Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Breaking Billy

 


Chapter 1: The Frat House

Billy Benson stood in front of the cracked mirror propped against the wall of the frat house, rolling up the sleeves of his black and white plaid cowboy shirt. He folded them carefully, just below his shoulders, baring his arms from shoulder to wrist—strong, tanned, and earned through years of ranch work. He adjusted his buckle from last year's rodeo, checked his best-fitting jeans, and stomped his boots against the wooden floor to settle them just right.

"Look at pretty boy over here," Jake drawled from his bunk, arms crossed behind his head. "You gonna flex for Edna when she opens the door, or you saving that for after dinner?"

Celeb laughed from across the room, sprawled on the other top bunk. "Man's about to ask that mirror for its number."

"Shut up," Billy muttered, but he was grinning. He turned to check his profile, making sure the sleeves sat just right on his shoulders.

"Oh, he's checking the guns," Junior said, sitting cross-legged on his mattress wedged between the two bunk beds. At sixteen, he was already built like the rest of them—broad-shouldered, lean, and strong. "Uncle Billy's gonna make sure Edna sees the merchandise."

Colton, Celeb's seventeen-year-old cousin from Louisiana, snorted. "Y'all see how high he rolled those sleeves? That ain't about staying cool. That's advertising."

Billy shot him a look. "Like you don't do the same thing when Anna's around."

"That's different," Junior said, his ears going red. "Anna likes when I—" He stopped. "Forget it."

Jake swung his legs off the bunk and dropped to the floor with a thud. He walked over to Billy, standing shoulder to shoulder with him in front of the mirror. They looked nearly identical—same height, same build, same sharp jaw. Jake rolled up his own sleeves in one quick motion, matching Billy's.

"Still think yours are bigger?" Jake said, flexing.

Billy flexed back. Their arms were nearly the same—veins running down their forearms, biceps hard as stone from a lifetime of lifting bales, fixing fences, and wrestling calves.

"Mine are," Billy said.

"In your dreams."

"Arm wrestle. Right now."

"You're gonna wrinkle your fancy shirt, pretty boy."

"I'll take that bet," Celeb said, pulling a crumpled five from his pocket. "I got Billy."

"Jake," Junior said immediately.

"Colton?" Jake asked.

Colton grinned. "I'm staying neutral. I like living here too much."

The door creaked open, and Pops shuffled in, a glass of brandy in one hand and a half-smoked cigar in the other. At seventy-six, he still had the presence of a drill sergeant—grizzled, squinting, and completely unbothered by the chaos of four young men crammed into one room.

"The hell are you boys yelling about now?" Pops said. He looked Billy up and down, taking in the rolled sleeves and the shined buckle. "Jesus, Mary, and Joseph. Look at this one. You taking Edna to the rodeo or proposing?"

"Pops—"

"Boy's got his arms out like he's entering a damn bodybuilding contest," Pops continued, puffing his cigar. "What's next, you gonna oil 'em up?"

The room exploded in laughter.

Billy's face went red. "I'm just—"

"Just making sure everyone at the rodeo knows you got arms," Jake finished for him, slapping Billy on the shoulder. "Don't worry, brother. I'm sure Edna will notice."

"Damn right she will," Pops said, raising his glass. "Hell, the whole county'll notice. Boy looks like he's about to lasso a bull with his bare hands." He squinted at Billy's biceps, then at Jake's. "Which one of you idiots thinks they're bigger this week?"

"Me," Billy and Jake said in unison.

Pops cackled. "Course you do. You been saying that since you were eight years old." He pointed his cigar at them. "You two are dumber than a box of rocks, but I'll be damned if you ain't my rocks."

Junior grinned. "Pops, who do you got? Billy or Jake?"

Pops took a long sip of his brandy, eyeing both of them. "I got fifty bucks says they both cry like little girls halfway through and call it a draw like always."

"Pops!" Billy protested.

"Don't 'Pops' me, boy. I've seen this song and dance a thousand times." He tapped ash from his cigar into an empty beer can. "Now get your ass out of here before Edna starts thinking you stood her up. And for Christ's sake, don't let her daddy see you flexing like that. Wade'll shoot you."

Billy laughed despite himself. He grabbed his black cowboy hat off the bedpost and settled it on his head. "I'm going. I'm going."

"Wait," Jake said, stepping in front of him. He held out his fist.

Billy bumped it.

"Don't let her talk you into line dancing," Jake said.

"I make no promises."

"Embarrassing."

Billy grinned, tipped his hat at the room, and headed for the door.

"Hey, Billy," Pops called after him.

Billy turned.

Pops raised his glass. "You look good, kid. Real good. Now go show her a good time."

Billy's grin widened. "Yes, sir."

He stepped out into the hallway, the sound of laughter and betting still echoing behind him as he headed down the stairs, out the door, and toward the barn for one last chore before he picked up Edna.

His truck was already humming outside, ready to go.

He had no idea he'd never make it to her door.

Chapter 2: The Barn

The night air was cool against Billy's face as he crossed the yard toward the horse barn. His truck sat idling near the house, headlights off, waiting for him. He could already picture Edna's face when he picked her up—the way she'd smile when she saw him dressed up nice, the way her hand would find his across the bench seat on the drive to the rodeo.

He pushed open the barn door, and it creaked on its hinges. The smell of hay and leather and horse sweat hit him immediately—familiar, comforting. He reached for the light switch.

Before his hand found it, something hard cracked against the back of his head.

Billy staggered forward, his vision exploding into white stars. His knees buckled, and he tried to turn, tried to raise his arms to defend himself, but a second blow caught him in the ribs. The air punched out of his lungs.

"Get him down! Get him down!"

Rough hands grabbed him from behind. Billy swung blindly, his fist connecting with something soft—a grunt—but then there were more hands, too many, dragging him to the ground. His hat flew off. His shoulder slammed into the dirt floor.

"Hold his arms! Hold his damn arms!"

Billy thrashed, fury igniting through the pain. He wasn't some steer to be thrown and tied. He twisted hard, trying to wrench free, but a knee drove into his back, pinning him. His face pressed into the dirt.

Rope bit into his wrists.

"No—" Billy snarled, yanking against it, but his wrists were jerked together behind his back. The rope pulled tight, cutting into his skin. He tried to kick, but his ankles were grabbed, yanked together, and more rope wrapped around them.

"Gag him. Gag him before he yells."

A rag was shoved into his mouth, tied tight around his head. Billy tried to spit it out, but it pressed against his tongue, choking him. He couldn't yell. Couldn't call for help.

A blindfold came next, rough fabric tied over his eyes. Everything went black.

Billy bucked against the hands holding him down, every muscle in his body straining against the ropes. But there were too many of them. They flipped him onto his side, and he felt more rope wrapping around his torso, his legs, binding him into a tight ball. His biceps—the arms he'd been so proud of an hour ago—were useless, pinned behind him.

"He's a big one," one of the voices muttered. "Look at him. Bet his family's got money."

"Dressed up nice, too. Yeah, they'll pay."

A boot nudged Billy's ribs. He grunted behind the gag, twisting against the ropes. His chest heaved, trying to pull in air through his nose.

"Load him up. Use his truck."

Hands grabbed him under his arms and knees, lifting him like a sack of feed. Billy thrashed, but the ropes held. He couldn't move. Couldn't fight. His fury burned hotter, hotter than the pain in his head, hotter than the humiliation of being carried like cargo.

They dumped him into the bed of his own truck. The metal was cold against his cheek. The engine was still running—his truck, the one he'd started up to go pick up Edna. The one that was supposed to take them to the rodeo.

The tailgate slammed shut.

Tires crunched over gravel, and the truck lurched forward.

Billy's last thought before the darkness pulled him under was simple, sharp, and absolute.

No one will break me.


When Billy came to, the blindfold was still tight over his eyes. The gag still choked him. But the ropes—the ropes felt different now.

He wasn't lying down anymore.

He was sitting.

His wrists were still tied behind him, but now they were lashed to something solid—wooden slats. His arms were pulled back, bent slightly at the elbows, and rope wrapped around his bare upper arms, biting into the skin just below his shoulders where his sleeves were folded. More rope circled his biceps, frapping them tight to the slats. His folded sleeves—the ones he'd rolled so carefully in front of the mirror—were pressed against his skin, soaked with sweat. From his shoulders to his bent elbows, the ropes dug in, and from there his forearms hung free behind the chair, wrists bound tight at the bottom.

His boots were tied together, and a long rope ran from them under the chair, pulling them back and connecting to his bound wrists in a hogtie. When he tried to move, the whole system tightened. If he pulled his arms, it yanked his boots. If he tried to move his legs forward, it wrenched his wrists down harder. He was locked in place.

Billy's chest rose and fell rapidly, sweat dripping down his temples. He twisted his wrists, testing the ropes. Nothing. He tried to push his legs forward. The rope cut deeper, yanking his wrists down harder.

His arms—the arms he'd flexed in the mirror, the arms Jake had compared to his own, the arms that had lifted bales and wrestled calves and never, ever failed him—were completely useless.

The veins in his forearms bulged, visible even in his restrained position. His biceps ached, straining against the tight bindings. The skin on his upper arms was already starting to discolor, turning purple where the circulation was cut off, the rope biting deep into the muscle.

Billy clenched his fists behind him, fury building in his chest like a wildfire.

He had never been tied up. Never been restrained. Never been made to feel powerless.

And he did not like it.

Footsteps echoed somewhere nearby. Boots on concrete. Voices, low and muffled.

Billy's jaw clenched around the gag. His nostrils flared as he sucked in air.

No one will break me.

Chapter 3: 911 Billy Jr.

Edna Nelson stood on the porch of her family's ranch house, smoothing down the skirt of her yellow sundress for the third time. She checked her watch. Seven-thirty. Billy was late.

"He'll be here, honey," her mother Mary said from the doorway. "You know how Billy is. Probably lost track of time in the barn."

But Edna's stomach twisted. Billy was never late. Not for her. Not for the rodeo.

By eight o'clock, her father—Sheriff Wade Nelson—was standing on the porch with his arms crossed, his jaw set. He pulled his radio from his belt.

"Tom, you copy?"

A crackle, then Tom Benson's voice. "Yeah, Wade. What's up?"

"Billy pick up Edna yet?"

A pause. "What? He left here over an hour ago. Said he had to lock up the barn, then he was headed your way."

Wade's eyes narrowed. "He never showed."

Another pause, longer this time. Then Tom's voice, sharper. "I'll check the barn."


Billy Junior was in the command center next to the frat house, headphones on, monitoring the ranch's security feeds with Billy Renzo and Ryan Mattern. Daniel Rodriguez was cross-legged on the floor, calibrating one of the new drones.

His radio crackled. "Junior. You there?"

Jr. pulled off his headphones. "Yeah, Grandpa. What's up?"

"Billy's truck still here?"

Junior frowned. He crossed to the window and looked down at the driveway. Empty. "No, sir. It's gone."

"Check the barn. Now."

Junior's stomach dropped. He looked at the other three boys. "Come on."

They took off running, boots pounding down the stairs and out the back door. The barn was dark, the door still half-open. Junior flipped on the lights.

Billy's black cowboy hat lay in the dirt near the door.

Junior's heart stopped.

He stepped forward slowly, scanning the ground. Long pieces of cut rope, scattered in the dirt. Scuff marks. Boot prints—multiple sets, not Billy's.

"Oh, God," Ryan breathed behind him.

Billy Renzo crouched down, examining the boot prints. "Three different treads. None of them match ranch boots."

Daniel pointed to the ropes. "These were cut clean. They tied him up here."

Junior's hands were shaking as he pulled the radio from his belt. He hit the red emergency button on the side.

A mechanical voice echoed across every radio in the consortium.

"911. Billy Junior. 911. Billy Junior. 911. Billy Junior."

Junior keyed the mic, his voice tight but clear. "This is Billy Junior. All consortium members, emergency at the Benson horse barn. Uncle Billy has been taken. I repeat—Billy Benson has been taken."

For three seconds, there was only static.

Then Wade's voice cracked through, sharp and controlled. "Junior, this is Wade. What's your location? What's the evidence?"

"Horse barn, Sheriff," Junior said. "Uncle Billy's hat on the ground. Cut ropes. Three sets of boot prints—not ours. His truck's gone. Signs of a struggle."

Billy Renzo leaned in toward Junior's radio. "Sheriff, the rope cuts are clean. They came prepared."

Ryan added, his voice shaking slightly, "There's drag marks leading to where the truck was parked."

A beat of silence.

Then Pops' voice, low and deadly. "Say that again, Junior."

Junior swallowed hard. "Billy's been taken, Pops. They ambushed him."

"Jesus Christ," Tom's voice broke through. "Junior, are you sure? Are you—"

"I'm sure, Dad," Junior said. "He's gone."

Jake's voice exploded over the radio. "Who?! Who the hell took him?!"

"Unknown," Junior said. "But there's three of them. Boot prints lead out to where his truck was."

Daniel spoke up. "We can track the truck. All the ranch vehicles have GPS."

"Do it," Wade's voice commanded. "Now. Junior, don't touch anything else in that barn. I'm on my way."

"Copy that," Junior said. He looked at the other three. "Ryan, Daniel—get back to the command center. Pull up the GPS. Billy, you're with me. We need to photograph this scene."

Wade's voice came through again. "Everyone converge on the Benson ranch. Now."

Pops' voice came through, quieter now but somehow more terrifying. "They took one of my boys." A pause. "They're gonna wish they hadn't."

Tom's voice was steady, but there was steel underneath. "All consortium members, this is Tom Benson. Emergency protocols. We find Billy. Whatever it takes."

The radio erupted with confirmations—voices from the Beaumonts, the Renzos' parents, the Matterns' parents, the Rodriguezes' parents.

Jake's voice cut through last. "I'm gonna kill them. I swear to God, I'm gonna—"

"Jake." Pops' voice. "Get your ass to the house. We do this smart. We do this together."

Junior looked at Billy Renzo, who was already snapping photos with his phone. Ryan and Daniel were sprinting back toward the house.

"Let's move," Junior said, picking up his uncle's hat with careful hands. "They need everything we can give them."


Within ten minutes, the Benson ranch house was chaos.

Tom and Sarah Benson stood in the living room, their faces pale. Pops was in his chair, cigar clenched between his teeth, brandy forgotten on the side table. Jake paced like a caged animal, his fists opening and closing. Ray and Josh stood by the door, already pulling on jackets. Celeb and Colton hovered near the stairs, ready to move.

Wade Nelson burst through the door with Mary, Edna, and Anna. Edna's face was streaked with tears. Anna immediately went to Junior's side.

Junior stood in the center of the room, still holding Billy's hat. Billy Renzo stood beside him with his phone out, showing the photos of the scene.

"Three sets of boot prints," Junior said, his voice steadier now. "Not ours. Cut ropes. Signs of a struggle." He swallowed hard. "They took him."

"Squatters," Wade said grimly. "We've had reports of transients camping out in empty barns across the county. I didn't think—" He cut himself off, his jaw tightening. "Doesn't matter. We find them. Now."

Ryan's voice came from the stairway. "We've got the GPS!"

Everyone turned.

Ryan and Daniel stood at the top of the stairs, Daniel holding a tablet. "Billy's truck. It's twenty miles southeast. Abandoned warehouse district near the county line."

"How long ago did it stop moving?" Wade asked.

Daniel checked. "About forty minutes ago."

The other consortium families started arriving—the Beaumonts, Mr. and Mrs. Renzo, Mr. and Mrs. Mattern, Mr. and Mrs. Rodriguez. The women gathered in the kitchen with Sarah, Rebecca, Mary, and the girls, their faces drawn but determined. The men assembled in the living room, checking weapons, pulling on boots.

Pops stood, his face carved from stone. "Someone took one of my boys." His voice was low, dangerous. "We get him back. And those sons of bitches who touched him—" He didn't finish. He didn't need to.

Junior's phone buzzed.

He looked down at the screen. His face went white.

"What?" Jake barked.

Junior turned the phone around.

The photo showed Billy—blindfolded, gagged, tied to a wooden chair. His arms were pulled behind him, roped tight to the slats, his folded sleeves soaked with sweat. His biceps were purple, veins popping out, the ropes cutting deep. His chest was heaving, ropes crisscrossed over his plaid shirt.

Edna let out a choked sob. Mary pulled her close.

Billy Renzo grabbed the phone from Junior, his jaw clenched. "There's metadata on this. I can trace it."

Jake's face twisted with rage. "I'm gonna kill them. I'm gonna—"

"You're gonna get in line," Pops said, his voice like gravel. He pointed his cigar at Junior and the other boys. "You four—get that command center running full speed. Track everything. Drones, satellite phones, the whole nine yards. Find my boy."

Junior nodded, his jaw set. "Yes, sir."

He turned to Billy Renzo, Ryan, and Daniel. "Let's go. We've got work to do."

The four of them bolted up the stairs to the command center.

Jake turned to Wade. "What do you need from us?"

Wade's hand rested on his holstered sidearm. "Saddle up. We're going hunting."

