kept rope for hazing pranks.

"Whatever," Ryan shrugged, taking another gulp of beer for courage. "I'm not going anywhere."

But twenty minutes later, sprawled on the hardwood floor of the frat house living room with rope cutting into his wrists and ankles, Ryan was testing the restraints with growing concern. He pulled and twisted, his muscles flexing as he searched for any weakness in the knots. The rope held firm.

For the next ten minutes, Ryan threw everything he had into escaping. He arched his back, trying to loosen the wrist bonds. He rolled onto his side, straining to reach the knots with his fingers. He pulled his knees to his chest, working his ankles against the rope until it burned his skin raw.

Sweat began beading on his forehead as he twisted and squirmed across the floor. His breathing grew heavy from the exertion. The rope seemed to get tighter with every movement, biting deeper into his wrists and ankles. His shoulders ached from the awkward positions he'd contorted himself into.

His frat brothers watched with growing amusement, some making bets on how long he'd keep fighting while others refilled their cups from the keg.

Finally, exhausted and slick with sweat, Ryan stopped struggling and looked up at them with the first real worry in his eyes.

"Okay," he panted, "this is tight enough, right? You can untie me now."

The laughter that met his request made his stomach drop.

"Untie you?" Marcus circled him like a predator. "We're just getting started, tough guy."

Ryan's struggles resumed with desperate urgency, rope burning against his already raw skin as he twisted and pulled. "Come on, seriously. I get the point. You can—"

The duct tape slapped across his mouth mid-sentence, silencing his protests. Jake pressed it down firmly, making sure it wouldn't come loose no matter how much Ryan worked his jaw.

Shit, Ryan thought, his breathing becoming quick and shallow through his nose. What the hell did I get myself into?

The blindfold came next, plunging him into darkness just as hands grabbed his arms and started dragging him toward the bathroom. His bare feet slipped on the floor as he tried to find purchase, tried to slow them down, but they were stronger and he was helpless.

Stay calm, he told himself as they hauled him down the hallway past the keg and laughing brothers. You wanted to prove you're tough? This is your chance. Don't let them see you panic.

The cold shower water hit him like a shock, but Ryan bit down on the gag and forced himself not to make a sound. Whatever came next, he wouldn't give them the satisfaction of hearing him break.Chapter 2: "Let's Tie Him Up Real Good and Have Some Fun!"

Ryan knew they were in the basement entertainment center - he'd spent countless hours down here playing pool and watching games. The familiar warmth from the heating system hit his wet skin as they forced him to his knees, still blindfolded and gagged. He could picture the bright fluorescent lights overhead, the pool table, the leather couches, but all he could see was darkness.

"Welcome to our playroom," Marcus's voice came from behind him, echoing slightly off the finished walls. "Hope you're comfortable, because you're gonna be here a while."

Ryan heard the sound of more rope being unwound - a lot more rope. His heart hammered against his ribs, but he kept his breathing steady through his nose. Whatever they had planned, he wouldn't break.

"Hold still," Jake commanded, though Ryan had no choice with his wrists already bound behind his back.

The first rope went around his upper arms, just above his elbows, pulling them tight against his sides. Ryan's shoulders immediately protested as Jake worked the rope in neat, methodical coils, binding his biceps firmly to his torso.

This is more serious than I thought, Ryan realized as he felt Jake's hands working expertly with the rope. Where the hell did they learn to tie like this?

"That's just the start," another voice said - Danny, maybe? "We're gonna make sure you can't move a muscle."

More rope circled his chest, above and below his pecs, each strand pulled tight and knotted off. Then came the frapping - rope wound between his bound arms and torso, creating a web of restraint that made any arm movement impossible. They worked with surprising skill, layering rope over rope until his entire upper body was locked in place.

Jesus, how much rope do they have? Ryan thought, feeling each new coil restrict his movement further. And why are they so good at this?

"Try to move your arms now," Marcus taunted.

Ryan tested the bonds and felt his stomach drop. His arms were completely immobilized, trapped against his sides by what felt like miles of rope. Every breath made the chest ropes tighten slightly, a constant reminder of his helplessness.

Okay, this is actually kind of annoying, he admitted to himself. But I'm not giving them the satisfaction of seeing me panic.

"Oh, we're not done yet," Jake said, his voice thick with anticipation. "This is just the foundation."

Stay calm, Ryan told himself as he heard them moving around him. You can handle this. You can handle anything they throw at you.

But as they began maneuvering him into a slightly different position, Ryan was beginning to understand that his frat brothers had planned something far more elaborate than he'd ever imagined.Chapter 3: The Endurance Round

"Time to step it up," Marcus announced, circling Ryan like he was examining a prize. "Let's put you in a nice little package."

They forced Ryan onto his stomach on the carpeted floor, his chest harness digging into the ground. He felt new rope being attached to his ankle bonds, then pulled tight toward his wrists behind his back.

"There we go," Jake said with satisfaction as Ryan's heels were pulled up toward his hands. "Perfect hogtie. How's that feel, tough guy?"

