TRUCKJACKED!!!!!
Chapter 1: The Hijacking
The afternoon sun beat down mercilessly as Ryan Benson adjusted his camo baseball cap and wiped sweat from his forehead with the back of his work glove. His white t-shirt, once clean that morning, now clung to his lean frame, stained with dirt and concrete dust from the dam repair project. At 19, he'd been working the ranch long enough to know that rebuilding the irrigation dam at the northern boundary was going to be brutal work.
"Hand me that rebar," Jake called from inside the concrete form. At 21, Jake had stripped off his shirt hours ago, his muscled chest glistening with sweat, dark hair matted against his skin. His cowboy hat provided the only shade as he positioned steel reinforcement bars. "This foundation's gonna take all night to set, then we got another day and a half of concrete work."
"Thirty-six hours minimum," Ryan agreed, checking his watch. "Good thing we packed the camping gear. Dad wants this dam finished before the spring floods hit." He gestured toward the partially demolished structure. "Can't believe that flash flood took out fifty years of concrete in one night."
The sound of their own truck engine made both brothers look up. But neither of them was driving it.
"What the hell?" Jake straightened, concrete on his hands, squinting at the approaching vehicle.
The truck lurched to a stop twenty feet away. Two men jumped out—strangers, rough-looking, with the pale complexion of men who'd been indoors too long. The passenger held something metallic that caught the sunlight.
"Gun," Ryan whispered, his stomach dropping.
"Well, well," the gunman said, grinning as he approached. "Look what we got here. Two strong young bucks, perfect for our needs."
The driver, equally armed, circled around behind them. "Get in the truck, boys. Now."
Jake's hands slowly rose, his jaw set with barely controlled anger. "What do you want?"
"I said get in the truck!" The gunman's voice cracked with desperation. "You're coming with us, and you're gonna do exactly what we say. Move!"
Ryan's legs felt like lead as he walked toward their hijacked truck, Jake beside him, both brothers exchanging glances that said everything and nothing at all.
Chapter 2: The Shed
Ryan sat pressed against the passenger door, acutely aware of the gunman beside him, while Jake was forced into the middle, the driver's weapon never wavering from his ribs.
"Lucky for us you boys had rope and duct tape in the back," the passenger said with a harsh laugh. "What are the odds?"
Ryan's stomach dropped as the pieces clicked together. These had to be the escaped convicts from the county jail—the ones on the radio this morning. Dad had mentioned it at breakfast, said they'd walked away from a work detail somewhere near the interstate, about ten miles north.
"You're talking too much," the driver snapped after Jake had asked where they were going. "Shut them up."
The passenger grabbed the roll of duct tape from the dashboard. "You first, kid," he said to Ryan. "Take off that bandanna around your neck."
"What?" Ryan's voice cracked.
"You heard me. Take it off and stuff it in your mouth. Now."
Ryan's hands shook as he untied his red bandanna. The gun pressed harder against Jake's ribs.
"Do it or your brother gets hurt."
Ryan pushed the cotton fabric between his teeth, the taste of sweat and dust filling his mouth. The passenger quickly wrapped duct tape around his head multiple times, the adhesive pulling at his hair.
"Your turn, cowboy," the gunman said to Jake. "That bandanna under your hat—use it."
Jake slowly removed his hat, revealing the blue bandanna underneath. With visible anger, he shoved it into his mouth. More tape followed, sealing both brothers into muffled silence.
"Can't have you seeing where we're going either," the passenger said, tearing off fresh strips. "Close your eyes."
The tape covered Ryan's eyes completely, plunging him into darkness. He heard the same treatment being applied to Jake.
The ride continued in suffocating silence—twenty minutes that felt like hours. Ryan could only hear the engine, his own breathing through his nose, and Jake's muffled attempts to shift position.
"Turn here," the passenger finally barked, and Ryan felt the truck bounce onto rougher ground.
Ryan's heart sank as he sensed they were heading down what felt like the old Hendricks place path—abandoned for years, miles from the nearest neighbor. These guys had been walking through rough country for hours, probably desperate when they spotted the truck.
The truck bounced over ruts and rocks until it finally stopped. Ryan heard car doors slam.
"Out," the driver ordered, hands roughly pulling them from the truck.
They stumbled blindly across uneven ground, unable to see, speak, or help each other. The shed's metal door screeched as it opened.
"Inside. Now."
Guided by rough hands, they were forced to sit back-to-back on the concrete floor. More rope came out—their own rope from the truck bed.
"Hands behind your backs."
The rope bit into Ryan's wrists as the driver worked quickly, binding them together with practiced efficiency. The same rope connected their hands to Jake's, then wound around both their torsos, cinching them tightly together.
"Feet too," the passenger said.
Their ankles were bound individually, then tied to iron rings bolted into the concrete floor—old tie-downs for equipment that now served as anchor points for human cargo.
"There," the driver said, stepping back. "That'll hold 'em nice and quiet."
The passenger checked his watch. "We got time. Let's get some sleep and figure out our next move."