Chapter 4: The Command Center

The command center hummed with electronic life. Six monitors lined the wall, displaying satellite maps, GPS coordinates, and live drone feeds. Junior sat at the main console, his fingers flying across the keyboard. Billy Renzo hunched over a laptop to his left, running trace programs on the photo metadata. Ryan manned the radio equipment, and Daniel prepped the drones on the floor. Louisiana—Colton's nickname since Pops dubbed him that a year and a half ago when he first arrived with his Baton Rouge drawl—stood at the equipment rack, pulling out the eighteen high-tech iPads from their charging station.

"First protocol," Junior said, not looking up from his screen. "Distribute the tablets. Everyone needs to be synced."

"On it," Louisiana said. He grabbed a large backpack and started loading the iPads into it, each one displaying the consortium's encrypted interface. "These are all linked to our network. GPS, drone feeds, thermal imaging, radio—everything we see, they'll see."

"Got it," Daniel said, holding up his own tablet. "Billy's truck stopped moving forty-three minutes ago. Coordinates are locked." He pulled up the satellite view. "Abandoned warehouse district. Three buildings, lots of cover."

Junior leaned in. "Zoom in on that middle building."

The image sharpened. A cluster of rusted corrugated metal structures, surrounded by overgrown lots and scattered debris.

"There," Billy Renzo said, pointing. "That's Billy's truck. Parked behind the east building."

Ryan keyed the radio. "Command to all units. We have a location. Coordinates coming through now."

Wade's voice crackled back immediately. "Copy that. Hold position. We're moving out in five."

Louisiana slung the backpack over his shoulder. "I'll get these distributed and answer any questions. We drilled for this."

"Good," Junior said. "Make sure Pops, Grandpa Wade, and Dad understand the thermal overlay. Go."

Louisiana headed for the door, the backpack heavy with tablets.

Junior pulled up the drone interface. "Daniel, get Falcon-1 and Falcon-2 airborne. I want eyes on that location before they get there."

"On it." Daniel grabbed the controller, his thumbs working the joysticks. On the monitor, the first drone's camera flickered to life, lifting off from the back porch. The second followed.

Billy Renzo's screen beeped. "Metadata traced. Photo was sent from a burner phone—no surprise there—but the signal bounced off a cell tower three miles from the warehouse. They're there. They have to be."

"How long ago was the photo sent?" Junior asked.

"Twenty-two minutes."

Junior's jaw tightened. Twenty-two minutes. Billy had been tied to that chair, blindfolded, gagged, his arms purple from restricted blood flow, and they were just now getting eyes on the location.

"Falcon-1 approaching target," Daniel said.

The monitor shifted to the drone's thermal imaging camera. The warehouse district appeared in shades of green and black. Three heat signatures inside the middle building.

"Three targets," Junior said. "Matches the boot prints."

Ryan adjusted the frequency. "Command to Sheriff Nelson. Three heat signatures in the middle building. Thermal confirms."

"Copy," Wade's voice came back. "We're ten minutes out."


Downstairs, the living room had transformed into a war room.

Wade stood at the head of the group, a county map spread across the coffee table. Tom, Pops, Josh, Ray, Jake, Celeb, and the other consortium fathers circled around him. Robert Beaumont checked his rifle. Mr. Renzo adjusted his vest. Mr. Mattern and Mr. Rodriguez stood shoulder to shoulder, their faces grim.

The door swung open and Louisiana came through, backpack slung over his shoulder. He set it down and started pulling out iPads.

"Tablets synced to command center," Louisiana announced, moving through the room with practiced efficiency. "Everything we see upstairs, you'll see down here. GPS, thermal, drone feeds, encrypted comms."

He handed the first one to Wade. "Sheriff, thermal overlay is here—" he tapped the screen, "—these three signatures are the targets. Red dot is Billy's truck."

Wade nodded, swiping through the interface with familiarity. They'd drilled this system half a dozen times for tornado emergencies. "Good. Clear picture."

Louisiana moved to Tom next. "Tom, your screen's locked to the satellite feed. You can toggle to thermal here if you need it."

"Got it," Tom said, his eyes already scanning the warehouse layout.

Pops took his tablet with a grunt. "This the same setup as the tornado drill?"

"Yes, sir," Louisiana said. "Exact same interface. You remember how to switch views?"

"I ain't senile, boy," Pops muttered, but his gnarled fingers swiped through the screens with surprising dexterity. The thermal feed appeared, showing the three glowing signatures. His jaw tightened. "Those bastards."

Louisiana distributed the rest quickly—Ray, Josh, Jake, Celeb, Robert, and the other consortium fathers. Each one took their tablet and immediately understood the interface. They'd practiced this.

"Comms button is here," Louisiana reminded them, pointing to the icon. "You can talk directly to command center or switch to the general channel. All encrypted."

Mr. Renzo tapped his screen, testing the interface. "Drone altitude?"

"Three hundred feet," Louisiana said. "Thermal and night vision active."

"Good work, Louisiana," Mr. Mattern said.

Jake stared at his screen, his jaw clenched. The thermal signatures glowed green against the black background. One of them was his brother. "How long till we're there?"

"Ten minutes," Wade said, checking his watch. He tapped the map on his own tablet. "Three tangos inside. Warehouse district, here. No civilians in the area. Nearest road access is here." He traced the route. "We go in quiet. Surround the building. Tom, you take the north entrance with Ray and Josh. Robert, you're with me on the south. Renzos, Matterns, Rodriguezes—cover the exits. Nobody gets out."

"What about Billy?" Jake's voice was tight, controlled fury barely restrained.

"We get him out first," Wade said. "Clean and fast. Then we deal with the men who took him."

Pops stood from his chair, stubbing out his cigar in the ashtray. His face was stone. "I'm going."

"Pops—" Tom started.

"I'm going," Pops repeated, his voice leaving no room for argument. "That's my boy in there."

Tom nodded. "You're with me."

Jake stepped forward. "I'm coming too."

Wade looked at him. "Can you keep your head?"

Jake's fists clenched at his sides. For a moment, he didn't answer. Then he exhaled slowly. "Yeah. I can keep my head."

"Then you're with us."

Louisiana picked up the backpack with the remaining tablets. "Sheriff, once we've got the drones positioned and the network locked, the five of us are coming with the convoy. We'll have mobile command in the field."

Wade nodded. "You boys stay in the trucks until we secure the perimeter. Understood?"

"Yes, sir."

Louisiana turned toward the kitchen. "I need to get tablets to the ladies."


In the kitchen, Sarah Benson stood at the stove, hands shaking as she poured coffee into mugs. Rebecca was beside her, her nurse's training kicking in as she assembled a medical kit on the counter. Mary Nelson held Edna, who was pale and trembling. Anna stood with her arms wrapped around herself, tears streaming silently down her face.

Caroline Beaumont moved between them, quietly efficient, setting out food no one would eat. Mrs. Renzo, Mrs. Mattern, and Mrs. Rodriguez gathered around the table, their voices low, their hands clasped in prayer.

Louisiana appeared in the doorway, pulling three iPads from his backpack. "Sarah, Mary, Rebecca—these are for you. Same system we used in the tornado drills."

Sarah took one with trembling hands, her fingers finding the interface immediately. The screen showed the warehouse location, the drone feeds, the thermal signatures. Her breath caught. "He's one of those?"

"Yes, ma'am," Louisiana said gently. "And we're going to bring him home."

Rebecca took hers, her nurse's eyes immediately scanning the data. "Radio comms?"

"Right here," Louisiana said, tapping the icon. "You can talk to us or the convoy. Encrypted."

Mary Nelson took the third, holding it so Edna could see. Anna leaned in, her hand on her mother's shoulder. They'd all trained on these tablets. Mary's fingers moved across the screen, pulling up the drone feed.

"Any questions?" Louisiana asked.

"No," Sarah said softly. "We know how to use them. Thank you, Louisiana."

"Yes, ma'am." Louisiana nodded and headed back toward the stairs.

"He's strong," Rebecca said, snapping the medical kit shut. "Billy's strong. He'll hold on."

"They have him tied up," Edna whispered, her voice breaking. "Did you see his arms? They were—"

"He's alive," Sarah said firmly, though her voice wavered. "He's alive, and they're going to bring him home."

Mary pulled Edna closer. "Wade will find him. You know he will."

Anna wiped her eyes, her voice small. "Junior and the boys will help. They'll find him."

Rebecca nodded. "Those boys are the smartest kids in the county. If anyone can track him, it's them."

On the tablet screens, the drones circled the warehouse. The thermal signatures glowed green.

Sarah closed her eyes and whispered a prayer.


Back in the command center, Junior's radio crackled.

"Command, this is Sheriff Nelson. Tablets are distributed. We're moving out. Keep those drones on station and give us real-time updates."

"Copy that, Grandpa," Junior said. He looked at the other four boys as Louisiana burst back through the door. "Everybody synced?"

"Affirmative," Louisiana said, slightly out of breath. "No questions. They all know the system."

"Good." Junior stood. "Network's locked. Drones are in position. Let's pack up the mobile units and get down there."

Billy Renzo grabbed two ruggedized laptops. Ryan unplugged the portable satellite uplink. Daniel secured the drone controllers in a padded case. Louisiana slung a backpack full of backup batteries over his shoulder.

"We stay with the convoy," Junior said. "We're their eyes and ears."

Billy Renzo nodded, his jaw set. "Let's go get him back."

Junior stared at the monitor one last time, at the glowing green shapes inside the warehouse.

One of them was Billy.

"Hang on, Uncle Billy," Junior muttered under his breath. "We're coming."

The five boys bolted down the stairs, equipment in hand, and piled into the back of Tom's truck. On the tablet screens throughout the convoy and back in the kitchen, the drone feeds showed the warehouse waiting in the darkness.

The convoy rolled out from the ranch, headlights cutting through the night, heading southeast toward the warehouse district.

The hunt had begun.

Chapter 5: No One Will Break Me

Hours 1-4

Billy's world was darkness and rope.

The blindfold pressed tight against his eyes. The gag filled his mouth, soaked with his own spit. His arms screamed—bent behind him, lashed to the chair, circulation cut off from his biceps down to his wrists. The ropes bit deep into the muscle he'd been so proud of just hours ago.

He could hear them moving around him. Three of them. Boots on concrete. Low voices arguing.

"How much you think we can get for him?"

"Dressed like that? Family's got money. Ten grand, easy."

Billy's jaw clenched behind the gag. Let them look. Let them come.

His wrists twisted against the ropes. Nothing. The hogtie connecting his boots to his bound hands pulled tighter every time he moved. His legs burned. His shoulders burned. His biceps throbbed, purple and swollen.

No one will break me.

The mantra started then, quiet and certain in his mind.

He thought of Jake. Arm wrestling at the kitchen table when they were ten years old. Billy gritting his teeth, pushing harder, harder—Jake's hand slamming down on the table. The look on his brother's face. Respect. Pride.

He thought of Pops. "You boys got heart. Heart's what matters. Body can fail you. Mind can trick you. But heart? Heart don't quit."

I won't quit.

He thought of Edna. Standing on her porch right now, probably. Waiting. Worried. Her yellow sundress catching the porch light.

I'm coming back to you.


The blindfold was ripped off.

Billy blinked against the sudden light—a single bare bulb hanging from the ceiling of what looked like an abandoned warehouse. Three men stood in front of him, bandanas over their faces. One held a knife.

Billy's eyes locked on the blade.

"Nice shirt," the man said, stepping forward. He grabbed Billy's collar. "Let's see what's underneath."

The knife flashed. The fabric ripped.

Billy's shirt tore open down the middle, buttons scattering across the concrete. The man yanked the torn halves apart, baring Billy's chest. Sweat glistened on his skin.

"Look at this. Boy's built like a damn bull."

The knife traced a line from Billy's collarbone down to his ribs. Not cutting. Not yet. Just the cold steel against his skin, a promise.

"You feel that? Your family pays, you walk out of here. They don't..." The knife pressed harder, leaving a red line. "Well. You won't be so pretty anymore."

Billy didn't look away. Didn't blink.

No one will break me.


They took the photo.

One of them held up a phone, snapping pictures of Billy tied to the chair—blindfold off, gag still in, arms roped tight behind him, his torn shirt hanging open. His biceps were purple, veins bulging, sweat dripping down his temples.

Billy stared into the camera with pure, unfiltered rage.

"Perfect. Your family's gonna see this and pay up real quick."

After they sent it, they left him alone.

Billy's head dropped forward, his breath coming hard through his nose. His arms were numb now. He couldn't feel his hands anymore.

He tested the ropes again. The chair creaked under his weight. Wooden slats behind him, old and weathered.

Wait. Be smart.

He thought of Junior and the wiz kids. Those boys were smart. Smarter than these three idiots combined. If anyone could find him, it was them.

They're coming. I just have to hold on.


The knife came back.

The man crouched in front of Billy, blade glinting. "Your family's not responding fast enough. Maybe they need more motivation."

The knife touched Billy's chest, just above his heart. This time, it pressed down.

Billy's jaw clenched. The blade bit into his skin, a thin line of blood welling up. The man dragged the knife slowly across Billy's chest, carving a shallow cut. Blood trickled down his ribs.

Billy's nostrils flared. His fists shook behind him. But he didn't make a sound.

No one will break me.

The man leaned in close. "You're tougher than I thought, pretty boy. But everybody breaks eventually."

Billy's eyes met his. Cold. Hard. Unyielding.

The man laughed nervously and stepped back. "We'll see how long that lasts."


Hours 5-8

Billy's world narrowed to pain and fury.

His arms were dead weight now. His chest burned where the knife had cut him. Blood dried on his skin, sticky and cold. The gag choked him. The ropes held him.

But his mind was sharp.

He thought of the rodeo. The last time he'd been thrown from a bull. Slamming into the dirt, ribs bruised, breath knocked out of him. He'd gotten up. Walked out on his own two feet. Grinning.

I've been hurt worse.

He thought of Pops' stories from Vietnam. "You find out what you're made of when everything's taken from you. That's when you learn if you got steel in your spine."

I've got steel.

The chair creaked under him. Billy shifted his weight, testing it again. The wood groaned.

Not yet. Soon.


One of the men walked over, pulling the gag down.

"You got anything to say? Want to beg? Want to tell us where your family keeps their money?"

Billy's mouth was dry. His lips cracked. But when he spoke, his voice was steady.

"You're dead men."

The man blinked. "What?"

"You're dead men," Billy repeated, his eyes locked on him. "You don't know who you took. You don't know who's coming for me. But they are. And when they find you..." He smiled, cold and sharp. "You're gonna wish you'd never set foot in that barn."

The man's laughter died. He shoved the gag back into Billy's mouth, hard.

"Tough guy," he muttered.

But Billy saw it. The flicker of doubt. The nervousness.

They're scared. Good. They should be.

Billy leaned his head back against the chair, closing his eyes.

Hang on. Just a little longer.

They're coming.

No one will break me.

Chapter 6: The Chair

Billy waited until their voices faded. Footsteps echoing toward the far end of the warehouse. A door opening. Closing.

Silence.

His heart pounded in his chest. This was it. His only chance.

He leaned forward, then threw his weight backward as hard as he could.

The chair tipped. For one breathless second, Billy hung suspended in the air. Then gravity took over.

The chair slammed backward onto the concrete with a deafening crash.

Pain exploded through Billy's shoulders, his head, his spine. Stars burst behind his eyes. But through the ringing in his ears, he heard it—the sharp crack of splintering wood.

The chair had broken.

Billy gasped behind the gag, his chest heaving. He could feel it now—the wooden slats behind him had shattered into pieces. The seat had split away from the back. His arms were still tied, still bound to what remained of the chair's back, but his legs—

His legs were free.

The rope connecting his boots to his wrists had gone slack when the chair broke. Billy kicked hard, twisting, and felt the loops around his boots loosen. Another kick. Another. The rope fell away.

His legs were free.

Billy rolled onto his side, then his knees. His arms were still useless behind him, still lashed to the broken slats of the chair back, but he could move. He could stand.

He staggered to his feet, swaying. The broken chair back hung from his bound arms like a grotesque backpack. His chest screamed where the knife had cut him. His biceps throbbed, still purple and swollen. But his legs worked.

And that was enough.

Billy ran.

His boots pounded against the concrete. The warehouse was massive—dim, shadowy, filled with rusted equipment and stacked crates. He didn't know where he was going. Didn't care. Just had to get out. Had to—

"He's loose! He's loose!"

Footsteps behind him. Shouting. Billy's lungs burned as he pushed harder, faster. The gag choked him. The broken chair back bounced against his spine with every step. But he ran.

A shadow stepped out from behind a crate.

Billy tried to dodge, but his balance was off, his arms useless. The man tackled him from the side, driving him into the ground.

Billy hit the concrete hard. The air punched out of his lungs. He bucked, thrashed, trying to roll away, but two more sets of hands grabbed him. They hauled him up, dragging him back toward the center of the warehouse.

"You think you're smart?!" one of them snarled. "You think you can run?!"

They threw him down. Billy's shoulder slammed into the floor. He groaned behind the gag.

"Tie him up. Different this time."

"What about the ransom?"

"Forget the ransom. This is done. We leave him. Let him die."

Billy's blood went cold.