Ryan tested the position and immediately understood the predicament. Any struggle to relieve pressure on his wrists pulled his ankles tighter. Any attempt to straighten his legs put more strain on his shoulders. He was trapped in an arch that made every muscle in his back and legs burn.

Ten minutes, he told himself as sweat began forming on his forehead. I can handle ten minutes of anything.

"Looking a little tense there, Ryan," Marcus taunted, then delivered a sharp slap to his exposed ribs. "Relax, man. We're just getting started."

Another slap caught him across the shoulder blades. Then Jake joined in, delivering quick smacks to his sides and legs, nothing too hard but enough to sting and remind him how completely vulnerable he was.

"Time's up!" Danny called after what felt like an eternity.

Ryan's muscles were screaming as they loosened the hogtie rope, but he forced himself to stay silent behind the gag. He wouldn't give them the satisfaction.

"Alright guys," Marcus said, his voice taking on a new excitement. "Go get the supplies. Time for the real games to begin."

Supplies? Ryan thought, his stomach dropping as he heard footsteps heading upstairs. What the hell are they planning now?

Chapter 4: Sensory Assault

The footsteps returned down the basement stairs, accompanied by the sound of items being set down nearby. Ryan's heart rate picked up as he heard bottles being opened, caps being twisted off.

"Oh, this is gonna be good," Marcus said with barely contained glee. "Ryan, meet your new best friends."

Something cold and sharp pressed against the sole of his left foot - a narrow-point Sharpie. The fine tip immediately sent ticklish sensations shooting up his leg as it traced across his sensitive arch.

Ryan's whole body jerked involuntarily, his muscles spasming against the ropes. Shit, shit, shit, he thought desperately. Not this. Anything but this.

"Oh ho ho!" Jake laughed, dragging the marker's point slowly along Ryan's foot. "Look at that reaction! Somebody's ticklish!"

The narrow tip continued its torturous path, each stroke sending waves of unbearable tickling through Ryan's nervous system. He bit down hard on the gag, fighting every instinct to laugh or cry out.

"What should we write first?" Jake asked, the marker tip dancing across Ryan's sole. "How about 'TICKLE TOY' since you're so sensitive?"

Each letter was drawn with excruciating slowness, the fine point of the Sharpie creating constant tickling sensations that made Ryan's entire body shake. He was already sweating from the effort of staying silent.

"Look at him squirm!" Danny laughed, picking up another narrow-point marker. "I'm gonna work on the other foot. Let's see how long he can keep quiet."

Two markers now, both tracing patterns and words across his hypersensitive soles. Ryan's breathing became ragged behind the gag as he fought against the overwhelming urge to break.

"Don't worry, Ryan," Marcus taunted, moving to his shoulders with a third marker. "We've got plenty more where that came from."

The narrow tip began writing "DUMBASS" across his shoulder blade, each stroke creating fresh tickling torture. Ryan's muscles contracted violently, but he forced himself to stay silent.

Don't break, he told himself, even as his body betrayed him with uncontrollable spasms. Don't let them win.

"Oh, this is beautiful," Jake said, moving his marker to Ryan's ribs. "Look how he's shaking. And we haven't even gotten to the good stuff yet."

The marker tip traced along his ribcage, finding every ticklish spot and exploiting it ruthlessly. Ryan was fighting a losing battle against his own nervous system, his whole body wracked with involuntary tremors.

"CRYBABY," Marcus announced as he wrote across Ryan's heaving chest, the narrow point creating unbearable sensations with every stroke. "That's what you are, isn't it? A big ticklish crybaby."

I can't, Ryan thought desperately as the markers continued their assault. I can't take much more of this.

But as they moved to his stomach, the most ticklish spot of all, Ryan felt his body betray him in the worst possible way. To his horror, he could feel himself getting hard from the overwhelming sensations.

"Holy shit!" Marcus burst out laughing. "Look at this! The tickling is turning him on!"

The humiliation was crushing. Not only was he helpless and being tortured with tickling, but his body was responding in a way that made everything infinitely worse.

"What a freak!" Danny taunted. "Getting a boner from being tickled like a little kid!"

Ryan wanted to disappear, but the markers kept working, the narrow points continuing their relentless assault while his arousal made the whole situation unbearably humiliating.

"Now for the really good stuff," Jake said, and Ryan heard bottles being opened nearby.

"Wait, wait!" Marcus called out. "We need proper accompaniment for this. Everyone ready?"

They began singing in exaggerated cheerful voices as they squeezed the condiments: "Wash your hair, wash it good, make it clean like you know you should! Scrub-a-dub-dub, rub-a-dub-dub, Ryan's getting a special scrub!"

The burning mixture of mustard, ketchup, and icy hot splashed into his hair as they sang, their voices getting louder and more obnoxious. They worked it in with their hands, massaging the burning cocktail into his scalp while continuing their ridiculous song.

"Rinse and repeat, make it neat, our special shampoo can't be beat!"

Ryan's scalp burned while his skin crawled with unbearable sensations from the continuing marker assault, and his face burned with shame as they sang their mocking song.