The metal door slammed shut, leaving them in complete darkness and silence except for their own labored breathing through their noses. Ryan tested the ropes—tight, professional, no give at all. The bandanna was making his jaw ache, and the tape over his eyes felt suffocating.
He tried to calm his breathing, focusing on the familiar warmth of Jake's back against his own. At least they were together. The rope was already beginning to chafe his wrists, and they'd only been tied for minutes. He tried not to think about how long this might last.
Chapter 3: The Tightening
Hours crawled by in the stifling darkness of the shed. Ryan's shoulders ached from being pulled backward, and the rope around his wrists had gone from uncomfortable to painful. How long have we been here? Three hours? Four? The tape over his eyes made it impossible to judge time, and the bandanna in his mouth was soaked with saliva.
Jake shifted slightly against his back, trying to relieve pressure on his bound arms. God, my hands are going numb, he thought, flexing his fingers behind his back. Got to keep the circulation going. The rope connecting them meant any movement Ryan made pulled on Jake's bindings, and vice versa.
Outside, they could hear the convicts stirring. Footsteps crunched on gravel, and bottles clinked—they'd found alcohol somewhere.
"Check on 'em," one voice slurred.
The shed door creaked open, letting in a sliver of late evening light that Ryan couldn't see through the tape. Heavy boots approached.
"Still trussed up tight," the driver's voice came from above them. "Look at 'em sweating. Bet those ropes are getting real uncomfortable."
He's enjoying this, Ryan realized with growing dread. This isn't just about escaping anymore.
"Maybe we should loosen them up a little," Jake tried to mumble through his gag, but only muffled sounds emerged.
"What's that, cowboy? Can't quite make that out." The passenger's voice was getting sloppier with drink. "You know what? I don't think you boys are taking this serious enough."
Ryan felt rough hands grab the rope around his torso. Oh no, what are they doing?
"Let's make sure you can't even think about getting loose," the driver said, pulling the rope tighter around both brothers. The binding that connected their torsos cinched down another few inches, forcing Ryan's chest against his knees.
Can barely breathe, Jake thought desperately as the rope compressed his ribs. They're cutting off our air.
Their ankles were retied to the floor rings with less slack, stretching their legs painfully. Ryan's hamstrings began to cramp almost immediately. This position is impossible to hold.
"There," the passenger said with satisfaction. "Now you boys just sit tight and think about your sins."
Sins? Ryan's mind raced. What's he talking about?
The door slammed shut again, leaving them in worse agony than before. Every breath was a struggle against the tightened ropes, and their legs were already starting to shake from the unnatural position.
We're going to die here, Ryan thought, panic rising in his chest. Nobody knows where we are. Dad thinks we're working on the dam.
Jake pressed his shoulder blade against Ryan's, a tiny gesture of comfort in their shared misery. Got to stay strong for Ryan, he told himself. He's scared. Hell, I'm scared too.
Hours passed. The ropes had worn grooves into their wrists, and both brothers' hands had gone completely numb. At least I can't feel the pain in my fingers anymore, Ryan thought grimly. The cramps in their legs had progressed to violent muscle spasms that made the ropes cut deeper with each involuntary jerk.
This is torture, Jake realized. They're not just keeping us prisoner—they want us to suffer.
Outside, the voices were getting louder and more incoherent. Religious phrases mixed with profanity, and the clink of bottles never stopped.
"We got ourselves some real sinners in there," one of them declared to the night sky. "Boys who work on the Sabbath, probably never seen the inside of a church."
They're completely insane, Ryan thought, his heart pounding despite his exhaustion. This isn't about money or escape. They think they're on some kind of mission.
The realization that their captors were delusional religious fanatics, not just desperate escapees, filled both brothers with a new kind of terror.
Chapter 4: The Mission Revealed
Dawn light filtered through the gaps in the shed walls, but Ryan and Jake couldn't see it through the tape over their eyes. They'd stopped trying to sleep hours ago—the pain in their shoulders and the cramping in their legs made rest impossible.
My wrists feel like they're on fire, Ryan thought, trying to work feeling back into his fingers. The rope had cut deep grooves into his skin, and dried blood made the bindings stick to his flesh.
Jake's breathing had become shallow and labored. Can't take much more of this, he realized. The rope around our chests is too tight. We're suffocating by degrees.
The sound of footsteps outside grew closer, accompanied by slurred singing—hymns mixed with curses in a way that chilled both brothers to the bone.
"Time to check on our lambs," the passenger's voice carried through the metal walls. "See if they're ready for salvation."
The door burst open, flooding the shed with morning light. Both convicts staggered in, reeking of alcohol and carrying half-empty bottles.
"Look at 'em," the driver said, his words thick with drink. "Still fighting the ropes. Still thinking they can get away from God's judgment."
God's judgment? Ryan's blood ran cold. What are they talking about?
"You boys been working on the Sabbath," the passenger declared, pointing an unsteady finger at them. "Building your worldly dams instead of honoring the Lord. That's sin, pure and simple."
Jake tried to protest through his gag, but only managed muffled sounds that seemed to enrage the convicts further.
"Still got pride," the driver observed. "Still think you know better than the Almighty." He took a long drink from his bottle. "Time to humble you properly."