Rough hands grabbed his boots, lashing them together again. But this time, they didn't tie him to a chair. This time, they looped a rope through the bindings on his boots and threw it over an exposed beam overhead.

Then they pulled.

Billy's body jerked upward. His boots lifted off the ground. Higher. Higher. The world flipped upside down as they hoisted him into the air by his feet.

Blood rushed to his head. His arms—still tied behind him, still lashed to the broken slats of the chair back—hung uselessly below him. The ropes around his biceps bit deeper. His torn shirt hung open, exposing his chest and the shallow knife wound, blood smeared across his ribs.

They tied off the rope. Billy swung slightly, suspended six feet off the ground, his body dangling like a side of beef in a slaughterhouse.

"Good luck getting out of that, pretty boy."

One of them walked over and looked up at Billy's inverted face. "Your family didn't pay fast enough. That's on them. Maybe they'll find you before you die. Maybe they won't."

Billy's chest heaved. His vision swam. Upside down, his head pounding, blood pooling in his skull.

He glared down at the man through the haze of pain and fury.

No one will break me.

The men left. A door slammed. An engine started outside. Tires on gravel. Then silence.

Billy hung alone in the darkness, suspended by his feet, his arms bound and useless, his body still lashed to the broken chair back.

His head throbbed. His lungs burned. His arms screamed.

But he was still alive.

Hang on. Just hang on.

They're coming.

No one will break me.

Chapter 7: The Hunt

The convoy had been rolling for fifteen minutes when Junior's tablet lit up with an alert.

He was in the back of Tom's truck with the other four wiz kids, equipment spread around them. Billy Renzo looked up from his laptop. "What is it?"

Junior's face went pale. "Another photo."

He turned the tablet so they could all see.

Billy. Hanging upside down by his feet. His arms still bound behind him to the broken chair back. His torn shirt hanging open. Blood on his chest. His face inverted, eyes closed.

"Jesus," Ryan whispered.

Daniel grabbed his radio. "Command to convoy. Second photo received. Billy's been moved. He's—" His voice cracked. "He's strung up."

The radio exploded with responses.

"What?!" Jake's voice.

"Send it. Now." Wade's voice, sharp and controlled.

Junior forwarded the image to all the tablets. In trucks throughout the convoy, screens lit up with the horrifying image.


In the lead truck, Wade stared at his tablet, his jaw working.

Back at the ranch, in the kitchen, Sarah's tablet lit up with the same image. She gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. Mary grabbed her, holding her up as her knees buckled.

"Oh God," Sarah whispered. "Oh God, my baby."

Rebecca stared at her screen, her nurse's training warring with her mother's heart. "He's alive. Look—his chest is moving. He's breathing."

Edna sobbed into Mary's shoulder. Anna held her, both girls crying.

Caroline Beaumont stood, her voice steady. "They're almost there. Wade and Tom will get him. They will."

Maria Renzo, Linda Mattern, and Sofia Rodriguez gathered around Sarah, their hands on her shoulders, silent support.

On the tablets, they could see the convoy's progress. Eight minutes out.

Rebecca moved to the counter, opening her medical kit, laying out supplies. Bandages, antiseptic, IV fluids, pain medication. Her hands were steady, focused. "Sarah, I need you to boil water. Mary, get me clean towels. As many as you can find."

The women moved into action, channeling their fear into purpose.


"How long ago was this sent?" Wade asked over the radio.

"Twelve minutes," Billy Renzo's voice came back. "Metadata places it at the same location. The warehouse."

"They're panicking," Tom's voice cut in from the truck behind them. "They wouldn't have done this unless the ransom plan fell apart."

"Or Billy tried to escape," Pops said, his voice low and deadly. "Look at that chair back still tied to him. Boy broke the damn chair and tried to run."

Jake's voice was barely controlled. "How long can he—"

"Don't," Pops interrupted. "Don't go there. We're eight minutes out. We get there, we get him down, we bring him home."

Wade keyed his radio. "All units, ETA seven minutes. Junior, what do the drones show?"

Junior's voice came back immediately. "Three heat signatures inside the warehouse ten minutes ago. Now showing... two. Wait—" A pause. "Heat signatures are moving toward the exit. They're leaving."

"Leaving?!" Jake's voice exploded. "They're just gonna leave him there to—"

"Which means we've got a clear entry," Wade said, cutting him off. "Tom, Robert, Renzos, Matterns, Rodriguezes—new plan. We go in fast. No resistance expected. Priority is getting Billy down."

"Copy," multiple voices responded.


In Tom's truck, Junior was typing furiously. "I'm pulling up the interior layout from the satellite thermal. Billy's heat signature is... here." He pointed to the screen. "Center of the main warehouse space. Elevated approximately six feet."

"Six feet up," Billy Renzo muttered. "Hanging."

Louisiana checked the first aid kit they'd brought. "We've got bandages, water, blankets. Should be enough to stabilize him for the ride home."

"Good," Tom's voice came through the radio. He'd been listening. "Junior, you boys stay in the trucks until we secure the scene."

"Yes, sir," Junior said.

Junior stared at the thermal image on his screen. The heat signature that was his Uncle Billy, suspended in the air, alone.

"Hang on," Junior whispered. "We're almost there."


The convoy crested a hill, and the warehouse district came into view. Three rusted metal buildings silhouetted against the night sky. Billy's truck was visible behind the middle building, exactly where the GPS had shown it.

Wade's voice came over the radio. "All units, lights off. We go in silent."

The headlights cut out. The convoy rolled forward in darkness, guided only by the moonlight and the drone feeds on their tablets.

Two hundred yards out, Wade raised his fist. The trucks stopped.

Men poured out silently. Wade, Tom, Pops, Jake, Josh, Ray, Celeb, Robert, and the consortium fathers. They moved like shadows, weapons ready, spreading out to surround the warehouse.

Junior watched from the truck bed, his heart pounding. The drone feed showed the two remaining heat signatures exiting through a back door, running toward an old pickup truck parked in the weeds.

"Two tangos fleeing south exit," Junior reported over the radio. "Billy's signature still inside, stationary."

"Renzos, Matterns—intercept those runners," Wade ordered. "Everyone else, with me. We're going in."

Mr. Renzo and Mr. Mattern peeled off, moving fast toward the south side of the building.

Wade reached the main entrance first. Tom and Pops flanked him on one side, Jake and Josh on the other. Robert Beaumont was right behind them. Wade tested the door. Unlocked.

He pushed it open slowly. The hinges creaked.

Darkness inside. The smell of rust and decay.

Wade clicked on his flashlight. Tom did the same. The beams cut through the darkness, illuminating the massive empty space of the warehouse.

And there, in the center, suspended from a beam—

"Billy!" Jake's voice broke.

Billy hung upside down, motionless. His arms bound behind him to the broken chair back. His boots tied together, rope stretching up to the beam. His torn shirt hung open. Blood on his chest. His face pale, inverted.

Jake started to run forward but Tom grabbed his arm. "Slow. Check for traps."

Wade swept his flashlight across the floor. No tripwires. No movement. "Clear. Move."

They rushed forward.

Tom reached Billy first, his hand going to his son's neck. Feeling for a pulse.

For three agonizing seconds, no one breathed.

Then Tom's voice, choked with relief. "He's alive. Pulse is weak, but he's alive."

Wade keyed his radio immediately. "Command to ranch. We have Billy. He's alive. Repeat—Billy is alive."


Back in the kitchen, the radio crackled with Wade's voice.

"We have Billy. He's alive."

Sarah collapsed into a chair, sobbing. Mary held her, crying too. Edna's knees gave out, and Anna caught her. Caroline, Maria, Linda, and Sofia gathered around, tears streaming, hands clasped in prayer and gratitude.

Rebecca's hands moved faster, organizing her medical supplies. "They'll be here in twenty minutes. I'll be ready."


At the warehouse, Pops' voice broke for the first time. "Get my boy down."

Jake was already climbing onto a crate, reaching for the rope tied to the beam. Josh pulled out a knife.

"Careful," Tom said, positioning himself directly under Billy. "I'll catch him. On three."

Jake steadied himself, one arm wrapped around Billy's legs for support. "Ready."

"Three."

Josh cut the rope.

Billy's body dropped into Tom's arms. Tom staggered under the weight but held firm. Jake jumped down, helping ease Billy to the ground, turning him right-side up as gently as they could.

Tom pulled out his own knife, cutting through the gag first. Billy's head lolled to the side.

"Billy," Tom said, his hand on his son's face. "Billy, can you hear me?"

No response.

Tom cut through the ropes around Billy's boots. Then the ropes binding his wrists. Then carefully, the ropes around his biceps and the broken chair back.

Billy's arms fell free, limp and discolored.

"Severe rope burns," Tom said, examining them. "Jesus. He's been like this for hours."

"Hospital," Wade said. "Now."

"No."

The word was barely a whisper, but everyone heard it.

Billy's eyes fluttered open. Barely focused. But open.

"Billy—" Tom started.

"No hospital," Billy rasped again. His voice was raw, broken, but determined.

"Son, you need—"

"Home." Billy's eyes found Tom's face. Then Jake's. "Take me home."

Jake's hand gripped Billy's shoulder. "You crazy stubborn idiot."

Billy's lips twitched. Almost a smile. "Yeah."

Wade keyed his radio. "Rebecca's waiting at the ranch. She can treat him there. But Billy, if anything changes—"

"Then hospital," Billy whispered. "Deal."

"Let's move," Tom said.

They lifted Billy as carefully as they could. Tom and Jake carried him between them, his arms draped over their shoulders. Billy's legs barely worked, but he tried. Every step back toward the trucks, he tried.

Behind them, shouts echoed from the south side of the warehouse. Mr. Renzo's voice. "We've got them! Both of them!"

Wade keyed his radio. "Secure them in one of the trucks. We'll deal with it after we get Billy home."

As they emerged from the warehouse, the five wiz kids jumped down from the trucks, tablets and equipment forgotten. Junior ran to Billy's side, his face streaked with tears.

"Uncle Billy—"

Billy's eyes opened again, finding Junior. "Hey... kid."

"You're okay. You're gonna be okay."

"Yeah." Billy's voice was fading. "Told you... no one... breaks me."

Then his eyes closed, and his weight sagged completely into Tom's and Jake's arms.

"Let's go!" Tom shouted. "Now!"

They loaded Billy into the back of Tom's truck on a bed of blankets Louisiana had prepared. Josh climbed in beside him, keeping him stable. Louisiana wrapped Billy in another blanket, elevating his feet slightly.

The wiz kids piled into another truck with their equipment.

The convoy turned around, headlights blazing now, racing back toward the Benson ranch.

Billy was coming home.

Chapter 8: Coming Home

The convoy roared into the Benson ranch just after midnight, headlights blazing, trucks skidding to a stop in front of the house.

The front door burst open. Sarah, Mary, Rebecca, Edna, Anna, Caroline, Maria, Linda, and Sofia poured out onto the porch, their faces a mixture of relief and terror.

Tom and Jake carefully lifted Billy from the truck bed. His head hung forward, barely conscious. Louisiana and Josh supported him from the sides as they carried him up the porch steps.

"Inside," Rebecca said, her voice steady and clinical. "Living room. Lay him on the couch."

They moved as one, carrying Billy through the door. Sarah's hand flew to her mouth when she saw him up close—the rope burns on his wrists and biceps, angry and purple. The torn shirt hanging open, dried blood on his chest. His face pale, drawn, exhausted.

They laid him gently on the couch. Rebecca was already there, medical kit open, gloves on.

"Everyone back," she said. "Give me room."

The family crowded around but stepped back enough for Rebecca to work. Sarah knelt beside the couch, her hand on Billy's face. "Baby, you're home. You're home now."

Billy's eyes fluttered open. "Mom."

Sarah's tears came harder. "I'm here. I'm right here."

Rebecca moved with practiced efficiency. She checked his pulse, his breathing, his pupils. "Dehydration. Possible mild concussion. These rope burns are severe—circulation was cut off for hours." She examined his arms, his wrists, his biceps. "Can you feel your hands, Billy?"

Billy tried to move his fingers. Slowly, they flexed. "Yeah. Hurts. But yeah."

"Good. That's good." Rebecca grabbed antiseptic and gauze. "This is going to sting."

She started cleaning the rope burns on his wrists. Billy's jaw clenched, but he didn't make a sound.

Jake stood beside the couch, his fists opening and closing. Pops was in his chair, cigar unlit, brandy untouched, watching every move. Tom stood with his hand on Sarah's shoulder. Josh, Ray, Celeb, and the wiz kids hovered near the doorway.

Wade stood by the window, radio still on his belt, watching the scene with the trained calm of a man who'd seen worse but never stopped caring.

"The knife wound?" Rebecca asked, examining Billy's chest. The shallow cut had stopped bleeding, but it was red and angry.

"Not deep," Billy muttered. "Just... a message."

Rebecca's jaw tightened. She cleaned it carefully, applied antibiotic ointment, covered it with a bandage. Then she moved to the rope burns on his biceps.

"These are the worst," she said quietly. "Billy, you need to understand—nerve damage is possible. We need to monitor this."

"I can feel them," Billy said. "They work."

"For now. But if anything changes—numbness, tingling, weakness—we go to the hospital. No arguments."

Billy met her eyes. "Okay."

Rebecca nodded. She wrapped his biceps in gauze, then his wrists, working methodically. When she finished, she sat back. "I'm starting an IV. You're dehydrated. You need fluids."

"I can drink water."

"IV first. Then water. Then food, if you can keep it down."

Billy didn't argue.

Rebecca set up the IV, threading the needle into his arm with practiced ease. The saline drip started, slow and steady.

"Rest," Rebecca said. "That's an order."

Billy's eyes closed.


An hour later, Billy's eyes opened again. The IV bag was half-empty. His color was better. His breathing steadier.

Sarah was still beside him, holding his hand. Edna sat on the other side of the couch, her hand on his shoulder. Anna stood with Junior near the doorway.

"Water," Billy said, his voice stronger now.

Sarah grabbed a glass immediately. Billy drank slowly, carefully. Then again.

"Food?" Rebecca asked.

"Yeah."

Caroline brought soup—warm, simple, easy. Billy ate slowly, his hands shaking slightly, but he ate.

The family watched in silence, relief washing over them.

When Billy finished, he set the bowl down and looked around the room. Everyone was there. His whole family. The consortium. The wiz kids.

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

"Don't," Tom said, his voice rough. "Don't thank us. We're family."

Billy nodded. Then his eyes found Jake, who stood leaning against the wall, arms crossed.

"Jake."

Jake pushed off the wall, walking over. "Yeah?"

Billy's lips twitched into the faintest smile. "I still think mine are bigger."

The room went silent.

Then Jake laughed—short, sharp, almost disbelieving. "You're out of your damn mind."

"Prove it," Billy said, sitting up slowly. He grimaced, but he sat up.

"Billy—" Sarah started.

"I'm fine, Mom." Billy looked at Rebecca. "Can I?"

Rebecca stared at him for a long moment. Then she sighed. "If you pass out, I'm putting you in the hospital myself."

"Deal."

Billy stood, swaying slightly. Jake grabbed his arm, steadying him. "You sure about this?"

"Yeah."

They moved to the kitchen table. The whole family followed, drawn by the absurdity and the familiarity of it.

Billy sat down. Jake sat across from him.

Billy rolled up his right sleeve—carefully, wincing as the gauze on his bicep shifted. But he rolled it up, baring his arm.

Jake did the same.

They clasped hands across the table, elbows down.

"You're insane," Jake said.

"Probably," Billy said.

Pops stood, pulling money from his pocket. "Fifty on Jake. Boy just got strung up like a damn piñata. No way he wins."

"I'll take that bet," Tom said. "Fifty on Billy."

"Billy," Sarah said, pulling out a twenty.

"Jake," Junior said, grinning.

"Billy," Celeb said.

"Jake," Louisiana said.

Money piled onto the table. Everyone chose a side.

Wade watched from the doorway, shaking his head but smiling. Mary stood beside him, tears still on her face but laughing softly.

"Ready?" Tom asked.

Billy and Jake locked eyes.

"Three... two... one... go!"

Their arms strained. Billy's jaw clenched. His bicep bulged against the gauze. Jake pushed hard, his face red with effort.

Neither arm moved.

"Come on, Jake!" Junior shouted.

"You got this, Billy!" Ray called.

The room erupted in cheers and jeers, the tension of the last twelve hours exploding into noise and laughter and life.

Billy's arm shook. Jake's arm shook.

And then, slowly, Billy's arm started to move. Inch by inch. Jake pushed back, but Billy didn't stop.

With a final surge, Billy slammed Jake's hand down onto the table.

The room exploded.

"No way!" Junior shouted.

"That's my boy!" Tom yelled, grabbing the money.

Pops cackled, shaking his head. "Unbelievable. Un-be-lievable."

Robert Beaumont whistled low. "I've seen a lot of things, but that might be the most stubborn thing I've ever witnessed."

"Stubborn?" Mr. Renzo said, laughing. "That's not stubborn. That's pure grit."

"That's Benson blood," Mr. Mattern added.

Wade shook his head, grinning. "Boy gets kidnapped, tied up, hung from a beam, and still comes home and wins an arm wrestle. That's something."