Stay strong, he told himself, though his resolve was cracking under the weight of physical torture, complete humiliation, and their ridiculous taunting. Don't let them hear you break.Chapter 5: The Final Push

"Alright, Ryan," Marcus said, his voice taking on a different tone - less playful, more serious. "Time for the grand finale."

They moved him back to the center of the room, his body still trembling from the tickling assault. The condiment mixture dripped from his hair onto his shoulders, mixing with the sweat and marker ink covering his torso. But through it all, he hadn't made a single sound.

"One more position," Jake announced, already working with the ropes. "And this time, we're not going easy on you."

They forced Ryan onto his stomach again, but this hogtie was different. Tighter. More methodical. They pulled his heels toward his bound wrists with deliberate precision, creating an arch that immediately put strain on every muscle in his back and legs.

"There," Danny said with satisfaction. "Let's see you handle this for fifteen minutes."

The position was brutal. Ryan's shoulders screamed, his thighs burned, and his back felt like it might snap. But he bit down on the gag and forced his breathing to stay steady.

Just fifteen minutes, he told himself. You've come this far. Don't break now.

"Look at him," Marcus said quietly, circling Ryan's bound form. "Still not making a sound."

"It's been over an hour," Jake added, his voice carrying a note of genuine surprise. "I thought for sure the tickling would get him."

Ryan could hear something changing in their voices. The taunting was becoming less frequent, replaced by something that sounded almost like... respect?

"Seriously," Danny said, kneeling beside Ryan's head. "You okay in there, man? You're not actually dying on us, are you?"

Ryan managed a slight nod, the only acknowledgment he'd given them throughout the entire ordeal. Even that small movement sent fresh waves of pain through his strained muscles.

"Jesus," Marcus muttered. "I don't think I could do this."

"None of us could," Jake agreed. "Look at him. He's exhausted, covered in crap, tied up like a pretzel, and he's still not giving us anything."

Almost there, Ryan thought, sweat dripping onto the carpet beneath him. Don't give up now.

But as the minutes crawled by and his body reached its absolute limit, Ryan realized something had shifted. They weren't trying to break him anymore. They were watching him prove something none of them had expected.

"Time," Marcus called softly. "That's enough."

The reverence in his voice told Ryan everything he needed to know. He'd won.Yeah. But at the end let the all jump Marcus and tie him up as Rayn

Chapter 6: Respect

The ropes came off slowly, Jake's hands surprisingly gentle as he worked the knots loose. Ryan's muscles screamed as circulation returned to his limbs, but he forced himself to sit up without assistance, even though every fiber in his body wanted to collapse.

"Holy shit, man," Danny said, shaking his head in amazement. "I can't believe you did that."

Ryan worked his jaw as Jake peeled away the duct tape, his first words coming out as a hoarse whisper. "Fuck you guys."

But he was grinning as he said it, and the laughter that followed was different from before - respectful, almost awed.

"Seriously though," Marcus said, handing Ryan a towel and a cold beer from the mini-fridge. "That was... that was actually incredible. I've never seen anything like that."

Ryan took a long pull from the beer, then grabbed a wet towel from the bathroom and started mopping the condiment mixture out of his hair. Chunks of mustard and ketchup fell to the floor as he scrubbed, but he did it casually, like he was just cleaning up after a workout.

"So," Jake said, looking around at the group. "Who's next?"

The silence that followed was telling. They all looked at each other, but nobody volunteered.

"Come on," Ryan said, still working the towel through his hair, his voice getting stronger and more confident. "Who's gonna prove they're as tough as they thought?" He squeezed more condiment gunk from his hair onto the floor. "I mean, if I can handle it, surely one of you big tough guys can too, right?"

More uncomfortable shifting. More avoided eye contact.

"I nominate Marcus," Danny said suddenly. "He was the one talking the most shit."

"What? No way," Marcus protested, backing toward the stairs. "I was just—"

But Jake and Danny were already moving, grabbing Marcus's arms before he could escape. "Fair's fair, man," Jake said. "You wanted to see how tough Ryan was. Now let's see how tough you are."

"Guys, come on!" Marcus struggled as they forced him to his knees in the same spot where Ryan had endured ninety minutes of torture. "This isn't funny!"

Ryan watched with growing amusement as they bound Marcus's wrists behind his back with the same rope that had held him. The same rope went around Marcus's ankles, then his chest.

"No, no, wait!" Marcus was already starting to panic as Jake approached with the duct tape. "I don't want to do this!"

The tape went over his mouth, cutting off his protests, followed quickly by the blindfold.

"Now for the special shampoo treatment," Danny announced cheerfully, reaching for the bottles of mustard and ketchup.

As soon as the cold condiments hit Marcus's hair, he started squealing behind the gag, his whole body thrashing against the ropes. The difference was night and day - where Ryan had maintained stoic silence, Marcus was already falling apart.

Ryan leaned back against the couch, taking another sip of his beer and laughing as Marcus writhed and muffled screams filled the basement.

"Not so tough now, are you?" Ryan called out, raising his bottle in a mock toast. "Welcome to the club, asshole."