Oh God, they're going to hurt us, Ryan realized, his heart hammering against his ribs.
"First things first," the passenger said, pulling out a knife. "Got to separate you boys. Can't do this right with you tied together."
What are they planning? Jake thought in terror as he felt the blade sawing through the rope that bound them back-to-back.
The rope around their torsos fell away, and both brothers almost collapsed forward without each other's support. Only the ropes at their ankles kept them upright.
"Look at this one still hiding behind his shirt," the driver sneered, grabbing Ryan's sweat-stained white t-shirt. "Time to strip away your worldly vanity."
The knife sliced through the cotton fabric with a sharp ripping sound. Ryan's shirt fell away in tatters, exposing his lean, muscled chest and the dark hair across his pectorals.
"There," the passenger said with satisfaction. "Now you're both equal before the Lord. No hiding your sins behind clothes."
They're humiliating us, Ryan thought, his face burning with shame despite everything else. Stripping us down like animals.
"Now we do this proper," the driver said, coiling fresh rope. "Can't have your arms pulling out when we hoist you up. Got to distribute the weight."
Ryan felt thick rope being wound around his bare waist and chest, the coarse fibers scratching against his exposed skin. The harness connected to his already-bound wrists, creating a web of restraint across his torso.
They're making sure nothing breaks when they lift us, he realized with growing terror. This is all planned out.
"What we're gonna do," the passenger explained as he worked on Jake, "is give you boys the full treatment. Arms crushed together proper, then pulled tight at the shoulders."
New rope looped around Ryan's forearms, cinching them together behind his back until his elbows nearly touched. The position forced his bare chest out and his shoulders back in an agonizing arch.
Can barely breathe, Ryan thought as his ribcage was compressed by the unnatural position.
"Now for the special part," the driver said with sick satisfaction. More rope appeared, threading around Ryan's biceps in an intricate weaving pattern. The rope forced his upper arms together, pulling his shoulders six inches closer than natural, crushing his shoulder blades together.
It feels like they're crushing my chest, Jake thought as he received the same treatment. The rope around his biceps bit deep into the muscle, and his shoulders screamed in protest at being forced so close together.
"There's the humility," the passenger said, stepping back to admire their work. "See how you bow before the Lord now?"
Both brothers were forced into an impossible position—their forearms crushed together while their shoulders were pulled inward, their backs arched in permanent submission, both now bare-chested and vulnerable.
"But the real lesson comes next," the driver continued. "Time to lift you up to heaven, boys."
The ropes from their biceps were thrown over exposed beams in the shed's ceiling. As the convicts pulled, both brothers felt themselves being lifted off the ground.
This is it, Ryan thought, tears streaming under the tape over his eyes. We're going to die here.
As they rose, the rope system compressed their shoulders from six inches closer than normal to just two inches apart, the bicep ropes cutting deeper as they bore the full weight. The harness ropes around their bare torsos and the bindings at their wrists shared the load, but the agony was still beyond description.
Shoulders are going to collapse inward, Jake realized, his vision going white with pain despite the tape over his eyes. The ropes are crushing everything together.
"Now you're in the proper position for prayer," the driver said. "Hanging there like the thieves beside our Lord. Maybe now you'll find some humility."
The convicts' laughter echoed in the shed as they stumbled back outside, leaving the brothers suspended in their engineered hell, unable to scream, unable to escape, unable to do anything but endure the systematic torture designed to break both body and spirit.
Chapter 5: The Cutting
Time became meaningless in the suspended hell of the shed. Ryan and Jake hung motionless, their bare chests heaving with shallow breaths, every muscle in their bodies screaming from the unnatural position. The ropes around their biceps had cut deep grooves into their flesh, and their shoulders felt ready to separate from their sockets.
How long have we been hanging here? Ryan wondered desperately. Hours? It feels like forever. The harness around his torso was the only thing preventing his arms from being torn completely apart, but even that offered little relief from the crushing agony.
Jake's consciousness drifted in and out of focus. Can't feel my hands anymore, he realized dimly. Arms are completely numb. The tape over his eyes was soaked with tears and sweat, and the bandana in his mouth had become a sodden mass that made every breath a struggle.
Outside, the convicts' voices grew louder and more incoherent. Religious ranting mixed with drunken laughter, and the sound of breaking glass suggested they'd found more alcohol.
"Time for the final lesson!" the passenger's voice boomed as the shed door crashed open. "Time to mark these sinners properly!"
Both men staggered in, even more intoxicated than before. The driver carried a hunting knife that gleamed in the morning light filtering through the gaps in the walls.
"Look at 'em hanging there," he slurred, circling the suspended brothers like a predator. "Still proud. Still defiant. But we're gonna fix that."
Oh God, they have a knife, Ryan thought, panic surging through his exhausted body. They're going to kill us.
"The Lord works in mysterious ways," the passenger declared, his voice taking on the cadence of a deranged sermon. "These boys need to carry the mark of their salvation. Seven crosses for the seven deadly sins they've committed."
Jake could only hear what was happening, the tape over his eyes blocking all sight. Seven crosses? he thought in terror. What are they going to do to us?