"That's everything," Tom said, his voice thick with pride.

Jake sat back, staring at his hand, then at Billy. "How?"

Billy grinned—tired, worn, but unbroken. "Told you. Mine are bigger."

"Bigger?!" Celeb leaned over from where he stood. "Jake, man, you just got beat by a guy who spent the last eight hours hanging upside down. You need to hit the gym, brother."

"Shut up, Celeb," Jake muttered, but he was grinning.

"No, seriously," Celeb continued. "Billy literally had no circulation in his arms for hours. And you lost. That's embarrassing."

"I said shut up."

"Maybe you should arm wrestle Junior next. Work your way back up."

Junior laughed. "I'll take that bet."

"Y'all are the worst," Jake said, but he reached across the table to grip Billy's shoulder. "You crazy son of a bitch."

Billy's grin widened. "Yeah."

Pops pushed himself up from his chair, walking toward the cabinet in the corner. "That deserves a proper drink."

He opened the cabinet and pulled out four bottles. Two bottles of Jack Daniel's Single Barrel Barrel Proof and two bottles of Jack Daniel's Sinatra Select.

The room went dead silent.

"Pops," Tom said slowly. "Those are—"

"Special occasion bottles," Pops finished, setting all four on the table with heavy thuds. "And if this ain't a special occasion, I don't know what the hell is." He looked around at the roomful of men—his sons, his grandsons, the consortium fathers, the wiz kids. "Billy came home. That's worth every damn drop."

"Pops, that's over a thousand dollars worth of whiskey," Josh said.

"I know what it costs, boy." Pops started lining up shot glasses. "And I know what it's worth. Now shut up and drink."

He grabbed the first bottle of Barrel Proof and started pouring. Then the Sinatra Select. Moving down the line, filling glass after glass.

"Everyone drinks," Pops said. "And I mean everyone." He looked at the wiz kids. "That includes you boys. You earned it tonight."

Junior, Billy Renzo, Ryan, Daniel, and Louisiana exchanged glances, then grinned.

Pops poured shots for Tom, Wade, Josh, Ray, Celeb, Robert, Mr. Renzo, Mr. Mattern, Mr. Rodriguez, and all the consortium fathers. He poured for the wiz kids. And finally, he poured two shots and set them in front of Billy.

"One of each," Pops said. "You drink both."

Billy looked at the two glasses, then at Pops. "Yes, sir."

Pops raised his own glass—Barrel Proof, neat. "To Billy. Who broke a damn chair, ran like hell, got strung up like a side of beef, and still came home and beat his brother at arm wrestling." He grinned. "No one breaks a Benson."

"No one breaks a Benson!" the room roared.

They drank.

The Barrel Proof burned like fire going down. The Sinatra Select was smooth, rich, warm. Billy drained both glasses and set them down, his eyes watering slightly but his grin intact.

"Damn," Billy rasped.

"That's the good stuff, boy," Pops said, already pouring another round.

Mr. Rodriguez raised his glass. "To the wiz kids. Without you boys, we'd still be looking."

"Hear, hear," Wade said.

The consortium fathers drank to that.

Tom raised his glass next. "To family. All of us."

"To family," everyone echoed.

They drank again, the whiskey flowing, the tension of the night dissolving into warmth and brotherhood and gratitude.


An hour later, the house was quieter. The consortium families had gone home. Wade, Mary, Edna, and Anna had left. Sarah, Tom, Rebecca, and Josh had gone to bed, exhausted but relieved.

Billy, Jake, Celeb, Junior, Billy Renzo, Ryan, Daniel, and Louisiana headed upstairs to the frat house.

Billy climbed the stairs slowly, but he climbed them. Jake stayed close, ready to catch him if he stumbled. But Billy didn't stumble.

They walked down the second-floor hallway, past the command center, past Pops' bedroom—where they could hear the old man's rumbling snores already—and pushed open the door to the frat house.

The same room where the night had started. The cracked mirror still leaned against the wall. The bunk beds, the mattress wedged between them, the clutter of boots and clothes and life.

Billy's black cowboy hat sat on the bedpost. Junior had brought it back from the barn.

Billy picked it up, turning it over in his hands. Then he set it back down.

"Beer?" Celeb asked, already kneeling by the floorboards near his bunk.

"Hell yes," Jake said.

Celeb pried up the loose board, revealing the hidden stash. Bottles clinked as he pulled them out, passing them around. Cold, contraband, perfect.

They settled in—Jake and Billy on the lower bunks, Celeb and Louisiana on the top bunks, Junior and the other three wiz kids on the floor, backs against the wall.

Billy cracked open his beer and took a long drink.

"So," Jake said, leaning back. "You gonna tell Edna you stood her up, or you gonna make me do it?"

Billy snorted. "I'll tell her. Tomorrow. When I can think straight."

"She's gonna kill you," Junior said.

"She's gonna cry first, then kill you," Louisiana added.

"Probably," Billy admitted.

Celeb took a swig of his beer. "Jake, I'm still not over it. You lost to a man who was literally dying a few hours ago."

"I wasn't dying," Billy corrected.

"Close enough," Celeb said. "And Jake still lost."

"Are we gonna do this all night?" Jake asked.

"Yes," Celeb said immediately. "Yes, we are."

"You know what I still can't figure out," Ryan said, looking at Billy. "How the hell did you break that chair?"

Billy grinned. "Threw myself backward as hard as I could. Figured if I was gonna die, I wasn't gonna die tied to a damn chair."

"And then you ran," Daniel said, shaking his head. "With the chair back still tied to you."

"Didn't have a choice."

"That's insane," Billy Renzo said. "You're insane."

"Yeah, well," Billy said, taking another drink. "Runs in the family."

Jake raised his beer. "Damn straight."

They clinked bottles.

"Seriously though," Junior said, his voice quieter now. "Uncle Billy... when we saw that second photo..." He trailed off.

Billy looked at him. "I knew you'd find me, Junior. You and these boys. I knew it."

Junior's throat tightened. "We almost didn't get there in time."

"But you did." Billy's voice was firm. "You did. And that's what matters."

Celeb leaned over from his bunk. "So what now? You gonna take a few days off? Rest up?"

Billy laughed. "You know me better than that."

"Figured," Jake said. "You'll be back on the ranch tomorrow, acting like nothing happened."

"Maybe not tomorrow," Billy said, glancing at his bandaged wrists. "But soon."

"Pops is gonna make you take a week," Louisiana predicted.

"Pops can try."

They laughed, the sound filling the small room, chasing away the shadows of the night.

Down the hall, Pops' snores rumbled on. Below them, the house was quiet. The barn was quiet. The horses were safe. The family was home.

And in the frat house on the second floor, the boys drank their contraband beer, told their stories, and laughed until their sides hurt.

Because they were alive. They were together. And no one—no one—had broken them.

Chapter 8: Coming Home

The convoy roared into the Benson ranch just after midnight, headlights blazing, trucks skidding to a stop in front of the house.

The front door burst open. Sarah, Mary, Rebecca, Edna, Anna, Caroline, Maria, Linda, and Sofia poured out onto the porch, their faces a mixture of relief and terror.

Tom and Jake carefully lifted Billy from the truck bed. His head hung forward, barely conscious. Louisiana and Josh supported him from the sides as they carried him up the porch steps.

"Inside," Rebecca said, her voice steady and clinical. "Living room. Lay him on the couch."

They moved as one, carrying Billy through the door. Sarah's hand flew to her mouth when she saw him up close—the rope burns on his wrists and biceps, angry and purple. The torn shirt hanging open, dried blood on his chest. His face pale, drawn, exhausted.

They laid him gently on the couch. Rebecca was already there, medical kit open, gloves on.

"Everyone back," she said. "Give me room."

The family crowded around but stepped back enough for Rebecca to work. Sarah knelt beside the couch, her hand on Billy's face. "Baby, you're home. You're home now."

Billy's eyes fluttered open. "Mom."

Sarah's tears came harder. "I'm here. I'm right here."

Rebecca moved with practiced efficiency. She checked his pulse, his breathing, his pupils. "Dehydration. Possible mild concussion. These rope burns are severe—circulation was cut off for hours." She examined his arms, his wrists, his biceps. "Can you feel your hands, Billy?"

Billy tried to move his fingers. Slowly, they flexed. "Yeah. Hurts. But yeah."

"Good. That's good." Rebecca grabbed antiseptic and gauze. "This is going to sting."

She started cleaning the rope burns on his wrists. Billy's jaw clenched, but he didn't make a sound.

Jake stood beside the couch, his fists opening and closing. Pops was in his chair, cigar unlit, brandy untouched, watching every move. Tom stood with his hand on Sarah's shoulder. Josh, Ray, Celeb, and the wiz kids hovered near the doorway.

Wade stood by the window, radio still on his belt, watching the scene with the trained calm of a man who'd seen worse but never stopped caring.

"The knife wound?" Rebecca asked, examining Billy's chest. The shallow cut had stopped bleeding, but it was red and angry.

"Not deep," Billy muttered. "Just... a message."

Rebecca's jaw tightened. She cleaned it carefully, applied antibiotic ointment, covered it with a bandage. Then she moved to the rope burns on his biceps.

"These are the worst," she said quietly. "Billy, you need to understand—nerve damage is possible. We need to monitor this."

"I can feel them," Billy said. "They work."

"For now. But if anything changes—numbness, tingling, weakness—we go to the hospital. No arguments."

Billy met her eyes. "Okay."

Rebecca nodded. She wrapped his biceps in gauze, then his wrists, working methodically. When she finished, she sat back. "I'm starting an IV. You're dehydrated. You need fluids."

"I can drink water."

"IV first. Then water. Then food, if you can keep it down."

Billy didn't argue.

Rebecca set up the IV, threading the needle into his arm with practiced ease. The saline drip started, slow and steady.

"Rest," Rebecca said. "That's an order."

Billy's eyes closed.


An hour later, Billy's eyes opened again. The IV bag was half-empty. His color was better. His breathing steadier.

Sarah was still beside him, holding his hand. Edna sat on the other side of the couch, her hand on his shoulder. Anna stood with Junior near the doorway.

"Water," Billy said, his voice stronger now.

Sarah grabbed a glass immediately. Billy drank slowly, carefully. Then again.

"Food?" Rebecca asked.

"Yeah."

Caroline brought soup—warm, simple, easy. Billy ate slowly, his hands shaking slightly, but he ate.

The family watched in silence, relief washing over them.

When Billy finished, he set the bowl down and looked around the room. Everyone was there. His whole family. The consortium. The wiz kids.

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

"Don't," Tom said, his voice rough. "Don't thank us. We're family."

Billy nodded. Then his eyes found Jake, who stood leaning against the wall, arms crossed.

"Jake."

Jake pushed off the wall, walking over. "Yeah?"

Billy's lips twitched into the faintest smile. "I still think mine are bigger."

The room went silent.

Then Jake laughed—short, sharp, almost disbelieving. "You're out of your damn mind."

"Prove it," Billy said, sitting up slowly. He grimaced, but he sat up.

"Billy—" Sarah started.

"I'm fine, Mom." Billy looked at Rebecca. "Can I?"

Rebecca stared at him for a long moment. Then she sighed. "If you pass out, I'm putting you in the hospital myself."

"Deal."

Billy stood, swaying slightly. Jake grabbed his arm, steadying him. "You sure about this?"

"Yeah."

They moved to the kitchen table. The whole family followed, drawn by the absurdity and the familiarity of it.

Billy sat down. Jake sat across from him.

Billy rolled up his right sleeve—carefully, wincing as the gauze on his bicep shifted. But he rolled it up, baring his arm.

Jake did the same.

They clasped hands across the table, elbows down.

"You're insane," Jake said.

"Probably," Billy said.

Pops stood, pulling money from his pocket. "Fifty on Jake. Boy just got strung up like a damn piñata. No way he wins."

"I'll take that bet," Tom said. "Fifty on Billy."

"Billy," Sarah said, pulling out a twenty.

"Jake," Junior said, grinning.

"Billy," Celeb said.

"Jake," Louisiana said.

Money piled onto the table. Everyone chose a side.

Wade watched from the doorway, shaking his head but smiling. Mary stood beside him, tears still on her face but laughing softly.

"Ready?" Tom asked.

Billy and Jake locked eyes.

"Three... two... one... go!"

Their arms strained. Billy's jaw clenched. His bicep bulged against the gauze. Jake pushed hard, his face red with effort.

Neither arm moved.

"Come on, Jake!" Junior shouted.

"You got this, Billy!" Ray called.

The room erupted in cheers and jeers, the tension of the last twelve hours exploding into noise and laughter and life.

Billy's arm shook. Jake's arm shook.

And then, slowly, Billy's arm started to move. Inch by inch. Jake pushed back, but Billy didn't stop.

With a final surge, Billy slammed Jake's hand down onto the table.

The room exploded.

"No way!" Junior shouted.

"That's my boy!" Tom yelled, grabbing the money.

Pops cackled, shaking his head. "Unbelievable. Un-be-lievable."

Robert Beaumont whistled low. "I've seen a lot of things, but that might be the most stubborn thing I've ever witnessed."

"Stubborn?" Mr. Renzo said, laughing. "That's not stubborn. That's pure grit."

"That's Benson blood," Mr. Mattern added.

Wade shook his head, grinning. "Boy gets kidnapped, tied up, hung from a beam, and still comes home and wins an arm wrestle. That's something."

"That's everything," Tom said, his voice thick with pride.

Jake sat back, staring at his hand, then at Billy. "How?"

Billy grinned—tired, worn, but unbroken. "Told you. Mine are bigger."

"Bigger?!" Celeb leaned over from where he stood. "Jake, man, you just got beat by a guy who spent the last eight hours hanging upside down. You need to hit the gym, brother."

"Shut up, Celeb," Jake muttered, but he was grinning.

"No, seriously," Celeb continued. "Billy literally had no circulation in his arms for hours. And you lost. That's embarrassing."

"I said shut up."

"Maybe you should arm wrestle Junior next. Work your way back up."

Junior laughed. "I'll take that bet."

"Y'all are the worst," Jake said, but he reached across the table to grip Billy's shoulder. "You crazy son of a bitch."

Billy's grin widened. "Yeah."

Pops pushed himself up from his chair, walking toward the cabinet in the corner. "That deserves a proper drink."

He opened the cabinet and pulled out four bottles. Two bottles of Jack Daniel's Single Barrel Barrel Proof and two bottles of Jack Daniel's Sinatra Select.

The room went dead silent.

"Pops," Tom said slowly. "Those are—"

"Special occasion bottles," Pops finished, setting all four on the table with heavy thuds. "And if this ain't a special occasion, I don't know what the hell is." He looked around at the roomful of men—his sons, his grandsons, the consortium fathers, the wiz kids. "Billy came home. That's worth every damn drop."

"Pops, that's over a thousand dollars worth of whiskey," Josh said.

"I know what it costs, boy." Pops started lining up shot glasses. "And I know what it's worth. Now shut up and drink."

He grabbed the first bottle of Barrel Proof and started pouring. Then the Sinatra Select. Moving down the line, filling glass after glass.

"Everyone drinks," Pops said. "And I mean everyone." He looked at the wiz kids. "That includes you boys. You earned it tonight."

Junior, Billy Renzo, Ryan, Daniel, and Louisiana exchanged glances, then grinned.

Pops poured shots for Tom, Wade, Josh, Ray, Celeb, Robert, Mr. Renzo, Mr. Mattern, Mr. Rodriguez, and all the consortium fathers. He poured for the wiz kids. And finally, he poured two shots and set them in front of Billy.

"One of each," Pops said. "You drink both."

Billy looked at the two glasses, then at Pops. "Yes, sir."

Pops raised his own glass—Barrel Proof, neat. "To Billy. Who broke a damn chair, ran like hell, got strung up like a side of beef, and still came home and beat his brother at arm wrestling." He grinned. "No one breaks a Benson."

"No one breaks a Benson!" the room roared.

They drank.

The Barrel Proof burned like fire going down. The Sinatra Select was smooth, rich, warm. Billy drained both glasses and set them down, his eyes watering slightly but his grin intact.

"Damn," Billy rasped.

"That's the good stuff, boy," Pops said, already pouring another round.

Mr. Rodriguez raised his glass. "To the wiz kids. Without you boys, we'd still be looking."

"Hear, hear," Wade said.

The consortium fathers drank to that.

Tom raised his glass next. "To family. All of us."

"To family," everyone echoed.

They drank again, the whiskey flowing, the tension of the night dissolving into warmth and brotherhood and gratitude.


An hour later, the house was quieter. The consortium families had gone home. Wade, Mary, Edna, and Anna had left. Sarah, Tom, Rebecca, and Josh had gone to bed, exhausted but relieved.

Billy, Jake, Celeb, Junior, Billy Renzo, Ryan, Daniel, and Louisiana headed upstairs to the frat house.

Billy climbed the stairs slowly, but he climbed them. Jake stayed close, ready to catch him if he stumbled. But Billy didn't stumble.

They walked down the second-floor hallway, past the command center, past Pops' bedroom—where they could hear the old man's rumbling snores already—and pushed open the door to the frat house.