The sound of Marcus's panicked breathing and muffled cries was music to Ryan's ears. He'd proven his point, earned their respect, and now he got to watch the ringleader get a taste of his own medicine.

This was turning out to be a pretty good night after all.


Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Psycho Revenge

 


Chapter 1: The Photos Arrive

The three photos arrived simultaneously at 3:47 PM on a Tuesday afternoon, hitting James Jenson's iPhone and those of his three older sons like digital lightning strikes.

James was fixing fence on the north pasture when his phone buzzed. The first image made him drop his wire cutters into the dust.

Ryan. His youngest boy. Eighteen years old, shirtless, bent forward with his eyes and mouth sealed with black tape. Some of his red hair fell across the tape, and thick ropes crossed over his young, hairy chest. His arms were bound behind him, completely helpless.

"Jesus Christ," James whispered, his hands shaking as he swiped to the next photo.

The second image showed Ryan's arms in an intricate torture tie—white ropes wound and wrapped above and below his elbows, with hoisting ropes pulling them up high. His shoulders were strained to the breaking point. More ropes circled his wrists and forearms, circled and wrapped tight.

The third photo was worse. Ryan's forearms were bent at right angles to his upper arms, and hoisting ropes pulled his bound arms away from his back. The veins in his hands bulged through his skin, dark and swollen.

One line of text appeared under the photos: ITS TIME FOR MY REVENGE JAMES JENSON.

Why me? Why is this happening to me? Ryan's thoughts were a jumbled mess of terror and confusion. I've never hurt anyone. I help old Mrs. Patterson with her groceries. I volunteer at the church. What did I do to deserve this?

James's phone rang immediately. His eldest son, Marcus.

"Dad, you see these?"

"Yeah." James's voice was barely a whisper.

"What the hell did you do to somebody?"

"I don't know. I swear to God, Marcus, I don't know."

Within minutes, all three brothers—Marcus, 26, Tyler, 24, and Jake, 22—had converged on the ranch house. They found their father sitting at the kitchen table, staring at his phone with the photos still on the screen.

Jake leaned over his father's shoulder, studying the images with a practiced eye. "Look at this rope work, Dad. This isn't some amateur trying to scare us."

"What do you mean?" James asked.

"These ties," Jake pointed to the screen. "The way the ropes are wrapped and tensioned. See how they're managing his circulation? This person knows exactly what they're doing. They're keeping him conscious, keeping him alive, but making sure he suffers."

Marcus nodded grimly. "That's not random rope from the hardware store either. That's quality stuff. And look at these knots—that's advanced work."

The ropes cut into my skin, but not enough to make me bleed out. Whoever is doing this wants me to stay awake, wants me to feel everything. The tape over my mouth makes every breath a struggle, but I can still breathe. Why won't they just tell me what they want?

"Dad," Tyler said quietly, "think hard. Who would want revenge against you? What did you do?"

James looked up at his three sons, his weathered face pale. "Boys, I swear on your mother's grave, I have no idea who would do this or why. I've worked this ranch for thirty years, minded my own business, never hurt nobody on purpose."

Marcus stood up, pacing toward the window. "We need to figure this out ourselves. Fast."

"We need to get the ranch crew involved," Tyler said. "More eyes on this."

Jake was still studying the photos. "And we need to be ready for more pictures. This person isn't done. Look at the progression—they're just getting started."

Please, God, let my family find me. I don't understand what's happening, but I know my dad and brothers won't give up. They're tough, they're smart, and they love me. If anyone can figure this out, they can.

Outside, the late afternoon sun was beginning to cast long shadows across the ranch, and somewhere in those shadows, Ryan was beginning to understand that his nightmare was just beginning.

Chapter 2: The Investigation Begins

By evening, word had spread through the ranch crew. James had called in his foreman, Bull Morrison, and the other hands—Danny, Cruz, and Pete. They gathered in the bunkhouse kitchen, the photos displayed on Jake's laptop screen.

"Jesus, boss," Bull whispered, studying the images. His weathered hands traced the air above the screen. "This ain't random violence. Look at these anchor points, the way the rope's distributed across his body."

Danny leaned closer. "That's a chest harness. See how it's wrapped? Takes the weight off his throat, keeps him breathing steady."

"Professional grade rope too," Cruz added. "That's not hardware store shit. That's climbing rope, maybe static line. Expensive stuff."

Pete, who'd been quiet, pointed to the third photo. "Box tie variant. Arms pulled up and back like that... whoever did this has serious experience."

I can't understand why someone would know so much about hurting people. The ropes don't just hold me—they're positioned to make everything hurt more. Every breath is work. Every heartbeat sends pain through my shoulders. What kind of person learns to do this?

James sat heavily in a chair, his face gray. "I still don't understand who would do this to my boy."

"Dad," Marcus said gently, "we need to think about this systematically. Someone with this level of skill doesn't just snap one day. They've been planning."

Jake pulled up a notepad app on his phone. "Let's break down what we know. The message said 'revenge.' Against Dad specifically. Something from the past."