The driver approached Ryan first, the knife steady in his hand despite his intoxication. "Hold still, boy. Pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, and sloth. Each sin gets its own mark."
No, no, no, Ryan thought frantically as he felt the cold steel touch his bare chest. Please, God, don't let them do this.
The blade bit deep into his skin just below his left collarbone, slicing through the dark hair on his chest as it carved a small but precise cross. The cut was narrow but went deep enough to ensure a steady flow of blood. Ryan's muffled screams echoed in the shed as crimson began to stream down his chest.
"That's pride," the passenger counted off, watching the blood flow with satisfaction. "The worst sin of all."
The knife moved again, cutting another small cross two inches lower, the blade parting chest hair and flesh with surgical precision. A second stream of blood joined the first. Then another cross. And another. Each small cross was carved deep enough to create its own slow, steady flow of blood across Ryan's chest and upper abdomen.
He's carving crosses all over me, Ryan realized through the haze of agony. Seven streams of blood. They want me to bleed slowly.
Jake could hear his brother's muffled screams and smell the metallic scent of blood growing stronger. When the sounds stopped and footsteps approached him, his body convulsed involuntarily against the ropes.
"Your turn, cowboy," the convict said with a twisted grin that Jake couldn't see but could hear in his voice. "Time to receive your blessings."
The knife found Jake's chest, beginning the same methodical torture. Seven small but deep crosses carved through his chest hair and into his flesh, each one creating its own deliberate flow of blood that would continue for hours.
"There," the passenger said, stepping back to admire their handiwork. "Now you boys are properly marked. Seven crosses each, seven streams of blood to wash away your sins."
Blood ran down both brothers' chests in multiple rivulets, each cross contributing its own steady flow that dripped steadily onto the concrete floor below. The wounds were designed not to be fatal, but to bleed slowly and persistently—a constant reminder of their ordeal for as long as they remained conscious.
We're going to bleed out slowly, Jake thought as consciousness began to slip away. Nobody knows where we are. Nobody's coming.
"Let 'em hang there and contemplate their sins," the driver said, wiping the knife clean on a dirty rag. "Seven flows of blood for seven deadly sins. Maybe when we come back, they'll be ready to accept Jesus into their hearts."
The door slammed shut once again, leaving the brothers alone with their pain and their blood and their despair. The seven carved crosses on each of their chests burned like fire, and the steady streams of blood continued their relentless journey down their bodies.
Dad's gonna find us, Ryan tried to tell himself, but the thought felt hollow. The younger boys will figure it out. They have to.
But as the hours crawled by and fourteen streams of blood continued to flow steadily onto the concrete below, hope seemed as distant as rescue.
Chapter 6: The Silence
The shed fell into an eerie quiet after the convicts stumbled back outside, their drunken laughter fading into the distance. Ryan and Jake hung suspended in their private hell, fourteen streams of blood creating a steady rhythm of drops hitting the concrete floor below.
How much blood can we lose before...? Ryan's thoughts trailed off as another wave of dizziness washed over him. The seven crosses carved into his chest throbbed with each heartbeat, sending fresh rivulets of crimson down his torso.
Jake's breathing had become shallow and labored. Stay awake, he commanded himself desperately. If I pass out, Ryan might give up too. The metallic taste of blood seemed to fill the air around them, and his vision—what little he could perceive through the tape—kept going dark at the edges.
Outside, they could hear the convicts' voices growing more distant. Truck doors slammed, and an engine started.
They're leaving, Ryan realized with a mixture of relief and terror. But that means no one knows we're here.
The truck drove away, leaving only the sound of their labored breathing and the steady drip, drip, drip of blood hitting concrete. The silence was almost worse than the torture—at least when their captors were present, there was the possibility of it ending. Now there was only the slow countdown of their life bleeding away.
Dad expects us back tomorrow night, Jake calculated through the fog of pain. That's still... God, how many hours? Twenty? Thirty? His wrists had gone completely numb hours ago, and now he couldn't feel his hands at all.
The ropes around their biceps had cut so deep that Ryan could feel warm blood mixing with the streams from his chest wounds. We're being cut apart piece by piece, he thought with growing despair. Even if someone finds us, will there be anything left to save?
Through the suffocating tape over his mouth, Jake tried to make a sound—any sound that might reach his brother. A low, muffled groan escaped, barely audible even in the silence.
Ryan's head lifted slightly at the sound. Jake's still conscious, he realized with a flood of relief. He tried to respond, managing his own weak moan through the gag.
We're still here, Jake thought, finding strength in that simple communication. Still fighting.
The brothers hung in the growing darkness, their blood continuing to flow, but their spirits—somehow—still unbroken. Each labored breath, each muffled sound between them, became an act of defiance against the evil that had tried to destroy them.
Someone will come, Ryan told himself, though he no longer knew if he believed it. Someone has to come.
The steady drip of blood continued, marking time in their race against death.Chapter 7: The Discovery
Back at the Benson ranch, the sun was setting on what should have been the brothers' second day at the dam site. Their father, Tom Benson, wheeled his chair onto the front porch and checked his watch for the tenth time in an hour.