The same room where the night had started. The cracked mirror still leaned against the wall. The bunk beds, the mattress wedged between them, the clutter of boots and clothes and life.

Billy's black cowboy hat sat on the bedpost. Junior had brought it back from the barn.

Billy picked it up, turning it over in his hands. Then he set it back down.

"Beer?" Celeb asked, already kneeling by the floorboards near his bunk.

"Hell yes," Jake said.

Celeb pried up the loose board, revealing the hidden stash. Bottles clinked as he pulled them out, passing them around. Cold, contraband, perfect.

They settled in—Jake and Billy on the lower bunks, Celeb and Louisiana on the top bunks, Junior and the other three wiz kids on the floor, backs against the wall.

Billy cracked open his beer and took a long drink.

"So," Jake said, leaning back. "You gonna tell Edna you stood her up, or you gonna make me do it?"

Billy snorted. "I'll tell her. Tomorrow. When I can think straight."

"She's gonna kill you," Junior said.

"She's gonna cry first, then kill you," Louisiana added.

"Probably," Billy admitted.

Celeb took a swig of his beer. "Jake, I'm still not over it. You lost to a man who was literally dying a few hours ago."

"I wasn't dying," Billy corrected.

"Close enough," Celeb said. "And Jake still lost."

"Are we gonna do this all night?" Jake asked.

"Yes," Celeb said immediately. "Yes, we are."

"You know what I still can't figure out," Ryan said, looking at Billy. "How the hell did you break that chair?"

Billy grinned. "Threw myself backward as hard as I could. Figured if I was gonna die, I wasn't gonna die tied to a damn chair."

"And then you ran," Daniel said, shaking his head. "With the chair back still tied to you."

"Didn't have a choice."

"That's insane," Billy Renzo said. "You're insane."

"Yeah, well," Billy said, taking another drink. "Runs in the family."

Jake raised his beer. "Damn straight."

They clinked bottles.

"Seriously though," Junior said, his voice quieter now. "Uncle Billy... when we saw that second photo..." He trailed off.

Billy looked at him. "I knew you'd find me, Junior. You and these boys. I knew it."

Junior's throat tightened. "We almost didn't get there in time."

"But you did." Billy's voice was firm. "You did. And that's what matters."

Celeb leaned over from his bunk. "So what now? You gonna take a few days off? Rest up?"

Billy laughed. "You know me better than that."

"Figured," Jake said. "You'll be back on the ranch tomorrow, acting like nothing happened."

"Maybe not tomorrow," Billy said, glancing at his bandaged wrists. "But soon."

"Pops is gonna make you take a week," Louisiana predicted.

"Pops can try."

They laughed, the sound filling the small room, chasing away the shadows of the night.

Down the hall, Pops' snores rumbled on. Below them, the house was quiet. The barn was quiet. The horses were safe. The family was home.

And in the frat house on the second floor, the boys drank their contraband beer, told their stories, and laughed until their sides hurt.

Because they were alive. They were together. And no one—no one—had broken them.

Monday, November 17, 2025

Escape!

 


Chapter 1: The Long Night

The third steer broke through the fence line just after midnight, and Jake Benson knew immediately it was going to be a long goddamn night.

"Son of a bitch," Billy muttered beside him, his flashlight beam catching the broken posts where the Hereford had busted through. "That's Big Red. He's halfway to the Nelson property by now."

Jake swung down from his horse, boots hitting the dusty ground with a thud. "Then we better move. Pops finds out we lost three head in one night, he'll skin us both."

Billy grinned despite the exhaustion already creeping into his bones. They'd been chasing strays since sundown—first the two heifers that had wandered into the creek bed, then the young bull that had somehow ended up in the equipment yard. "Pops is gonna skin us anyway when he finds out about the fence."

"Then let's at least bring his cattle home first."

They split up at the property line, Jake heading west toward the old access road while Billy cut north through the scrub. The August heat had finally broken with nightfall, but the air still hung thick and heavy. Jake's radio crackled every fifteen minutes with Billy's updates: tracks heading toward the wash, then doubling back toward the highway, then disappearing entirely into hard ground.

It was nearly 1:30am when Billy's voice came through, clearer this time. "Got him. He's bedded down in that culvert by the
turnoff. Stubborn bastard doesn't want to move."

"I'm ten minutes out."

It took both of them another forty minutes to coax Big Red out of the culvert and back toward the Benson property. The steer was ornery, well-fed, and in no particular hurry. By the time they had him back through the temporary fence line Jake had rigged with spare wire and sheer determination, it was pushing 2am.

Billy dismounted and leaned against his horse, tilting his head back to stare at the stars. "I am too tired to function."

"You and me both." Jake secured the last section of wire and wiped the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve. "Pops is gonna be up in three hours screaming his head off."

"Let him scream. I earned this sleep."

They rode back to the barn in companionable silence, the kind of quiet that only came from twenty-one years of being brothers who might as well have been twins. They'd shared a room since Billy was born, shared chores and beatings and secrets. Jake was a year older, a few inches taller, and had the temper that got them both in trouble. Billy was steadier, quicker to laugh, but just as stubborn when it counted.

The barn lights were off when they arrived. They unsaddled the horses, mucked the stalls quickly, and stumbled across the yard toward the main house. The frat house, as everyone called it now, was on the second floor—two bunk beds crammed into a room that had once held just one, plus a mattress squeezed in between for Louisiana. Beer cans hidden under the floorboards. Boots piled by the door. The smell of teenage boys and ranch work.

Jake pushed the door open as quietly as he could. Celeb was snoring softly in the top bunk across from them, one arm hanging over the side. Jr. was curled up in the bottom bunk beneath him, dead to the world. Louisiana—Colt, as they all called him now—was sprawled on the mattress between the bunks, his long frame taking up every inch of space.

Billy kicked off his boots and climbed into the bottom bunk without a word. Jake took the top, groaning as his body finally relaxed into the thin mattress. His muscles ached. His hands were raw. He smelled like dirt and cow and sweat.

"Jake," Billy whispered from below.

"What."

"Next time, you chase Big Red by yourself."

Jake smiled in the darkness. "Deal."

Within minutes, both brothers were asleep.

Chapter 2: Morning Comes Early

"GET YOUR ASSES OUT OF BED! DAYLIGHT'S BURNING!"

Pops' voice exploded through the second floor like a grenade at exactly 5:15am, followed by the bang of his walking stick against the frat house door.

Celeb jerked awake, nearly hitting his head on the ceiling. "Jesus Christ, Pops."

"DON'T JESUS CHRIST ME, BOY! THOSE HORSES AIN'T GONNA FEED THEMSELVES!"

Jr. groaned from the bottom bunk and threw his pillow at the door. "We're up, we're up."

Louisiana rolled off his mattress onto the floor with a thud, blinking in the dim light filtering through the curtains. "What time is it?"

"Too damn early," Celeb muttered, swinging his legs over the side of his bunk.

Pops pushed the door open, all seventy-six years of him filling the doorframe like a drill sergeant. His white hair stood up in every direction, and he was already dressed—worn jeans, flannel shirt, boots that had seen more miles than most trucks. A cigar hung unlit from the corner of his mouth.

"Where the hell are Jake and Billy?"

"Out all night chasing Big Red," Jr. said, sitting up and rubbing his eyes. "Didn't get back till two."

Pops grunted. "They get him?"

"Yeah. Fixed the fence too."

"Well, shit. Let 'em sleep then." Pops pointed the walking stick at the three of them. "But you boys? You got work. Move it."

He stomped back down the hall toward his bedroom, muttering curses that would've made Grandma Sarah cross herself if she'd heard them.

Celeb pulled on his jeans and grabbed a t-shirt from the pile on the floor. "One of these days, that old man's gonna give himself a heart attack yelling like that."

"Nah," Jr. said, lacing up his boots. "Pops is too mean to die."

Louisiana laughed and kicked the mattress back into place between the bunks. The frat house was already warming up despite the early hour—five bodies in one room did that. Empty soda cans lined the windowsill. A deck of cards sat abandoned on the floor next to someone's work gloves. The beer stash under the loose floorboard by Jake's bunk stayed hidden, untouched.

They filed out into the hallway, past the command center room where the lights were already on—Jr. must've left the equipment running overnight—and down the stairs.

Downstairs, the house was waking up in its usual rhythm.

Tom Benson stood in the kitchen in his undershirt and jeans, pouring coffee into a thermos. He looked up when the boys came through. "Morning, boys."

"Morning, Grandpa," Jr. said.

"Pops get you up?"

"Like always."

Tom smiled slightly. "Your grandma's still asleep. Keep it quiet."

From the extension, they could hear Josh's voice, low and steady, probably on the phone already with one of the other consortium families. Rebecca would be getting ready for her shift at Kings County Hospital, moving through their room with the practiced efficiency of a nurse who'd worked double shifts more times than she could count.

Ray was already in the business office off his bedroom, door cracked open, the glow of his computer screen visible. He ran the financial side of the consortium like clockwork—purchase orders, market prices, inventory. If it had a number attached to it, Ray knew it.

Jr. grabbed a water bottle from the fridge and tossed one to Louisiana. Celeb was already out the door, heading toward the barn.

The radio on the kitchen counter crackled to life.

"Benson Ranch, this is Beaumont. Morning check-in."

Tom picked up the handset. "Morning, Robert. All good here. You?"

"All good. We're moving the herd to the south pasture today if you want to send anyone over."

"Will do. Jr.'s got the morning free."

The radio went quiet for a moment, then clicked again. "Nelson Ranch checking in. Wade here. Everyone accounted for?"

"We're good," Tom said. "Jake and Billy are sleeping in—had a late night with strays."

"Heard about that. Tell them Big Red's a son of a bitch."

Tom laughed. "Will do."

One by one, the other families checked in—Renzo, Mattern, Rodriguez. The consortium had been running this system for over a year now, and it worked like clockwork. Six families, covering a third of Kings County, watching each other's backs.

Jr. drained his water bottle and tossed it in the recycling bin. "I'm gonna check the horses, then head over to Beaumont's."

"Take Louisiana with you," Tom said. "And grab breakfast first."

"Yes, sir."

Outside, the sun was just starting to edge over the horizon, painting the sky in shades of orange and pink. The ranch was coming alive—trucks starting up, dogs barking, the distant sound of Pops yelling at someone about something.

Just another morning on the Benson Ranch.

Jr. and Louisiana crossed the yard toward the horse barn, the day stretching out ahead of them, routine and predictable.

Neither of them noticed the dust cloud on the access road, miles out, barely visible in the early light.

Chapter 3: 9:30am - The Kidnapping

Jake drifted up from sleep slowly, his body still heavy with exhaustion. The floorboards creaked somewhere nearby—soft, deliberate footsteps.

Billy, he thought groggily. Probably heading to the bathroom.

He kept his eyes closed, trying to sink back into sleep. His muscles still ached from the long night. Big Red. The fence. The—

The footsteps stopped.

Something felt wrong.

Jake opened his eyes.

Four masked figures stood around his bunk, black ski masks, dark clothing. The nearest one held a Glock pointed directly at his face.

"Don't move," the man whispered. "Don't make a sound."

Jake's heart slammed against his ribs. His hand twitched toward the edge of the mattress—instinct, not plan—but another masked figure grabbed his wrist and yanked it back.

"I said don't move."

The Glock pressed against his lips, cold metal forcing his mouth open. Jake tasted steel and oil. His mind raced—Celeb, Jr., Louisiana, they're right here, they're—

But the other bunks were empty. How long had he been asleep? Where was everyone?

Rough hands grabbed him, flipping him onto his stomach. His face pressed into the thin mattress. Rope bit into his wrists, pulled tight behind his back. He tried to twist away, tried to shout, but the Glock pressed harder against the back of his head.

"Stay quiet or I pull the trigger."

They yanked him upright, sitting him on the edge of the bunk. Jake saw Billy's empty bunk below his. Panic spiked through him. Where's Billy? Did they already—

One of the masked men pulled out a roll of duct tape and tore off a strip. Before Jake could react, the tape sealed his mouth shut. Another strip. Another. His breathing came hard and fast through his nose.

A gag—cloth, rough—was shoved into his mouth beneath the tape, making him want to retch. More duct tape wrapped around his head, holding the gag in place.

"Get up. Walk."

The Glock pressed against his spine. Jake's legs shook as he stood, his wrists bound tight behind his back but his ankles free. They shoved him toward the door.

The command center door stood open—dark, equipment humming but no one there. Pops' room—door open, empty. The whole second floor was silent.

They moved fast, steering him toward the back staircase—the one that led directly to the kitchen's back door. Jake tried to slow down, tried to stumble and make noise, tried to slam into the walls, but the Glock dug harder into his back and the man's voice was flat and cold.

"Do that again and you're dead."

They forced him down the narrow stairs, step by step. Jake's heart hammered. The house was empty—completely empty. No voices. No movement. Everyone was gone.

At the bottom, the back kitchen door was propped open. Early morning light spilled through.

And there, on the floor by the door, was Billy.

His brother was kneeling, wrists bound behind his back, duct tape over his mouth, eyes wide with terror and rage. Two more masked men stood over him, one holding a Glock to the back of Billy's head.

Billy's eyes locked on Jake's. Even through the fear, Jake saw the question: What do we do?

Jake had no answer.

One of the kidnappers pulled out a white cloth and a small bottle. The chemical smell hit Jake's nose immediately—sharp, sickly sweet.

Chloroform.

"This'll keep you quiet for the ride," the man said.

The cloth pressed against Jake's face, covering his nose. He tried to hold his breath, tried to thrash, but his lungs were already screaming for air. He saw them forcing Billy down onto his side, pressing another cloth over his face, the same panic in his brother's eyes.

Jake's vision started to blur. The edges of the room went soft. His body felt heavy, distant.

The last thing he saw before everything went black was Billy's hand, fingers twitching, trying to reach toward him.


When the four masked men carried the brothers out through the back kitchen door, the ranch was busy but the house was empty.

Rebecca was already two hours into her shift at Kings County Hospital. Sarah was at the market in town, picking up supplies for the week. Pops and Tom were out at the fence line, inspecting the damage Big Red had caused the night before. Ray was in town at a meeting with the bank president, going over the consortium's quarterly numbers. Josh was over at the Beaumont Ranch coordinating the herd move.

Jr., Louisiana, and Celeb were still mucking out the horse barn, working through the morning chores.

No one was in the house to hear the back door open and close.

No one heard the truck engine start up in the back lot.

No one saw it speed away down the access road, kicking up dust.

By the time it disappeared over the hill, Jake and Billy Benson were gone.

The only thing left behind was a white cloth on the kitchen floor, reeking of chloroform.

Chapter 4: Discovery

Jr., Louisiana, and Celeb trudged across the yard toward the main house, boots caked with dust and horseshit. The August sun was already climbing, promising another brutal afternoon. They'd been mucking out the barn for the last two hours, and Jr.'s shirt was soaked through with sweat.

"I need a gallon of water," Louisiana muttered, pulling off his work gloves as they reached the back door.

"You and me both," Celeb said.

Jr. pushed open the back kitchen door and stepped inside, grateful for the shade and the promise of cold water from the fridge. Louisiana and Celeb followed right behind him.

Jr. stopped.

On the floor, just inside the door, was a white cloth.

He bent down, picked it up, brought it to his nose. The chemical smell hit him instantly—sharp, sickly sweet, unmistakable.

"What the hell?" Louisiana said, staring at the cloth.

Jr.'s stomach dropped. "Chloroform."

They looked at each other for half a second, then all three of them were running—through the kitchen, down the hall, up the stairs two at a time.

The frat house door was wide open.

Jr. burst through. His bunk—empty. Celeb's bunk—empty. Louisiana's mattress on the floor—pushed aside.

And Jake and Billy's bunk—empty.

"Jake! Billy!" Jr. shouted, spinning around. Nothing. No one.

He grabbed his radio from his belt. "Jake, Billy, you copy?"

Static.

"Jake! Billy! Come in!"

Nothing.

Jr. didn't hesitate. He pressed and held the 911 button on his radio.

The mechanical voice echoed through the encrypted network, broadcasting on every radio, every phone, every device connected to the consortium system:

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

Jr. keyed the mic, his voice tight and urgent. "This is Jr. at Benson Ranch. Something's wrong. Jake and Billy are gone. Found a chloroform rag by the back kitchen door. House is empty. They're not answering radio. Repeat—Jake and Billy are missing. Possible kidnapping."

The encrypted frequency exploded with voices.

"Jr., this is Pops! What the hell is going on? We're at the fence line—heading back now!"

"Tom here. We're with Pops. Five minutes out. Stay put, boy."

"This is Rebecca. I'm leaving the hospital now. Oh God, my brothers—"

"Sarah here. I'm in town—leaving now. Jr., are you safe?"

"Nelson Ranch responding. Wade here. I'm calling in Ryan and Wilson. We're on our way."

"Benson Ranch, this is Beaumont. We're ten minutes out. Repeat, ten minutes out."

"Renzo Ranch. Copy that. Mobilizing now."

"Mattern. We're coming."

"Rodriguez. En route."

Jr. clipped his radio back to his belt and looked at Louisiana and Celeb, both of their faces gone pale.