"How far back we talking?" Bull asked.

"Could be years," Tyler said. "Decades, even. Someone who's been nursing a grudge, learning these skills, waiting for the right moment."

I keep trying to think if I've ever seen this person before. The hands that tied these ropes—do I know them? Did I pass them on the street? Did I smile and say hello to the person who's doing this to me? I can't make sense of it. I can't make sense of any of it.

Meanwhile, twenty miles away in an abandoned hunting cabin, Ryan hung suspended in the dim light of a single Coleman lantern. The tape over his mouth forced him to breathe through his nose, each inhale a conscious effort. The rope harness dug into his chest and shoulders, supporting his weight but ensuring constant discomfort.

The man who had taken him sat in a folding chair ten feet away, occasionally looking up from an old paperback book to stare at Ryan with cold, calculating eyes.

"You're probably wondering why," the man said finally, his voice eerily calm. "You're probably thinking this is about you."

Please just tell me what you want. Please just explain this. I'll do anything. I'll give you anything. Just tell me what this is about.

The man stood and walked closer. "It's not about you, boy. You're just the payment. The price your daddy owes for what he took from me."

He picked up Ryan's discarded shirt from the floor, then walked to a small table where he'd set up a digital camera on a tripod.

"Time for the next lesson."

No, please. Not more photos. My family must be going crazy. I can't stand the thought of them seeing me like this, seeing me suffer and not being able to help. Dad's probably blaming himself for something he doesn't even understand.

The man began untying specific ropes, adjusting Ryan's position. The new arrangement pulled his arms higher, creating more strain on his shoulders.

"Your daddy forgot something," the man said as he worked. "Something important. But don't worry—by the time this is over, he'll remember everything."

Back at the ranch, Jake's phone buzzed with an incoming message. The room fell silent as he opened it.

"New photo," he said quietly.

The image showed Ryan in the adjusted position, his face twisted in obvious pain, sweat beading on his forehead despite the cool evening air. His bound arms were pulled even higher, and his shoulders showed the strain.

The message read: DAY ONE. REMEMBER THE TWINS YET JAMES? REMEMBER WHAT YOU DID ON MILLER ROAD?

The pain is getting worse. I can feel my shoulders starting to give. But worse than the physical pain is the helplessness. Is this how I'm going to die? Tied up like an animal, while my family watches through photographs they can't do anything about?

James stared at the message, his face going pale. "Twins," he whispered.

"What?" Marcus looked at his father sharply.

"Miller Road..." James's voice trailed off, something stirring in the back of his memory. A flash of headlights, the screech of brakes, rain on the windshield.

Bull studied the new photo with professional interest. "He's escalating the stress positions. See how he's pulled the arms higher? That's going to cause real damage if it goes on too long."

"Dad?" Tyler was watching his father's face. "What about twins? What happened on Miller Road?"

James shook his head slowly. "I... I'm not sure. Something's familiar about that, but I can't..." He rubbed his forehead. "That was a long time ago. Maybe thirty years or more."

"Think, Dad," Jake urged. "Someone's been planning this for decades. What happened thirty years ago that involved twins?"

James looked around the room at the expectant faces, but the memory remained just out of reach, like trying to grasp smoke.

"I don't know," he said finally. "But we need to keep looking."

Hold on, Dad. Hold on, everyone. I'm still here. I'm still fighting. Just find me before this monster decides talking isn't enough anymore.

Chapter 3: Escalation

The next photos arrived at dawn, waking James from his restless sleep on the couch. His phone buzzed insistently, and he fumbled for it with shaking hands. Two new images filled the screen, and his stomach lurched.

Ryan was no longer in the same position. The ropes had been completely reconfigured into something far more complex and sinister. His arms were now bound in an intricate pattern—rope woven through itself in diamond shapes up his forearms, with additional lines running to anchor points above him. His feet barely touched the ground.

The second photo showed the full suspension. Ryan hung mostly supported by the rope work, his weight distributed across multiple contact points on his torso and limbs. Sweat glistened on his skin, and his breathing looked labored.

The message was brief: DAY TWO. STILL NOTHING JAMES?

Every muscle in my body is on fire. The ropes shift my weight constantly, never letting any part of me rest. My shoulders burn, my wrists ache, and my chest feels compressed. But I'm still alive. He's keeping me alive on purpose. Why?

Within minutes, the brothers and ranch crew had gathered again in the kitchen. Bull took one look at the photos and whistled low.

"Son of a bitch knows what he's doing," he said grimly. "Look at this work."

Jake pointed to the diamond pattern on Ryan's arms. "That's decorative rope work. Not just functional—artistic. Someone spent time learning this."

"More than that," Danny added, studying the suspension points. "See how the load's distributed? He's managing circulation, nerve pressure, everything. This isn't torture—it's calculated suffering."

Marcus ran his hands through his hair. "How long can someone hang like that?"

"Hours," Pete said. "Maybe longer, depending on how it's rigged. The way those chest ropes are positioned, they're supporting most of his weight. Keeping him conscious."