"They should've called by now," he muttered, reaching for his phone. The dam project was supposed to take thirty-six hours, but it had been forty-two since Jake and Ryan had left.
He dialed Ryan's number. The call wouldn't connect.
Jake's phone did the same.
"Marcus," he called to his youngest son, a wiry fifteen-year-old who was tinkering with a laptop on the porch swing. "Try calling your brothers."
Marcus looked up from his screen, his fingers never stopping their dance across the keyboard. "Already did, Dad. Can't reach either of them. Calls won't go through."
Tom's younger brother Luke, the county sheriff, chose that moment to pull into the driveway. At forty-five, Luke still had the lean build of a man who'd spent his youth working ranches before trading his spurs for a badge.
"You look worried," Luke observed, climbing out of his patrol car.
"Jake and Ryan aren't answering their phones. They should've been done hours ago."
Luke's expression darkened. "Tom, we had two convicts escape from a work detail yesterday morning. About ten miles north of here. I should have thought to warn you."
Tom's blood ran cold. "Jesus, Luke. You think...?"
"Let's not jump to conclusions. Marcus, pull up that GPS tracker on the work truck."
Marcus's fingers flew across the keyboard. "Already on it, Uncle Luke. Truck's been stationary for..." He paused, studying the screen. "Eighteen hours. That's not right."
"Where?" Luke asked, moving to look over his nephew's shoulder.
"About two miles from the dam site, near the old Hendricks property line."
Tom's face went white. "They wouldn't have gone there. No reason to."
"I'm going to check it out," Luke said, already calling dispatch. "This is Sheriff Carson. I need all available units and state police backup. We may have a situation involving those escaped convicts."
Marcus looked up from his laptop, his voice tight with worry. "Dad, their phones aren't just going to voicemail. They're not connecting at all. Like they've been destroyed."
Luke was already heading for his car. "Tom, you and Marcus stay here. Keep monitoring that GPS tracker. If that truck moves even an inch, you call me immediately."
The drive to the abandoned truck took twenty minutes that felt like hours. Luke's deputy son, Michael, met him at the coordinates Marcus had provided.
The white pickup sat empty in a grove of mesquite trees, doors unlocked, keys still in the ignition.
"No signs of struggle here," Michael observed, walking around the vehicle.
"Check the bed," Luke ordered, his gut telling him this was worse than he'd hoped.
Michael lifted the tailgate and found rope and duct tape scattered in the bed, along with what looked like pieces of torn fabric. "Dad, you need to see this."
But it was what he found wedged between the tailgate and bed liner that made Luke's blood run cold—a cell phone with a cracked screen, definitely not one of his nephews' phones.
Luke picked it up carefully, noting dried blood on the case. When he accessed the photo gallery, his worst fears were confirmed.
The images showed two young men suspended by ropes, their bare chests carved with crosses, blood streaming down their bodies. Jake and Ryan, tortured and helpless.
"Michael, call in everything we've got. State police, helicopters, search teams. Those convicts have my nephews."
"Dad, look at the background in these photos."
Luke forced himself to study the horrific images more carefully. Behind the suspended brothers, he could make out metal walls, concrete floors, and rusted farm equipment.
"It's an old work shed," he realized. "Could be anywhere within miles of here."
His radio crackled. "Dad!" Marcus's voice was urgent. "You need to get back here. I think I know where they are."
"What did you find?"
"That fence post in the background of one of the photos. I recognize it. We can find them."
Luke was already running for his car. The race to save Jake and Ryan had just begun.
Chapter 8: The Hunt
Luke screeched into the ranch driveway, gravel flying as he slammed the brakes. Marcus was already running toward the patrol car, laptop in hand, his sixteen-year-old brother Danny close behind.
"Show me what you found," Luke demanded, climbing out of the vehicle.
Marcus flipped open his laptop on the hood of the car. "Look at this photo," he said, pointing to one of the horrific images. "See that fence post in the background? The one with the metal bracket?"
Luke squinted at the screen. Behind Jake's suspended form, barely visible in the shadows, was indeed a distinctive fence post with what looked like a custom-welded bracket.
"We fixed that post last spring," Danny said, his voice tight with excitement and fear. "Remember, Dad? We were helping the Hendricks family repair their boundary fence. That's their back forty, near the old work sheds."
"The Hendricks place," Luke breathed. "But that's thousands of acres. Dozens of outbuildings."
"Not just any building," Marcus said, his fingers flying across the keyboard. "Look at the metal siding pattern in the background. See those corrugated ridges? And that concrete floor with the tie-down rings?"
He pulled up a satellite image on his screen. "I've been mapping all the structures on neighboring properties for a school project. There's only one building that matches this description near that fence post."
Luke studied the aerial view. A cluster of buildings sat about two miles from the main Hendricks house, including what looked like a large work shed in a remote corner of their property.
"That's got to be it," he said, already reaching for his radio. "Michael, I need you to coordinate with state police. We have a location."
"Wait," Danny interrupted. "Uncle Luke, we need to call the Hendricks family. That's their property, and they know every building on it."