"We need to get armed," Jr. said. "Now."

All three of them moved to the lockbox mounted in the corner of the frat house. Jr. punched in the code and pulled out three Glocks—his own, plus Jake and Billy's. He tossed one to Celeb, one to Louisiana, kept one for himself. They'd all been shooting since they were kids. The weight of the weapon in his hand was familiar, grounding.

They grabbed their holsters from the hooks by the door and strapped them on. Standard procedure on the ranch—everyone carried when there was trouble.

Louisiana pulled out his satellite phone and started texting the other wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, Daniel Rodriguez. Within seconds, all three responded: On our way.

Jr. checked his Glock's magazine, then holstered it. His hands were shaking. Jake and Billy—his uncles, his friends, the guys he'd grown up with in this very room—were gone. Taken.

He thought about the chloroform rag. The empty bunks. The silence.

How long have they been gone? An hour? Two?

The sound of engines roared up the driveway. Pops' truck skidded to a stop in the gravel, followed immediately by Tom's. Both men jumped out, Pops already yelling before his boots hit the ground.

"WHERE THE HELL ARE THEY?"

Jr. ran downstairs, Celeb and Louisiana right behind him, Glocks holstered at their hips. Pops stormed through the front door, Tom close behind. The old man's face was red, his jaw clenched, veins standing out on his neck.

"Show me," Pops growled.

Jr. led them to the back kitchen door. The chloroform rag was still on the floor where he'd dropped it. Pops bent down, picked it up, smelled it. His face went darker.

"Sons of bitches," he muttered. "They drugged them."

Tom was already on his phone, calling Ray. "Get back here now. Jake and Billy are gone."

The roar of a mule quad tore through the yard. Jr. looked out the window and saw Billy Renzo at the wheel, Ryan Mattern and Daniel Rodriguez hanging on. All three were armed—Glocks holstered at their hips. The quad skidded to a stop and the boys jumped off, running for the house.

"Upstairs!" Jr. shouted to them as they burst through the door. "Command center!"

More trucks pulled up outside—Wade's sheriff's vehicle, followed by his deputy sons Ryan and Wilson Nelson. Then the Beaumonts. Then the rest of the Renzo, Mattern, and Rodriguez families, all arriving within minutes of each other.

The Benson Ranch was transforming into a command center.

Jr., Louisiana, Celeb, and the three wiz kids pounded up the stairs to the command center. Jr. pulled up the surveillance feeds on the main monitor—twelve cameras covering different angles of the property.

"What are we looking for?" Billy Renzo asked, already at another terminal, fingers flying over the keyboard.

"Anything from this morning. Nine to nine-thirty," Jr. said.

Ryan Mattern brought up the drone control interface. "I'm launching Drone One and Two. We can start a grid search."

Daniel Rodriguez was reviewing the radio logs. "No transmissions from Jake or Billy since last night at 1:47am. That was Jake reporting they got Big Red back."

Jr. scrolled back to 9:30am on the main feed.

And there it was.

A black pickup truck, parked behind the house near the back kitchen door. Four masked men. Two of them carrying Jake's limp body—hands tied behind his back with rope, duct tape wrapped around his mouth and head, completely unconscious. Two more carrying Billy the same way—bound, gagged, knocked out cold.

"There," Jr. said, his voice tight. "Got them."

All four wiz kids leaned in, studying the footage. The image was crystal clear: the brothers' arms pulled back at unnatural angles, the silver gleam of duct tape covering their mouths, their heads lolling as the kidnappers manhandled them into the truck bed.

"They're tied up," Louisiana said quietly. "Rope and tape."

"And drugged," Celeb added, his voice hard. "Chloroform knocked them out."

"Sending this to all eighteen iPads now," Jr. said, already uploading the footage. "SOP."

Within seconds, the surveillance video was pushed out to every iPad in the consortium network—each family had at least two, plus extras in key vehicles and locations. It was their standard operating procedure in emergencies: get critical intel to everyone immediately.

"Zoom in on the plates," Billy Renzo said.

Jr. enhanced the image. The license plate was partially visible—Texas tags, but mud-covered, deliberate.

"Can you clean that up?" Daniel asked.

"Working on it," Jr. muttered, running the image through enhancement software.

The small command center was getting crowded. Wade Nelson pushed through the door, his sheriff's hat low over his eyes, his hand resting on his sidearm. Pops and Tom were right behind him. Then Josh came in, his face pale, followed by Ray who'd just arrived from town. Robert Beaumont squeezed in next, then the elder Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguez patriarchs.

The room, designed for maybe four people comfortably, now had fifteen bodies packed in, all staring at the monitors.

Wade's eyes went straight to the screen showing the kidnapping footage. "That them?"

"Yeah," Jr. said. "Four masked men. Black pickup. Took them out the back. They're bound and gagged—hands tied behind their backs with rope, duct tape over their mouths. Chloroformed."

Sarah pushed through the doorway, her face tear-streaked, Rebecca right behind her supporting her mother-in-law. "Show me," Sarah said, her voice breaking. "Show me my boys."

Jr. hesitated, but Tom nodded. Jr. played the footage again.

Sarah's hand went to her mouth as she watched Jake and Billy's limp, bound bodies being carried to the truck. The rope. The tape. The way their heads lolled, unconscious. Rebecca held her tight, tears streaming down her own face—those were her brothers-in-law, her sons' uncles.

"Oh God," Sarah whispered. "My babies."

"We're gonna get them back, Grandma," Jr. said quietly.

Pops put his arm around Sarah, his jaw working. His eyes stayed locked on the screen, on the image of his grandsons tied and gagged. "Damn right we are."

Wade studied the screen. "Can you track that truck?"

"We're trying," Ryan Mattern said from the drone station. "Drones are up. We've got thermal imaging and GPS tracking active."

"Got a partial on the plate," Billy Renzo said, pulling up the enhanced image on a secondary monitor. "Texas tags. Last three digits are 4-7-something. First three are obscured."

Wade pulled out his radio. "Wilson, Ryan, you getting this footage on your iPads?"

"Copy, Dad. We got it," Deputy Ryan Nelson's voice came back. "Running the partial plate now. Every black pickup in Kings County with plates ending in 4-7. Cross-referencing with priors."

Robert Beaumont leaned over Daniel Rodriguez's shoulder. "Can you pull up property maps? Abandoned buildings, foreclosed ranches within fifty miles?"

"On it," Daniel said, opening another window.

The command center was buzzing now—multiple conversations, keyboards clacking, drone feeds streaming, radio chatter crackling. The six consortium families working as one machine.

Pops moved closer to the main screen, staring at the frozen image of his grandsons—bound, gagged, helpless—being carried away. His hands clenched into fists.

"Find them," he said quietly, but everyone heard him. "I don't care what it takes. Find my boys."

"We will, Pops," Jr. said, his fingers never stopping on the keyboard.

The hunt had begun.

Chapter 5: The Ransom Demand

The encrypted satellite phone on the command center desk buzzed at 11:47am.

Unknown number.

Jr. looked at Wade, who nodded. Jr. put it on speaker.

"Benson Ranch," Jr. said carefully.

"You want your boys back?" The voice was digitally distorted, mechanical and cold. "Check your email. You've got twenty-four hours."

The line went dead.

Jr. was already pulling up the ranch's main email account on the monitor. One new message. No subject line. Sender: anonymous encrypted account.

He clicked it open.

Two photos loaded.

The command center went silent.

Jake and Billy sat bound to steel ladder-back chairs in what looked like an old barn or warehouse. Concrete floor. Corrugated metal walls. Harsh overhead light casting deep shadows.

Their arms were pulled behind the chair backs, wrists tied together with rope. More rope lashed their biceps tight to the vertical slats of the chairs. Their ankles were pulled back under the chairs and hogtied to their wrists, forcing their backs to arch and their bodies into painful positions.

Duct tape covered their mouths, wrapped multiple times around their heads. Their eyes were open—conscious now, awake, terrified.

Below the photos, a message:

$1,000,000 per brother. $2,000,000 total. Cash. Non-sequential bills.

You have 24 hours to deliver. Instructions will follow.

If you contact law enforcement beyond Sheriff Nelson, they die.

If you attempt a rescue before payment, they die.

If you do not pay, we will torture them to death and send you the video.

Your consortium has the money. We know you do.

The clock is ticking.

Sarah's knees buckled. Tom caught her before she hit the floor, lowering her into a chair. Rebecca was at her side immediately, checking her pulse, her training as a nurse kicking in even as tears streamed down her face.

"Breathe, Sarah. Breathe," Rebecca whispered, her voice shaking.

The other mothers crowded around—Caroline Beaumont, Maria Rodriguez, Linda Mattern, Elena Renzo—all of them pale, holding Sarah's hands, their own tears falling.

Pops stood frozen, staring at the screen. His face had gone from red to white. His hands trembled as they gripped his walking stick.

"Those sons of bitches," he said, his voice barely above a whisper. Then louder: "THOSE SONS OF BITCHES!"

He slammed the walking stick against the wall so hard it cracked. Tom grabbed his father's shoulder.

"Pops. We're getting them back."

"Look at them!" Pops pointed at the screen with a shaking finger. "Look at what they did to my boys! Tied up like animals! They're hurting them!"

Wade stepped forward, his sheriff's training overriding his rage. "Everyone, listen to me. We're going to get Jake and Billy back alive. But we need to stay calm and work the problem."

Josh was staring at the photos, his face ashen. Those were his little brothers—the same boys he'd taught to ride, to shoot, to work cattle. Ray stood beside him, fists clenched, barely breathing.

Jr. forced himself to focus. "I'm saving these photos and running them through analysis. Background details, lighting angles, anything that might tell us where they are."

"Good," Wade said. "Billy, Ryan, Daniel—help him. Pull apart every pixel."

Billy Renzo was already zooming in on the background. "Metal walls. Could be a barn, storage facility, old industrial building."

"Look at the light," Daniel said, pointing. "Single overhead bulb. But there's natural light coming from the left—see the shadow angle? There's a window or door off-camera."

Ryan Mattern studied the concrete floor. "Stains. Oil maybe? Could be an old garage or equipment shed."

Louisiana leaned closer to the screen, his face tight. "They're awake. That means they woke up from the chloroform. How long does that take?"

"Couple hours," Rebecca said quietly, still holding Sarah's hand. "They've been conscious for a while now. Tied up like that... the pain..."

Her voice broke. Sarah squeezed her hand.

Robert Beaumont stepped forward. "Two million dollars. We can raise it. Between the six families, we can have it in twelve hours."

"No." Wade's voice was hard. "We don't negotiate with kidnappers. It never ends well."

"Those are my brothers on that screen!" Josh said, his voice rising. "You want us to just let them die?"

"I want us to find them and bring them home," Wade shot back. "Paying ransom doesn't guarantee their safety. Once these bastards have the money, what's to stop them from killing Jake and Billy anyway? Dead men can't identify them."

Pops turned on Wade, his eyes blazing. "So what the hell do you suggest, Sheriff? We sit here and do nothing while they torture my grandsons?"

"No. We find them. Fast." Wade looked at Jr. and the wiz kids. "You've got the best tech in the county. Use it. Drones, thermal imaging, traffic cameras, satellite tracking—everything. We've got twenty-four hours. Let's not waste a second."

Jr. nodded, his jaw set. "Already on it."

Tom pulled out his phone. "I'm calling an emergency consortium meeting. All six families, all hands on deck. We mobilize everyone."

Sarah stood up slowly, supported by Rebecca and Caroline. Her face was tear-streaked but her voice was steady.

"Bring my boys home," she said quietly. "Whatever it takes. Bring them home."

Pops looked at the screen one more time—at Jake and Billy bound and gagged in those chairs, eyes wide with fear and pain.

"We're coming for you, boys," he said softly. "Hold on. We're coming."

The command center erupted into coordinated chaos—phones ringing, keyboards clacking, radios crackling, the six families of the consortium converging into a single focused machine.

The clock was ticking.

Twenty-four hours to find them.

Twenty-four hours to bring them home alive.

Chapter 6: War Council

The command center was too crowded. Wade made the call to move downstairs to the dining room, where they could spread out. Within minutes, the long oak table was covered with laptops, iPads, radios, and maps.

The six consortium families gathered—Bensons, Nelsons, Beaumonts, Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguez. Pops sat at the head of the table, Tom on his right, Wade on his left. The other patriarchs lined the sides. Jr. and the wiz kids set up their tech station at the far end, monitors glowing.

Sarah sat with the other mothers in the living room, just beyond the doorway. They could hear everything, but they gave the men space to plan.

Wade stood, commanding the room. "Listen up. Here's what we know: Jake and Billy were taken at approximately 9:30 this morning. Four masked men, black pickup truck, Texas plates partially obscured. They drugged them with chloroform, bound and gagged them, and transported them to an unknown location. As of 11:47am, we received ransom photos showing them alive but restrained. The demand is two million dollars, twenty-four hour deadline."

He paused, looking around the table. "Here's what we're not going to do: pay that ransom. And we're not calling in state police, FBI, or any outside law enforcement."

Robert Beaumont leaned forward. "Wade, with all respect—why the hell not? We've got the money. We can have it by tonight."

"Because kidnappers don't keep their word," Wade said flatly. "You pay, they take the money, and then what? They still have two witnesses who can identify their voices, their builds, their methods. The safest play for them is to kill Jake and Billy and disappear. Paying guarantees nothing except we're two million poorer and my nephews are still dead."

Josh slammed his hand on the table. "So we just let them die?"

"No," Wade said, his voice cold and steady. "We find them. And we get them back."

Pops spoke up, his voice gravelly but controlled. "Wade's right. We handle this ourselves. Family only. No outsiders."

"But Dad," Tom said carefully, "if we don't involve the FBI or state police, we're on our own. That's a hell of a risk."

"It's a bigger risk to bring in outsiders," Pops said. "The ransom note said they'd kill the boys if we contacted law enforcement beyond Wade. I believe them. These bastards have been watching us. They knew when the house would be empty. They knew Jake and Billy would be alone. They know about the consortium, about our money. They've done their homework."

Wade nodded. "Which means someone local either talked, or these guys have been scouting us for weeks. Either way, the fewer people who know what we're doing, the better."

"What about your deputies?" Ray asked, looking at Wade. "Ryan and Wilson?"

"They're family," Wade said. "Rebecca's brothers. They're in. But they go off-duty as of now. Officially, they're taking personal time. Unofficially, they're working this case with us."

"So it's just us," said Marcus Renzo, the patriarch of the Renzo family. "Six families. However many men that takes."

Wade turned to Jr. and the wiz kids. "What have you got?"

Jr. looked up from his laptop. "We've got two drones in the air now. Launching the other four in the next ten minutes. That'll give us full coverage—thermal imaging, night vision, GPS tracking. All six drones will feed directly to the eighteen iPads."

"Show me," Wade said.

Billy Renzo tapped his iPad and held it up. The screen showed a split view—six quadrants, two active with aerial feeds, four waiting. "Once all six are up, everyone with an iPad will see the same feeds in real-time. We can coordinate search grids, mark points of interest, share intel instantly."

"How big an area can you cover?" Pops asked.

"Each drone has about a forty-mile range," Ryan Mattern said. "Flying them in overlapping patterns, we can cover roughly a hundred and twenty square miles in the first sweep. After that, we refine based on what we find."

Daniel Rodriguez pulled up a map on the main monitor. "I've been filtering properties that match the ransom photo—corrugated metal buildings, concrete floors, isolated locations. So far I've got sixty-three possibles within fifty miles. I'm narrowing it down to foreclosures, abandoned ag buildings, defunct industrial sites."

"Prioritize by access roads," Wade said. "They had to get a truck in and out without being seen. Look for properties with private access, away from main highways."

"On it," Daniel said, typing rapidly.

Louisiana was working another terminal. "I'm pulling traffic cam footage from every route out of the ranch. If we can track which direction that truck went after they left here, we can narrow the search radius."

"Good," Wade said. "How long?"

"Give me twenty minutes," Louisiana said.

Celeb was synchronizing the iPads, his fingers flying across the screen. "All eighteen iPads are on the network now. Everyone's synced. When the drones go live, you'll all see it."

Tom looked around the table. "So we wait for the drones to find something?"

"We wait for intel," Wade corrected. "The drones are our eyes. Once we get a hit—thermal signatures, the black pickup, anything that matches—then we move."

Pops leaned forward. "And when we find them? What's the plan?"

Wade met his eyes. "We plan the extraction. Fast, quiet, lethal if necessary. But we don't move until we know exactly where Jake and Billy are and how many hostiles we're dealing with."

"What if we don't find them in time?" Josh asked quietly.

Pops' jaw tightened. "We will."

Jr. called out from the tech station. "Drones Three and Four are up. Feeds coming online now."

The iPads around the table lit up, the split screens now showing four aerial views—rolling ranch land, access roads, scattered buildings in the distance.

"Drones Five and Six launching in five minutes," Ryan Mattern said.

Wade picked up one of the iPads, studying the feeds. "Spread the search pattern. Focus on the northwest and northeast quadrants first—those have the most abandoned properties."

"Copy that," Billy Renzo said.