I want to scream, but the tape won't let me. I want to beg, but he doesn't care about my pain. He only cares about Dad remembering something. What could Dad have done that was so terrible? Dad's a good man. He taught me to help people, to be kind. What memory is this monster trying to drag out of him?

James stared at the photos, that nagging feeling in the back of his mind growing stronger. Miller Road. Twins. Rain on the windshield, the squeal of brakes...

"Dad," Tyler said gently, "you're remembering something. I can see it in your face."

"I don't know," James said, frustrated. "It's like trying to remember a dream. Something about driving, maybe an accident..."

Cruz leaned over the laptop screen. "Look at the background in this second photo. Those walls—that's not the same place as yesterday."

They all studied the image more carefully. The wood paneling was gone, replaced by what looked like concrete block walls.

"He moved him," Marcus said. "That's why there was no photo last night. He was relocating."

"But why move him?" Jake wondered.

Bull's expression was grim. "Because wherever he's moved him, he can make more noise. Can do worse things without worrying about being heard."

He carried me while I was unconscious. When I woke up, everything was different. The smells, the sounds, even the way the air moves. I'm somewhere more isolated now. Somewhere no one will ever think to look. The walls are thick, and when he talks, there's no echo like before.

Twenty-five miles away, in the basement of an abandoned farmhouse, Ryan hung in his new prison. The man who had taken him sat at a small table, methodically cleaning and organizing lengths of rope.

"Your daddy's a stubborn man," he said without looking up. "Thirty years, and he's blocked it out completely. But that's okay. We have time."

Please, just tell him what you want him to remember. Just tell him, and this can stop. I don't understand why you have to hurt me to make him remember something. I don't understand any of this.

The man stood and walked to Ryan, running his hands along the rope work, checking each knot and anchor point with professional precision.

"Perfect circulation," he murmured. "No permanent nerve damage yet. You can hang like this for quite a while before anything irreversible happens."

He picked up his camera again, but this time he also grabbed something else from the table—a faded wallet-sized photograph.

"Time to give daddy the final clue."

No, please. Not another photo. They must be going crazy, seeing me like this. Marcus is probably ready to tear the county apart looking for me. Tyler's probably analyzing every detail. Jake's probably blaming himself for not being there to protect me. And Dad... God, what is this doing to Dad?

The flash illuminated Ryan's suspended form, but this photo was different. The man had placed the old photograph against Ryan's chest, held there by the ropes.

Back at the ranch, James's phone buzzed again. This time, the message came with just one photo—Ryan hanging in suspension with an old photograph pressed against his chest. Even through the image quality, they could make out what looked like a graduation photo of a young man with red hair.

The text read: TOMMY HENDRICKS, MILLER ROAD, JULY 15TH, 1993. REMEMBER NOW, YOU BASTARD?

I can see the photograph against my chest when I look down. It's a young man who looks like he could be my brother. The same red hair, the same gentle eyes. This must be who died. This must be the brother this man lost.

James stared at the phone, and suddenly everything came flooding back like a dam breaking. The rain, the slick roads, coming around that bend on Miller Road too fast. The young man—Tommy Hendricks—walking along the shoulder. The truck sliding, the impact, the terrible silence afterward.

"Tommy Hendricks," James whispered, his face going white as a sheet. "Oh God. Tommy Hendricks."

"What?" Marcus looked at his father sharply.

"July 15th, 1993," James continued, his voice hollow. "I was driving home from town in the ranch truck. It was pouring rain, roads were slick as glass. I came around that curve on Miller Road too fast, and there was this kid walking on the shoulder..."

The room was dead silent.

"I hit him," James said, his voice breaking. "I hit Tommy Hendricks. He was eighteen years old. Just graduated high school. I pulled over, but he was already... he was already gone."

"Jesus, Dad," Tyler breathed.

"There was no one else around. No witnesses. I called 911, stayed with the body until the sheriff came. They ruled it an accident—weather conditions, poor visibility. No charges filed." James looked up at his sons with haunted eyes. "But this kid, Tommy, he had a twin brother. They were identical. I remember now—at the funeral, seeing the brother, how destroyed he was."

Bull leaned forward. "What was the brother's name?"

James closed his eyes, forcing himself to remember. "Michael. Michael Hendricks. He screamed at me at the funeral, said it should have been me who died. Said someday he'd make me pay."

Marcus stood up abruptly. "Michael Hendricks. That's who has Ryan."

"After thirty years," Jake said quietly. "He's been planning this for thirty years."

James looked around the room at his sons and crew, the full weight of his past finally crashing down on him.

"He's going to kill my boy," he said. "He's going to kill Ryan the same way I killed his brother."

Chapter 4: The Move to the Woods

No new photos came that night, and the silence was almost worse than the images. James sat at the kitchen table, staring at his phone, willing it to buzz. The crew had dispersed to search local abandoned buildings, but they'd found nothing.

At 6 AM, his phone finally rang with an incoming message.

The photo that appeared made James's blood run cold. Ryan was no longer indoors. He hung suspended in what looked like a dilapidated cabin, with daylight streaming through gaps in the rotting wood walls. Thick ropes ran from his bound arms to heavy beams in the ceiling above. His feet dangled two feet off the wooden floor.