Luke paused. The Hendricks family had been neighbors for two generations. Old Carl Hendricks and his sons would know exactly how to approach that shed without being seen.
"Marcus, can you call the Hendricks? Tell them what's happening."
"Already on it," Marcus said, his phone already dialing. "Mr. Hendricks? It's Marcus Benson. We need your help. Jake and Ryan have been taken by those escaped convicts, and we think they're in your old work shed..."
While Marcus explained the situation, Luke coordinated with dispatch. "I need all available units converging on the Hendricks property. State police ETA?"
"Twenty minutes out, Sheriff. Helicopter is en route."
"That might be too long," Luke muttered, studying the photos again. The blood on his nephews' chests looked fresh in some images, older in others. How long had they been hanging there?
Marcus finished his call. "The Hendricks are already moving. Mr. Hendricks and his two sons are loading up their trucks. They can be there in ten minutes—they know a back road that leads right to that shed."
"Tell them to observe and report only. Those convicts are armed and dangerous."
"Uncle Luke," Danny said quietly, "what if ten minutes is too late?"
Luke looked at the photos one more time, at his nephews suspended in agony, and made a decision that went against every regulation he'd ever learned.
"Marcus, call your dad. Tell him what we found. Then call the Hendricks back. Tell them if they see those boys in immediate danger, they have my permission to do whatever it takes."
"What about the convicts?"
Luke's jaw was set in a hard line. "The Hendricks know that land like the back of their hands. They're good men with rifles and pickup trucks. Those convicts picked the wrong county to run to."
As sirens began to wail in the distance and the Hendricks trucks roared across their back pasture, Luke climbed back into his patrol car. The race to save Jake and Ryan was about to become a converging assault from multiple directions.
"Hold on, boys," he whispered, studying the photos one more time. "The cavalry's coming."
But even as he said it, he wondered if they would arrive in time to save his nephews, or just in time to find their bodies.
Chapter 9: The Race
The Hendricks pickup trucks bounced across the rough pasture, taking a route that no outsider would ever find. Carl Hendricks, weathered and gray at sixty-two, gripped the steering wheel while his sons Jake and Tommy rode shotgun, rifles ready.
"There's the shed," Tommy said, pointing through the windshield at the metal building in the distance. "Truck's not there, though."
"Convicts probably took it somewhere else," Carl muttered, cutting the engine a hundred yards away from the building. "We go in quiet. If those boys are alive in there, we don't want to spook their captors into doing something desperate."
The three men approached the shed on foot, moving with the practiced stealth of lifelong hunters. As they got closer, they could hear something that made Carl's blood run cold—the steady drip of liquid hitting concrete.
"Jesus," Jake Hendricks whispered, pressing his ear to the metal wall. "Something's dripping in there. A lot of something."
Carl motioned for silence and crept to a gap in the corrugated siding. What he saw through the crack made him nearly vomit.
Two young men hung suspended from the ceiling by ropes, their bare chests carved with multiple crosses, blood streaming down their bodies in dark rivulets. The concrete floor beneath them was stained crimson.
"It's the Benson boys," he whispered urgently into his radio. "Luke, they're alive, but barely. You need to get here now. And bring an ambulance."
"Are the convicts there?"
Carl peered around the building, checking for any signs of the escapees. "Negative. Just the boys. We're going in."
The shed door wasn't locked—just a simple latch that opened with a screech of rusted hinges. The smell hit them immediately: blood, sweat, and the metallic tang of terror.
"Holy mother of God," Tommy breathed, seeing the full extent of the torture.
Both brothers hung motionless, their heads slumped forward, tape still covering their eyes and mouths. Fourteen separate streams of blood had carved channels down their chests, and the ropes around their biceps had cut so deep that Carl could see bone.
"Get them down," Carl ordered, pulling out his knife. "Careful with those ropes—we don't know what'll happen when we release the tension."
Jake Hendricks climbed onto an old crate to reach the ceiling beams while Tommy steadied the suspended brothers from below. As they carefully lowered Ryan first, his legs buckled completely—he'd been hanging too long to support his own weight.
"He's breathing," Tommy reported, gently laying Ryan on the concrete. "Barely, but he's breathing."
They lowered Jake next, his larger frame even more difficult to handle. Both brothers were unconscious, their bodies shutting down from blood loss and trauma.
Carl was already on his radio. "Luke, where's that ambulance? These boys are in bad shape. Multiple lacerations, severe blood loss, possible nerve damage from the restraints."
"Five minutes out. State police helicopter is landing now."
As Carl carefully peeled the tape from Ryan's eyes, the young man's eyelids fluttered open. His gaze was unfocused, confused, but alive.
"Easy, son," Carl said gently. "You're safe now. We're getting you out of here."
Ryan tried to speak, but the gag made it impossible. Carl cut the tape around his head as carefully as possible, pulling the sodden bandanna from his mouth.
"Jake," Ryan whispered, his voice barely audible. "Is Jake...?"
"He's right here," Carl assured him. "You're both going to be okay."