The room settled into focused tension. Men watched their iPads. Keyboards clacked. Radio chatter crackled softly. The wiz kids coordinated the drones, adjusting flight paths, scanning thermal signatures.

Pops sat back in his chair, his hands gripping the armrests. His eyes never left the iPad in front of him.

"Hold on, boys," he muttered under his breath. "We're coming."

In the living room, Sarah sat with her hands folded, Rebecca beside her. They'd heard every word.

"They'll bring them home," Rebecca whispered.

Sarah nodded, tears streaming down her face. "They have to."

The hunt was on.

Chapter 7: Punishment

Jake's wrists burned. The rope had rubbed his skin raw hours ago, and now every small movement sent fresh waves of pain up his arms. His shoulders screamed from being pulled back at this angle, his spine ached from the forced arch created by the hogtie connecting his ankles to his wrists under the chair.

He couldn't see Billy. The chairs had been placed facing away from each other, maybe ten feet apart. But he could hear his brother's breathing—ragged, strained, fighting through the gag just like Jake was.

The duct tape covering his mouth was suffocating. The cloth gag underneath pressed against his tongue, making him want to retch. He forced himself to breathe slowly through his nose, fighting down the panic.

How long have we been here?

Hours. It felt like days.

The kidnappers had left them alone after taking the photos. Jake had heard the door slam, heard a vehicle start up and drive away. Maybe all four of them left. Maybe just some of them.

He didn't know. But the silence gave him a sliver of hope.

Jake tested the rope around his wrists again. Thick, tight, expertly tied. But rope could stretch. Rope could loosen. If he worked it long enough...

He started small. Twisting his wrists back and forth, feeling for any give in the knots. The pain was excruciating, but he gritted his teeth against the gag and kept going. Pull. Twist. Rotate. Pull again.

Minutes passed. Maybe ten, maybe twenty. His hands were slick with sweat—or blood, he couldn't tell. But he felt something. A fraction of movement. The tiniest bit of slack.

Behind him, he heard Billy making similar sounds—the creak of the chair, the strain of rope, labored breathing. His brother was working the ropes too.

Good. Keep going, Billy. Don't stop.

Jake focused on the hogtie connecting his ankles to his wrists. If he could loosen that, if he could get his feet flat on the floor, he'd have leverage. He twisted harder, ignoring the way the rope bit deeper into his skin.

The knot shifted. Just barely, but it shifted.

His heart pounded. Come on. Come on.

He pulled his wrists down and forward as hard as he could, trying to create space between them and his ankles. The chair creaked. The rope burned. His back screamed in protest.

But the knot loosened another fraction of an inch.

Almost. Almost.

Behind him, Billy's chair scraped against the concrete floor—just an inch or two, but audible. Jake froze, listening.

More scraping. Billy was trying to move his chair.

Jake started working faster. If they could just get loose before—

The door slammed open.

Heavy footsteps. Multiple sets. Angry voices.

"What the hell do you think you're doing?"

Rough hands grabbed Jake's chair and slammed it forward, nearly tipping him over. He grunted through the gag, eyes watering from the sudden jolt.

A masked figure moved into his line of sight—same black ski mask from the morning, same cold eyes staring through the holes.

"You think you're clever?" the man growled. "Think you can get out of those ropes?"

Jake stared back at him, defiant.

The man looked at Jake's wrists, saw the raw, bloody skin where the rope had been moving. His eyes narrowed.

"Bad idea, kid."

The punch came without warning—a closed fist slamming into Jake's face, snapping his head to the side. Pain exploded across his cheek and nose. Blood poured down over the duct tape covering his mouth, hot and metallic. His vision went white for a second.

Another punch. This one to his jaw. Jake's head whipped back, his ears ringing.

"You stay put," the man snarled. "You don't move. You don't try shit. Understand?"

Jake's eyes watered. Blood ran from his nose, soaking into the duct tape. He could taste it seeping under the gag.

Behind him, he heard the same sounds—fists hitting flesh, Billy's muffled groan, the thud of knuckles connecting with bone.

"Same goes for you!" another voice shouted. "You try to escape again, we'll break your fingers. Got it?"

More punches. Jake heard Billy's chair scrape as his brother took the blows.

Then the hands were on Jake again—checking the ropes, yanking them tighter. The slack he'd worked so hard to create disappeared in seconds. The man pulled the hogtie knot tighter, forcing Jake's ankles even closer to his wrists, arching his back further.

"There," the man said. "Try getting out of that."

Jake's vision swam. His face throbbed. Blood dripped steadily from his nose onto his lap.

"Get the camera," one of the kidnappers said.

No. No.

A phone appeared in front of Jake's face. Flash. Another picture. Then the sound of the kidnappers moving behind him—another flash, capturing Billy.

"Send them to the family," the lead kidnapper said. "Let them see what happens when their boys don't cooperate."

The door slammed shut again. The lock clicked. Footsteps faded.

Silence.

Jake sat in the chair, blood running down his face, every muscle in his body screaming. He heard Billy's labored breathing across the room—harsh, pained, but alive.

They'd tried. They'd failed.

But they were still alive.

Hang on, Billy. Pops is coming. They're all coming.

He just had to stay alive long enough for them to get here.


Back at the Benson Ranch, Jr.'s phone buzzed at 1:52pm.

Another email. Same anonymous account.

He opened it with shaking hands.

Two new photos loaded.

Jake and Billy, still bound to the chairs. But now their faces were covered in blood—noses broken or bleeding, lips split, bruises already forming on their cheeks and jaws. Their eyes were still open, still conscious, but filled with pain and fear.

Below the photos, a message:

Your boys tried to escape. This is what happens when they don't cooperate.

23 hours left.

Pay up, or it gets worse.

Jr. stared at the screen, his stomach twisting.

"POPS!" he shouted. "WADE! GET UP HERE NOW!"

Within seconds, the command center was packed again. Everyone stared at the new photos in horror.

Sarah's scream echoed through the house when she saw her sons' battered faces.

Pops stood frozen, staring at the screen. His hands trembled. His face had gone white.

Then red.

Then a cold, deadly calm settled over him.

"Find them," he said quietly. "Find them now."

The hunt became an obsession.

Chapter 8: The Hunt Intensifies

The photos of Jake and Billy's bloodied faces changed everything.

Pops stood at the head of the dining room table, his knuckles white as he gripped the edge. His voice was low, controlled, but everyone in the room could hear the rage simmering beneath.

"Those bastards laid hands on my boys. Beat them. Made them bleed." He looked around the table at the assembled families. "We find them. Today. Now. I don't care what it takes."

Wade stepped forward. "Jr., what do we have? Any new intel from the drones?"

Jr. was back at the tech station, all six wiz kids surrounding him, fingers flying across keyboards. "All six drones are operational. We're running systematic grid searches—northwest, northeast, and north sectors based on the traffic cam data."

"Narrow it down," Wade said. "They're within fifty miles. They have to be."

Daniel Rodriguez pulled up the refined property list. "I've got it down to twenty-eight possibles. All foreclosed or abandoned, all with metal structures matching the photos, all with isolated access."

"That's still too many," Tom said. "We can't check twenty-eight locations before the deadline."

"We don't have to check them all," Billy Renzo said, zooming in on the map. "We can eliminate based on the timing. They grabbed Jake and Billy at 9:30am, sent the first ransom photos at 11:47am. That's two hours and seventeen minutes. They had to drive there, secure them to the chairs, take photos, and transmit. Figure at least thirty minutes for setup. That means they drove for maybe an hour and a half, max."

"So we're looking at a forty-five mile radius, accounting for back roads," Ryan Mattern added.

Louisiana was pulling up traffic camera footage on another screen. "The stolen pickup was last seen heading north on County Road 14 at 10:15am. After that, nothing. But County Road 14 splits three ways—"

"Focus there," Wade interrupted. "Every property within ten miles of that split. How many?"

Daniel recalculated. "Eleven."

"That's manageable," Josh said. "We can check eleven."

Jr. redirected the drones. "Drones Two, Four, and Five—converge on County Road 14 corridor. Thermal imaging active. I want every structure scanned."

The iPads around the table lit up with new feeds. Aerial views of ranch land, scattered buildings, dirt roads cutting through scrub brush.

"First property—old Weaver place," Billy Renzo said, watching the thermal feed. "No heat signatures. Structure's empty."

"Second property—Martinez equipment shed," Ryan Mattern reported. "Wait. I've got heat signatures. Two of them. Stationary."

Everyone leaned forward.

The drone descended, circling a small metal building at the end of a long access road. Corrugated walls. Concrete pad. A vehicle partially hidden behind the structure.

"Can you ID that vehicle?" Wade asked.

Jr. enhanced the image. "Dark pickup. Could be black. Can't see the plates from this angle."

"Two heat signatures," Pops said, his voice tight. "That's them. Has to be."

"Or it could be squatters," Wade cautioned. "We don't move until we're sure."

"How do we get sure?" Ray demanded. "Knock on the door and ask?"

Louisiana spoke up. "I can get the drone lower. Try to get a visual through any openings—vents, cracks, anything."

"Do it," Wade said.

The drone dropped altitude, moving slowly around the building. The feed showed metal walls with no windows. A single door on the south side—closed. But near the roofline, a ventilation gap.

Ryan Mattern adjusted the camera angle, zooming in on the gap.

For a moment, all they saw was shadow. Then—

A flash of silver. Duct tape. Wrapped around something—someone's head.

Jr. froze the image and enhanced it.

A face. Partially visible. Young. Male. Blood on his cheek.

Sarah gasped from the doorway. "That's Billy. That's my Billy."

Pops was already on his feet, strapping on his holster. "We go. Now."

Wade grabbed his arm. "We plan this. Five minutes. We go in smart or we don't go in at all."

"They're beating my grandsons!"

"And if we storm in blind, those kidnappers will put bullets in their heads before we get through the door," Wade shot back. "Five minutes, Pops. We plan the approach."

Pops' jaw worked, but he nodded.

Wade turned to the tech station. "Jr., how many heat signatures total in that building?"

"Two stationary—Jake and Billy. I'm scanning for others." He adjusted the thermal filters. "Wait. There's a third signature. Southeast corner. Not moving much, but it's there."

"One guard," Wade said. "Maybe more outside we can't see."

Deputy Wilson Nelson's voice came over the radio. "Dad, we're fifteen minutes from that location. Ryan and I can approach from the east, get eyes on the building."

"Negative," Wade said. "You spook them, they kill the boys. We all go together. Coordinated approach."

Tom spread a satellite map of the property on the table. "Single access road from the north. Building's about two hundred yards from the road. Open ground—no cover."

"We can't drive up," Josh said. "They'll hear us coming."

"We go on foot," Pops said. "Park half a mile out, approach through the brush."

Celeb spoke up. "What about the back of the building? If there's only one door on the south side, we could breach from the north while they're watching the road."

Wade considered it. "That could work. Split into two teams. Team One approaches from the north, quiet. Team Two holds position on the road as backup in case they try to run."

"Who goes in?" Tom asked.

"Me, Pops, Josh, Ray," Wade said. "Wilson and Ryan on Team Two with Robert Beaumont. The rest of you stay here on comms and drones. If this goes sideways, we need real-time intel."

Jr. looked up. "I'm keeping Drone Two overhead. You'll have eyes from above the whole time."

"Good," Wade said. He looked at Pops. "We do this quiet. Suppressed weapons. We get in, neutralize the hostiles, cut the boys loose, and get out. Fast and clean."

Pops checked his Glock, his face hard as stone. "And if they resist?"

"Then they don't walk out," Wade said simply.

Sarah stepped into the room, Rebecca supporting her. Her face was pale but her voice was steady. "Bring my boys home. Please."

Pops moved to her, cupped her face in his weathered hands. "I'm bringing them home, Sarah. I promise."

She nodded, tears streaming.

Wade grabbed his tactical vest and radio. "We roll in five. Everyone check your gear. Weapons hot, safeties on until we're in position. Jr., you keep that drone feed live. Any changes, any movement, you radio us immediately."

"Yes, sir," Jr. said.

The room erupted into motion—men grabbing gear, checking magazines, pulling on vests. The iPads stayed active, the drone feed showing the metal building where Jake and Billy were being held.

Pops strapped his knife to his belt alongside his Glock. His hands were steady now, his face calm. The Vietnam vet was back, ready for war.

"Let's go get my boys," he said quietly.

And they moved out.

Chapter 9: Second Escape Attempt

Jake had lost track of time. The pain from the beating had settled into a dull, constant throb across his face. His nose felt broken. His lip was split. Every breath through his nose was harder now, the blood crusted around the duct tape making it difficult to pull in air.

But the rage kept him focused.

They're not going to break us. They're not.

He heard Billy shift in his chair across the room—a deliberate movement, not just adjusting for pain. Then the scrape of wood on concrete.

Billy was moving his chair.

Jake's heart quickened. He tested his own chair. The legs weren't bolted down. He could rock it, shift it. Slowly, inch by inch, he began working his chair backward.

The sound of Billy's chair scraping again. Closer.

Jake kept going. Rock. Shift. Slide. His muscles screamed, his back arched at the painful angle from the hogtie, but he didn't stop.

Minutes passed. Maybe ten. Maybe fifteen.

Then he felt it—the back of Billy's chair bumping against his.

They were back-to-back.

Jake's bound hands, tied behind the chair, were now within reach of Billy's. He felt his brother's fingers immediately, searching, finding his.

And then Billy traced a letter on Jake's palm.

O

K

You okay?

Jake traced back: Y

U

Yeah. You?

Billy: Y

It was their game from when they were kids—tracing letters on each other's palms when they were supposed to be quiet in church, or when they didn't want anyone else to hear what they were saying. Even gagged and bound, they could still talk.

Billy traced again: W

O

R

K

K

N

O

T

S

Work the knots.

Jake traced: Y

Their fingers found the rope connecting Jake's ankles to his wrists—the hogtie knot. Billy's fingers worked from one side, Jake's from the other. It was awkward, painful, their hands slick with blood and sweat, but they didn't stop.

Billy traced: A

L

M

O

S

T

Jake felt it too. The knot was loosening. If they could just get their ankles free from their wrists, they'd have leverage. They could work on the wrist bindings next.

His fingers pulled at the rope, feeling it give another inch. Billy was doing the same on his own hogtie.

Jake's knot slipped. His ankles came free from his wrists.

The relief was immediate. His back could straighten. His legs could move. He wanted to shout, but the gag muffled everything.

Billy's chair shifted—he'd gotten his ankles free too.

Now for the wrists.

Billy traced: M

Y

W

R

I

S

T

S

Jake's fingers found Billy's wrist bindings, working the knots blind. It was harder—these were tied tighter, more deliberately. But rope was rope. It could be undone.

He felt the knot shift.

Then the door exploded open.

"WHAT THE HELL?!"

Hands grabbed Jake's chair and ripped it forward, away from Billy. Jake's head snapped back as the chair was thrown sideways, crashing to the concrete floor. Pain shot through his shoulder where he landed.

"You little shits!" the lead kidnapper roared. "You don't learn, do you?"

Jake tried to roll, tried to move, but his wrists were still bound behind him and his biceps were still lashed to the chair. He was helpless.

The kidnapper hauled him upright, slamming the chair back into position. Jake's vision swam.

Another masked man had Billy's chair, doing the same—checking the ropes, retying the hogtie even tighter than before.

"This time," the lead kidnapper said, his voice cold, "you're gonna learn what happens when you don't listen."

He pulled out a hunting knife.

Jake's eyes widened.

The blade pressed against Jake's bare chest, just below his collarbone. Then it sliced—shallow but deliberate. Jake grunted through the gag as blood welled up from the cut, running down his chest.

Another cut. This one across his ribs. Pain flared, hot and sharp.

"There," the man said. "Now you've got something to remember us by."

Jake heard Billy's muffled shout—rage and fear mixed together. The same deliberate cuts being made to his brother's bare chest.

"Get the camera," the lead kidnapper ordered.

No. Not again.

The phone appeared. Flash. Jake's bloodied chest on display—the cuts fresh and bleeding, his face still swollen and bruised from the earlier beating.

Another flash behind him—Billy getting the same treatment.

"Send these to the family," the man said. "Let them know their boys are running out of time."

Jake sat in the chair, chest heaving, blood running down his torso from the cuts. His face throbbed. His wrists burned. Every part of him hurt.

But he was still alive.

Then he heard it.

A low hum. Distant but distinct.

A drone.

The kidnappers heard it too. All four of them froze, looking up.

"What the hell is that?" one of them said.

The lead kidnapper moved to the door, cracked it open, looked up at the sky.

"Shit. It's a drone. They found us."

"How?!"

"Doesn't matter. We're out of here. NOW."

"What about them?" one of the others asked, gesturing at Jake and Billy.

"Leave them. We've got the photos, we've got the ransom demand out. Let the family sweat it. We'll regroup and contact them later."

"But—"

"I SAID NOW!" the lead kidnapper barked. "Move!"

The four masked men grabbed their gear and bolted for the door. Jake heard the truck engine start up outside, tires spinning in gravel, the vehicle tearing away down the access road.

And then—silence.

Just the hum of the drone overhead.

Jake's heart pounded. They were gone. The kidnappers were gone.