But worse than the new location were the deep cuts across Ryan's chest—gaping wounds that were bleeding heavily. The rope work had evolved again, more complex and cruel, but now it was accompanied by serious injury.

The message read: DAY THREE. THE BOY SCREAMS SO BEAUTIFULLY JAMES. ALMOST AS BEAUTIFUL AS TOMMY DID.

The cuts are so deep I can see inside them. Blood runs down my chest and drips onto the rotting floor below. I'm losing so much blood, and I can feel myself getting weaker with each heartbeat. He's not just restraining me anymore—he's killing me slowly, and he's enjoying every second of it.

Within minutes, the brothers and ranch crew had gathered again. This time, the mood was different—more urgent, more desperate.

"Jesus Christ," Bull whispered, staring at the wounds on Ryan's chest. "Those cuts are deep. He's bleeding out."

"Look at the blood loss," Danny said grimly. "Those aren't surface wounds anymore. Kid's in real danger now."

Marcus studied the background. "That's an old cabin. Look at the construction—hand-hewn logs, probably built sixty, seventy years ago."

"And look at the light coming through those gaps," Pete added. "That place is falling apart. Probably been abandoned for decades."

Jake was already pulling up a map on his phone. "We need to focus on abandoned structures in the hill country. Dad, think about where you used to see old cabins when you were younger."

James closed his eyes, forcing himself to remember. "There's old homesteads scattered all through Chapman's Hill area. Some of them been empty since the fifties."

I'm getting so cold, and it's not just the morning air. I can feel the blood leaving my body with each cut he's made. My vision is starting to blur around the edges. I don't know how much longer I can stay conscious.

Tyler was already moving toward the door. "We need to cover every old structure in a twenty-mile radius. Split up into teams."

"Wait," Cruz said, still studying the photo. "Look at this rope configuration. See how it's anchored to those ceiling beams? And the hardware—pulleys, eye bolts. This took time to set up."

Bull nodded grimly. "Professional rigging in a prepared location. He's been getting this place ready for weeks, maybe months."

Marcus was already grabbing his keys. "We need to move. Now. If he's cutting him this deep..."

"How long does Ryan have?" James asked, his voice barely audible.

The ranch hands exchanged glances. Finally, Bull answered. "With blood loss like that? Hours, maybe less. We need to find him fast."

I can taste blood in my mouth now. The cuts are so deep that every breath makes them gape wider. I'm trying to stay strong, but I can feel myself fading. Please, God, let them find me before I bleed to death in this horrible place.

Twenty-eight miles away, in the abandoned cabin deep in the woods, Ryan hung from the rotting beams while his captor sat on an old wooden crate, admiring his handiwork.

"Look how the blood catches the light," Michael Hendricks said, running his finger along the blade. "Your daddy never got to see Tommy bleed. This is so much better."

He's enjoying this. He's actually enjoying watching me die. The way he looks at the cuts, the way he smiles when I make noise through the tape—this isn't just about revenge anymore. He likes hurting me.

Michael stood and walked closer, pressing the tip of the blade against Ryan's ribs.

"Don't worry, boy. I'm not going to let you die too quickly. Your daddy needs to suffer longer than thirty seconds. He needs to know what thirty years of pain feels like."

I want to tell him that Dad is sorry, that Dad never meant to hurt anyone. But the tape won't let me speak, and I'm getting so weak that I can barely think straight. The blood loss is making everything fuzzy.

Back at the ranch, the search teams were mobilizing. Marcus, Tyler, and Jake would take the main logging road up Chapman's Hill. James and Bull would circle around from the north. Danny, Cruz, and Pete would come up from the south, covering the old hunting trails.

"We're looking for an old cabin," Marcus said, clipping a walkie-talkie to his belt. "Something that's been abandoned for decades. And we're running out of time."

James looked around at his sons and crew, men who were risking everything to save his boy because of a mistake he'd made three decades ago.

"Find him," he said simply. "Whatever it takes."

"We will, Dad," Tyler replied, checking his rifle. "We're bringing Ryan home alive."

Please hurry. I can feel the life draining out of me with every drop of blood that hits the floor. But I'm still fighting. I'm still here. Just find me before this monster finishes what he started.

As the search teams spread out across the hill country, Ryan hung alone in the decaying cabin, suspended between rotting beams and splintered floor, bleeding heavily and praying his family would find him before it was too late.

Chapter 5: The Rescue

The final photo arrived as the search teams were already deep in the woods. James's phone buzzed, and the image that appeared made his heart stop.

Ryan hung in the cabin with his shoulders visibly dislocated, his arms twisted at unnatural angles. More deep cuts had been added to his chest and abdomen, and blood pooled on the floor beneath him. His face was pale, his eyes barely focused.

But worse than the injuries was what else appeared in the photo—Michael Hendricks stood beside Ryan, a large hunting knife pressed against his throat, ready to draw it across.