But even as he said it, Carl wondered if that was true. The amount of blood on the floor, the systematic nature of the torture, the precision of the rope work—this hadn't been random violence. This had been deliberate, calculated cruelty designed to cause maximum suffering.
Outside, the sound of helicopter rotors grew louder, and sirens wailed in the distance. Help was finally arriving, but Carl couldn't shake the feeling that they might already be too late to undo the damage that had been done to these two young men.
"Stay with us, boys," he whispered, pressing clean rags against their wounds. "Your daddy's coming."Chapter 10: The Minister
Fifty miles away, in the small town of Cedar Creek, Pastor William Garrett was preparing for evening service when two disheveled men stumbled through the doors of his church. The white pickup truck they'd arrived in sat running outside, its engine ticking in the summer heat.
"Pastor," the taller man called out, his voice slurred and desperate. "We need to talk to you. We need... guidance."
Pastor Garrett looked up from his sermon notes, taking in the strangers' appearance. Both men reeked of alcohol and sweat, their clothes stained with what looked suspiciously like blood. Something about their pale complexions and the way they kept glancing toward the door made his skin crawl.
"Of course," he said carefully, recognizing the signs of men in spiritual crisis. "Please, sit down. How can I help you?"
The shorter man collapsed into a front pew, his hands shaking as he reached for a Bible. "We've done God's work, Pastor. We've... we've cleansed sinners. Marked them with the cross of Christ."
God's work? Pastor Garrett thought, alarm bells going off in his head. What kind of work?
"Tell me what you mean," he said gently, moving closer but keeping his distance.
"Those boys," the taller convict rambled, his words tumbling over each other. "Working on the Sabbath, building worldly things instead of honoring the Lord. We showed them the error of their ways. Seven crosses each, just like the seven deadly sins."
The shorter man fumbled in his pocket and pulled out a cell phone with a cracked screen. "Look, Pastor. Look at our first ministry. See how we brought them to the Lord."
He thrust the phone toward Pastor Garrett, who found himself staring at an image that made his stomach lurch. Two young men hung suspended by ropes, their bare chests carved with bloody crosses, their faces twisted in agony behind tape and gags.
Pastor Garrett's blood ran cold. He'd heard the radio reports about the escaped convicts, the missing Benson brothers. These men weren't seeking spiritual guidance—they were showing off their torture.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" the taller convict said with sick satisfaction. "See how they bow before the Lord now? We hung them up proper, like the thieves beside our Savior."
Dear God, Pastor Garrett thought, fighting the urge to vomit. They're proud of what they've done. They think this is holy work.
"We hung them up proper," the shorter man continued, his voice taking on a disturbing sing-song quality. "Like the thieves beside our Savior. Let them feel the weight of their sins as their blood washed away their wickedness."
Those poor boys, Pastor Garrett thought, his hand slowly reaching for the phone in his pocket. They tortured them and photographed it like some kind of religious ritual.
"That's... that's very powerful," he managed to say, his voice steady despite his racing heart. "Would you excuse me for just a moment? I need to... to get something from my office that might help with your spiritual journey."
The convicts nodded, too lost in their religious delusions to notice his growing alarm. Pastor Garrett walked calmly toward the back of the church, then broke into a run once he was out of sight.
"911, what's your emergency?"
"This is Pastor Garrett at Cedar Creek Methodist," he whispered urgently into his phone. "I have the two escaped convicts here in my church. They just showed me pictures of the missing Benson brothers being tortured. They're alive, but barely."
"Sir, can you repeat that?"
"The escaped convicts from the prison. They're here, in my church. They have photographs of two boys hanging by ropes, carved up with crosses. You need to get here now, and you need to find those boys."
"Units are already en route, Pastor. Can you keep them there?"
Pastor Garrett peered around the corner. Both men were now on their knees at the altar, praying loudly and incoherently over the phone with its horrific images, their voices echoing off the church walls.
"They're not going anywhere," he said. "They think they're having some kind of religious experience."
Within minutes, the sound of sirens filled the evening air. The convicts looked up in confusion as patrol cars surrounded the church.
"What's happening?" the taller man asked, genuine bewilderment in his voice.
Sheriff Carson's voice boomed through a megaphone: "This is the police. Come out with your hands up."
The convicts looked at Pastor Garrett with growing rage. "You called them," the shorter man snarled. "You're in league with the devil, just like those boys."
"You're under arrest," Luke Carson said as he and his deputies burst through the church doors, weapons drawn.
As the handcuffs clicked into place, both convicts began screaming about corruption and demons, their voices rising to a fever pitch.
"You're all servants of Satan!" the taller convict shrieked as he was dragged toward the patrol car. "We did God's work! We cleansed the sinners!"
"The only thing you cleansed," Luke said grimly, taking the phone with its damning evidence, "was your chance at ever seeing freedom again."
As the patrol cars drove away, Pastor Garrett stood in the doorway of his church, shaking. He'd ministered to troubled souls for thirty years, but he'd never encountered evil this pure, this twisted in its righteousness.