He and Billy were alone.

Still tied to the chairs. Still gagged. Still bleeding.

But alone.

Jake tested the ropes on his wrists again. Looser now—they'd been working them when the kidnappers interrupted. He pulled hard, twisting, ignoring the pain.

The rope stretched.

He pulled harder.

One hand slipped through.

Then the other.

His wrists were free.


Back at the Benson Ranch, Jr.'s phone buzzed at 2:34pm.

Another email. Same anonymous account.

Two new photos.

Jake and Billy, bare chests bleeding from fresh knife wounds. Their faces still battered. Duct tape still covering their mouths.

Below the photos:

Final warning. 22 hours left. Pay or they die.

Sarah collapsed when she saw the images. Rebecca caught her, lowering her to the floor, checking her pulse.

Pops stared at the screen. His face was a mask of pure fury.

"Drone Two just reported movement," Jr. said, his voice tight. "The truck's leaving the location. They're running."

Wade grabbed his radio. "All units, move in NOW. They're abandoning the site. Go, go, go!"

Pops was already out the door, Glock in hand, heading for his truck.

The rescue was on.

Chapter 10: Escape and Shootout

"They're leaving the boys behind," Jr. said, watching the thermal feed. "The kidnappers just peeled out. The two heat signatures are still in the building—they're not moving."

Wade was already in motion, grabbing his radio. "All units, the hostiles are mobile, heading south from the Martinez property. We intercept on County Road 14. Do NOT let them get away."

Pops was out the door, Tom and Josh right behind him. Ray grabbed his keys.

Jr. looked at the other wiz kids. "We're going. Bring the iPads. We coordinate from the field."

All six of them—Jr., Louisiana, Celeb, Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez—grabbed their gear and iPads, Glocks still holstered at their hips. They piled into Jr.'s truck and Celeb's, engines roaring to life.

The convoy tore down the driveway—Pops leading, Wade and his deputies next, then Tom, Josh, Ray, and the wiz kids bringing up the rear.

Rebecca's voice came over the radio from the ranch. "I've got all the drone feeds here. You boys stay safe. Bring them home."

"Copy that, Mom," Jr. said, his iPad mounted on the dash showing the aerial view. "Drone Two, stay on that truck. Drone Three, get overhead on the intercept point."

The black pickup appeared on the feed, tearing down the dirt access road, dust billowing behind it.

"They're going to hit the main road in two minutes," Billy Renzo said from the passenger seat, watching his iPad. "Wade and Pops are three minutes out."

"Deputies Ryan and Wilson are closer," Daniel added from the back seat of Celeb's truck, coordinating over the radio. "They can block the road."

"Do it," Wade's voice came back. "Block County Road 14 at the intersection. Don't let them through."


Inside the warehouse, Jake's hands were free.

He tore at the duct tape covering his mouth, ripping it away. The gag came out next, wet and disgusting. He gasped for air, his lungs burning.

"Billy!" he rasped, his voice hoarse.

He heard his brother's muffled response behind him.

Jake's fingers flew to the ropes binding his biceps to the chair slats. The kidnappers had tied them tight, but they'd been in a hurry. He found the knot, worked it frantically. His hands were shaking, slick with blood from the cuts on his chest, but he didn't stop.

The rope loosened. He pulled his arm free. Then the other.

He was loose from the chair.

Jake stumbled to his feet, legs weak from hours of being restrained. His ankles were still tied together. He bent down, fingers working the knot. Come on. Come on.

The rope came free.

He could move.

Jake spun around. Billy was still in his chair, wrists bound behind him, ankles hogtied, duct tape over his mouth, eyes wide and desperate.

"Hold on," Jake said, dropping to his knees behind Billy's chair. His fingers found the hogtie knot connecting Billy's ankles to his wrists. They'd been working this knot together—it was already loose. He pulled, twisted, yanked.

The rope came free. Billy's ankles dropped to the floor.

Now the wrists. Jake worked the knot, his hands shaking with adrenaline. The rope was tight, cutting into Billy's skin, but Jake found the loop and pulled.

One hand came free. Then the other.

Billy tore the duct tape from his mouth and ripped out the gag, gasping. "Jesus Christ."

Jake moved to the ropes binding Billy's biceps to the chair. "Almost there. Hold still."

The knots came loose. Billy pulled his arms free, stood up on shaky legs.

They were free.

Both brothers stood in the warehouse, bare-chested, bleeding, battered, but free.

"We gotta move," Jake said. "They could come back."

Billy nodded, grabbing Jake's shoulder for support. "Can you walk?"

"Yeah. You?"

"Yeah."

They stumbled toward the door, pushed it open. Sunlight hit them, blinding after hours in the dim warehouse. Jake squinted, looking around.

The drone hummed overhead.

And in the distance, the sound of engines. Shouting. Then—

Gunfire.


County Road 14 was chaos.

The black pickup had hit the intersection at full speed, only to find Deputy Wilson Nelson's patrol car blocking the road. The truck skidded, tried to swerve, but Deputy Ryan Nelson's vehicle boxed it in from the other side.

The kidnappers bailed out, all four of them, guns drawn.

That's when Pops, Wade, Tom, Josh, and Ray arrived, tires screaming. The wiz kids' trucks pulled up seconds later, the boys jumping out with their iPads still in hand, Glocks drawn.

"DROP YOUR WEAPONS!" Wade shouted, his Glock trained on the nearest masked man.

The kidnappers opened fire instead.

The consortium fired back.

It was over in seconds. Four against thirteen, and the consortium had the training, the position, and the fury. Pops put two rounds center mass in the lead kidnapper. Wade took down another. Tom and Josh dropped the third. Ray and Deputy Wilson got the fourth.

The kidnappers hit the ground, dead before the echoes faded.

Silence.

Pops stood over the bodies, his Glock still raised, his chest heaving. "Sons of bitches."

Wade keyed his radio. "Rebecca, hostiles are down. All four. We're secure."

"Copy that," Rebecca's voice came back from the ranch, tight with emotion. "The boys. Jr., check the drone feed. Are they—"

Jr. was already looking at his iPad. "The heat signatures. They're moving. Out of the building."

"What?" Pops spun around.

"They're walking," Billy Renzo said, staring at his screen in disbelief. "They freed themselves."

Everyone turned toward the dirt access road.

And there, in the distance, two figures stumbled into view.

Jake and Billy. Bare-chested, bloodied, limping, supporting each other, but walking.

"Oh my God," Tom whispered.

Jr. stared, his iPad forgotten in his hand. "They did it. They actually did it."

Louisiana let out a shaky laugh. "Those crazy bastards."

Pops broke into a run, his Glock still in his hand. Tom was right behind him, then Josh, then Ray.

The wiz kids ran too, all six of them sprinting down the road.

Jake and Billy saw them coming. Billy's legs gave out and Jake caught him, both of them sinking to their knees in the dirt.

Pops reached them first, dropping down beside them. "Boys. Oh, my boys."

He pulled them both into his arms, not caring about the blood, the cuts, the bruises. Just holding them.

Tom was there next, then Josh and Ray, all of them surrounding the brothers. Jr. and the wiz kids crowded in, Celeb's hand on Jake's shoulder, Louisiana gripping Billy's arm.

"You're alive," Jr. said, his voice cracking. "You're actually alive."

Jake looked up at him, exhausted, battered, but managing a weak smile. "Takes more than four assholes to kill a Benson."

Billy leaned against his brother, too tired to even speak.

Wade keyed his radio. "Rebecca, we've got them. They're alive. Beat up, but alive."

Rebecca's voice came through, shaking with tears. "Bring them home. I'm calling Dr. Peterson now. Bring my brothers home."

Pops helped Jake to his feet. Tom lifted Billy. The brothers leaned heavily on their family as they walked back toward the trucks.

The wiz kids walked alongside them, still in awe.

"You freed yourselves," Daniel said. "How?"

Billy managed a weak grin. "Rope's just rope. You work it long enough..."

Jake finished: "It comes loose."

They loaded the brothers into Pops' truck, wrapped blankets around them despite the heat. The convoy turned around, heading for home.

The kidnappers lay dead on County Road 14.

Jake and Billy Benson were going home.

Chapter 11: Homecoming

The convoy pulled into the Benson Ranch just after 4pm. Sarah was on the porch before the trucks even stopped, Rebecca right beside her.

Pops' truck barely rolled to a halt before Sarah yanked open the door. Jake and Billy, wrapped in blankets despite the heat, looked up at their mother with exhausted, bloodshot eyes.

"My babies," Sarah whispered, tears streaming down her face. She reached in, touching their faces gently, careful of the bruises and cuts. "My babies."

"We're okay, Mama," Billy said, his voice hoarse.

"We're home," Jake added.

Rebecca was already in full nurse mode, assessing them with clinical efficiency even as her own tears fell. "Inside. Both of you. Now."

The brothers stumbled out of the truck, still shirtless, still covered in blood and dirt. The wiz kids hovered close, ready to catch them if they fell. Pops and Tom flanked them as they made their way into the house.

Rebecca pointed to the dining room table. "Sit. Don't move."

Dr. Peterson's car pulled up the driveway—Rebecca had called him from the ranch while they were en route. The elderly doctor grabbed his bag and hurried inside.

"Good Lord," he muttered when he saw them. "Let's see what we're working with."

Rebecca had already laid out supplies—gauze, antiseptic, bandages, ice packs. She worked on Billy while Dr. Peterson examined Jake. Sarah hovered nearby, hands clasped, praying under her breath.

"Broken nose," Dr. Peterson said, gently probing Jake's face. Jake winced. "Not displaced, though. It'll heal on its own. Split lip, bruised jaw, possible mild concussion." He moved to Jake's chest, examining the knife cuts. "These are shallow. Clean them well, bandage them. They'll scar, but they'll heal."

Rebecca was doing the same for Billy, cleaning the cuts on his chest with antiseptic. Billy hissed through his teeth.

"Ouch!"

"Hold still," Rebecca said, not unkindly but firmly. "This is going to sting."

"You're not exactly gentle, you know that?" Billy muttered.

"Would you rather they get infected?" Rebecca dabbed more antiseptic on a particularly deep cut. Billy jerked.

"OW! Jesus, Becca—"

"Stop being a baby."

Jake snorted from the other side of the table, then winced when Dr. Peterson pressed too hard on his ribs.

"Ouch!"

"Bruised, not broken," Dr. Peterson said. "You boys are lucky."

"Don't feel lucky," Jake said.

Sarah brought over two glasses of water. "Drink. Both of you."

They drank, grateful. The cold water felt like heaven.

Twenty minutes later, both brothers were cleaned, bandaged, and given clean shirts to wear. Jake's nose was taped. Billy had butterfly bandages on his split lip. The cuts on their chests were covered with gauze and medical tape.

"Rest," Dr. Peterson said. "Lots of rest. Liquids. No heavy lifting for at least a week. And if either of you starts vomiting or feeling dizzy, you call me immediately. Understood?"

"Yes, sir," they both said.

Dr. Peterson packed up his bag and left. Sarah hugged him on the way out, thanking him profusely.

Inside, Pops surveyed his grandsons, now patched up and sitting at the table looking exhausted but alive. He nodded once, satisfied.

"Tom," he said. "Get the steaks out of the freezer. All of them."

Tom blinked. "All of them?"

"All of them. We're having a goddamn barbecue."


Within an hour, the backyard was alive with activity. The grill was fired up, loaded with steaks that had been speed-defrosted and were now sizzling. The consortium families had all stayed—no one wanted to leave. The Beaumonts brought potato salad. The Renzos brought beans. The Matterns had coleslaw. The Rodriguez family brought tortillas and salsa.

It was a celebration of leftovers and survival.

Jake and Billy sat in lawn chairs near the grill, still moving slowly but refusing to go inside. Louisiana and Celeb hovered nearby, making sure they had everything they needed. Jr. and the other wiz kids stood around them, still processing what they'd seen.

"You really freed yourselves," Ryan Mattern said, shaking his head. "I still can't believe it."

"Believe it," Jake said, taking a bite of steak. "We weren't gonna sit there and wait to die."

"How'd you do it?" Jr. asked.

Billy and Jake exchanged a look. Billy held up his hand, traced an invisible letter on his palm.

"Old game we used to play," Billy explained. "When we were kids. Trace letters on each other's palms when we couldn't talk out loud."

"Worked pretty well when you're gagged and tied to a chair," Jake added with a grim smile.

Celeb laughed. "You two are crazy."

"Crazy and alive," Billy said.

Pops appeared with a bottle in his hand—Jack Daniel's, the good stuff from his special reserve. He set it on the table with a thunk and started pouring shots into small glasses he'd brought out on a tray.

"Every man gets a shot," Pops announced. "Including you boys." He looked at Jr., Louisiana, Celeb, and the other wiz kids. "You earned it today."

He poured shots for all of them, then turned to Jake and Billy. He poured three fingers into each of their glasses—double what everyone else got.

"You two get extra," Pops said. "For what you went through."

Wade raised his glass. "To Jake and Billy. Tough as nails."

"To Jake and Billy," everyone echoed.

They drank. The whiskey burned going down, but it was a good burn. Jake coughed. Billy grinned.

"Pops, this is the good stuff," Billy said.

"Damn right it is," Pops said. "Today deserved the good stuff."

Tom raised his glass. "To family. All of us."

"To family!"

They ate and drank and talked as the sun started to set. Stories were told—how Jr. had coordinated the drones, how Wade had planned the intercept, how Pops had taken down the lead kidnapper without hesitation. The wiz kids recounted watching Jake and Billy walk out of that warehouse on the thermal feeds, free and alive.

Sarah sat with the other mothers, watching her sons laugh and joke despite their injuries. Rebecca sat beside her, holding her hand.

"They're home," Rebecca whispered.

"They're home," Sarah agreed.


By 9pm, the families had started to leave, heading back to their own ranches. Hugs were exchanged. Promises to check in tomorrow were made. The consortium had come together and won.

Jake and Billy stood to head inside, but Pops stopped them.

"Not yet," he said. "One more thing."

He gestured to Tom, Josh, Ray, Jr., Louisiana, and Celeb. "Everyone upstairs. Frat house."

They all climbed the stairs—Pops, Tom, and the boys. The frat house looked exactly as it had that morning, before everything went to hell. The bunk beds. The mattress on the floor. The beer stash hidden under the floorboards.

Pops looked at Jake and Billy. "You two. Show me where you hide it."

Jake grinned despite his split lip. He knelt by his bunk and pried up the loose floorboard. Underneath was their stash—cans of beer, carefully hidden from sight.

"I knew about that the whole time," Pops said with a smirk.

"No you didn't," Billy said.

"The hell I didn't. You think I don't know every inch of this house?" Pops reached down and grabbed a beer. "Tonight, we're drinking these."

He tossed cans to everyone—Tom, Josh, Ray, Jr., Louisiana, Celeb, Jake, Billy. Then he cracked his own open and took a long drink.

"To the frat house," Pops said. "Where it all started this morning. And where we're ending it tonight. Together."

They all drank. The beer was warm, but no one cared.

Jake leaned back against his bunk, exhausted but content. Billy sat beside him, their shoulders touching like they had a thousand times before.

"Hell of a day," Jake said.

"Hell of a day," Billy agreed.

Jr. looked at his uncles, then at Pops and his grandfather Tom. "We got you back. That's what matters."

"Damn right," Pops said. He raised his beer. "To this family. Toughest sons of bitches in Kings County."

"To family," they all said.

They drank in comfortable silence for a few minutes, the weight of the day finally settling over them.

Pops finished his beer and stood, stretching his back. He looked down at the loose floorboard, then at Jake and Billy with a knowing smile.

"You know," Pops said, "guess who's been loading up those beers every morning?"

Jake and Billy froze, their cans halfway to their mouths.

"What?" Billy said.

"Santa Claus," Pops said with a straight face. Then he grinned. "That's right, boys. You think Tom didn't tell me about your little stash? I've been keeping it stocked for six months."

Jake's jaw dropped. "You've been—"

"Every damn morning," Pops said. "Someone's gotta make sure you boys don't drink piss-warm Natty Light. You're Bensons. You drink better than that."

Jr. burst out laughing. Louisiana and Celeb joined in. Tom was shaking his head, grinning.

"I can't believe it," Billy said.

"Believe it," Pops said. He headed for the door, then paused and turned back. His face was serious again, but there was warmth in his eyes.

"Reveille is at 5:15am. Sharp." He looked directly at Jake and Billy. "And you two? No excuses. I don't care if you got kidnapped, beat up, and carved on. Those horses need feeding, and Big Red probably busted through another fence by now."

Jake and Billy stared at him, then slowly grinned.

"Yes, sir," they said in unison.

"Good." Pops nodded once. "Get some sleep. Tomorrow's a work day."

He left, his boots heavy on the stairs. Tom followed, clapping both his sons on the shoulders as he passed.

The boys sat in the frat house, exhausted and battered but home. Jr. raised his beer.

"To 5:15am," he said with a grin.

"To 5:15am," they all echoed.

And in the frat house, where the nightmare had started that morning, the Benson family—bloodied, exhausted, but unbroken—drank warm beer and celebrated being alive.

Life on the ranch would go on.