The message was simple: FINAL PAYMENT DUE. GOODBYE JAMES.

I can't feel my arms anymore. The pain has gone beyond unbearable into something else—a kind of floating numbness. I can see the knife at my throat in my peripheral vision. This is it. This is how I die. I'm sorry, Dad. I'm sorry I couldn't be stronger.

"Jesus Christ!" Marcus shouted into his radio. "All teams converge on my position! Now! He's about to kill him!"

Marcus, Tyler, and Jake had found the cabin first, hidden deep in a grove of pine trees off an old logging road. Through the gaps in the rotting walls, they could see Ryan hanging inside, and Michael Hendricks raising the knife.

"No time for strategy," Tyler whispered, raising his rifle. "On three."

"One," Jake breathed, sighting through the largest gap in the wall.

"Two," Marcus whispered, his finger on the trigger.

Michael Hendricks smiled as he pressed the blade against Ryan's throat, thirty years of hatred finally about to be satisfied.

"Three."

The three rifles fired simultaneously.

Michael Hendricks jerked backward, three bullets punching through his chest. He dropped the knife and crumpled to the cabin floor, blood spreading beneath him.

The knife is gone. The pressure at my throat is gone. I can hear my brothers shouting, but everything sounds so far away. I'm still hanging here, still bleeding, but somehow I know I'm going to be okay now.

The brothers burst through the cabin door, Jake immediately cutting the ropes while Marcus and Tyler checked that Michael was dead. Ryan collapsed into Jake's arms, barely conscious but alive.

"Ryan! Ryan, stay with us!" Marcus shouted, applying pressure to the worst of the chest wounds.

"Call for medevac!" Tyler yelled into his radio. "We need a helicopter now!"

I can hear their voices, but they sound like they're coming from underwater. I want to tell them I'm okay, that I'm so glad they found me, but I can't make my mouth work. Everything is getting dark around the edges.

Within minutes, the clearing filled with people. James and Bull arrived first, James dropping to his knees beside his youngest son. The sheriff's department came next, followed by paramedics who immediately began working on Ryan.

"Sheriff Patterson," Marcus called out, "we had to shoot him. He had a knife to Ryan's throat."

Sheriff Patterson surveyed the scene, then noticed something glinting in the corner. Michael's camera was still running, mounted on a tripod, having recorded everything.

"Well, I'll be damned," the sheriff said, walking over to the camera. He hit the playback button, and they could all see the final moments—Michael pressing the knife to Ryan's throat, the shots being fired, Michael falling, and the brothers rushing in to cut Ryan down.

"Boys," Sheriff Patterson said, turning off the camera, "this is the clearest case of justifiable homicide I've ever seen. That video shows everything—the imminent threat, the life-saving action, the immediate rescue. You did exactly what the law allows when someone's life is in immediate danger."

I can feel hands working on me, bandaging the cuts, stabilizing my shoulders. Someone is talking about blood pressure and fluid loss. I want to tell them I'm grateful, but sleep is pulling me down.

The medevac helicopter landed twenty minutes later, its rotors whipping the pine needles into a frenzy. The flight paramedics quickly assessed Ryan's condition and loaded him onto a stretcher.

"Severe blood loss, bilateral shoulder dislocation, multiple lacerations," the lead paramedic reported. "He's stable but critical. We need to move now."

James climbed into the helicopter with his son, holding Ryan's hand as they lifted off toward the regional trauma center.

I can see Dad's face above me, and for the first time in days, I'm not afraid. His eyes are full of tears, but he's smiling. I'm going to be okay. We're all going to be okay.

At the hospital, Ryan was rushed into surgery while the family waited in the corridor. Hours passed before Dr. Martinez emerged, still in his scrubs.

"He's going to make it," the doctor said, and James felt his knees give out with relief. "The blood loss was severe—another hour and we might have lost him. The shoulder dislocations will require physical therapy, but there's no permanent nerve damage. The lacerations were deep but clean, and we've repaired everything."

Marcus put his arm around his father's shoulders. "He's tough, Dad. He's going to be fine."

"The psychological trauma will take time to heal," Dr. Martinez continued. "But physically, your son is going to recover completely. You got to him just in time."

I can hear voices in the recovery room, but I'm not afraid anymore. I know those voices—they're my family. I'm safe now. The nightmare is over.

Later that evening, when Ryan was awake and stable, James sat beside his hospital bed. The sheriff had already taken statements from everyone, and the case was officially closed—the video evidence making everything crystal clear.

"I'm sorry, son," James said quietly. "This was all my fault. That accident thirty years ago—"

Ryan squeezed his father's hand weakly. "Dad," he whispered, his voice hoarse from the tape and trauma. "It wasn't your fault. You didn't know this would happen. You couldn't have known."

James looked at his youngest son—battered, bandaged, but alive—and felt a weight lift from his shoulders that he'd been carrying for three decades.

Outside the hospital window, the sun was setting over the Texas hills, and for the first time in days, the Jenson family was together and safe.

I'm going to have scars, and I'm going to have nightmares, but I'm alive. We're all alive. And that's what matters.