Chapter 11: The Test
Two days later, Marcus and Danny walked quietly down the hospital corridor, their father's wheelchair rolling silently beside them. The smell of antiseptic couldn't mask the underlying scent of pain that seemed to permeate the intensive care unit.
"Room 314," Tom Benson said softly, checking the numbers on the doors. "The nurse said they're both awake now."
Marcus carried a small bouquet of wildflowers from the ranch, while Danny held a thermos of their mother's soup—though he doubted either of his brothers would be eating much solid food for a while.
The door was slightly ajar, and they could hear low voices inside. Tom knocked gently.
"Come in," Jake's voice called out, hoarse but recognizably his own.
The sight that greeted them made all three visitors stop short. Jake sat propped up in the bed closest to the window, his chest and arms wrapped in white bandages. His shoulders were held in a brace that kept them from moving too far in any direction. Ryan lay in the bed beside him, similarly bandaged, with an IV drip running into his arm.
"Hey, Dad," Ryan said, managing a weak smile. "Hey, guys."
The seven crosses carved into each brother's chest were hidden beneath the bandages, but the psychological scars were visible in their eyes—a haunted quality that hadn't been there before.
"How are you feeling?" Tom asked, wheeling closer to Jake's bed.
"Like I got hit by a truck," Jake replied, attempting humor but not quite managing it. "Doc says the nerve damage in my shoulders might be permanent. Won't know for sure for a few weeks."
Marcus set the flowers on the bedside table, noticing how both his brothers flinched slightly at sudden movements. "We brought you some of Mom's soup," he said quietly.
"Thanks," Ryan said. "I'm not really hungry, but... thanks."
Danny studied his older brothers' faces, seeing the exhaustion and trauma written there. "The whole county's been talking about what those guys did to you," he said. "Sheriff Carson says they're going to prison for life."
"Good," Jake said, his voice hardening. "They were completely insane. Thought they were doing God's work."
The conversation continued for another hour, but both younger brothers could see their siblings were struggling to stay awake. The pain medication and the trauma were taking their toll.
"We should let you rest," Tom said finally. "We'll be back tomorrow."
As they left the hospital, Marcus and Danny were unusually quiet. The drive home passed in contemplative silence, each lost in their own thoughts about what their brothers had endured.
That night, long after their father had gone to bed, Marcus found Danny sitting on the porch steps, staring out at the dark horizon.
"Can't sleep either?" Marcus asked, settling beside his younger brother.
"Keep thinking about what they went through," Danny said. "Hanging there for hours, bleeding, not knowing if anyone would find them."
Marcus nodded. "I keep wondering if we would have been strong enough. If it had been us instead of them."
Danny was quiet for a long moment. Then: "There's one way to find out."
Marcus looked at him sharply. "What do you mean?"
"The shed. It's still there. The ropes are probably still there too." Danny's voice was steady, but Marcus could hear the undercurrent of need beneath it. "We could... we could see what it was like. Not the cutting part, but the hanging. Just to understand."
"Danny, that's crazy. We could get hurt."
"Not if we're careful. We won't tie ourselves up as tight as they were tied. And we'll have a way to get free if we need to." Danny turned to face Marcus. "I need to know, Marcus. I need to understand what they survived."
Marcus was quiet for a long time, wrestling with the idea. Finally, he nodded. "Okay. But we do this smart. We leave word for Dad about where we're going, and we don't stay longer than we can handle."
The next morning, they told their father they were going to check the irrigation lines in the north pasture—technically true, since they'd pass the lines on their way to the old shed. They loaded rope and a first aid kit into the truck, both brothers unusually quiet.
The abandoned shed sat exactly as the rescue team had left it, the door hanging open, dried blood still staining the concrete floor. The ropes the convicts had used still hung from the ceiling beams.
"Jesus," Danny whispered, seeing the scene for the first time. "They really hung them up like this?"
Marcus studied the rope configuration, the anchor points, the height of the beams. "Jake's taller than both of us. Ryan's about my height. If we're going to do this, we need to be really careful about the knots."
They spent an hour studying the setup, discussing safety measures, and preparing their own version of the restraints—loose enough to escape from, but tight enough to give them a sense of what their brothers had experienced.
"You sure about this?" Marcus asked as he helped Danny position the ropes around his arms.
"I need to know," Danny said simply. "I need to understand what made them strong enough to survive."
As the ropes took his weight and his feet left the ground, Danny felt a small measure of what his brothers had endured. The pain was immediate and intense, but it was also something else—a connection to Jake and Ryan's courage, a deeper understanding of the strength it had taken to survive.
They took turns, each spending only a few minutes suspended, but it was enough. When they finally packed up their equipment and headed home, both brothers felt they'd gained something precious: a deeper appreciation for what their family had survived, and a new understanding of the bonds that held them together.
The scars would always be there—some visible, some hidden. But the Benson family had proven that love and determination could overcome even the darkest evil.
As they drove away from the shed for the last time, Marcus and Danny knew they'd never look at their older brothers the same way again. Jake and Ryan weren't just their siblings anymore—they were survivors, heroes who'd faced the worst humanity could offer and had somehow found the strength to endure.
The nightmare was over, but the respect and love it had forged would last forever.
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