Monday, June 9, 2025

POW Training

 



Chapter 1: The Contract

Twenty-two-year-old Lance Corporal Ryan Henderson adjusted his battle dress uniform and knocked on his commanding officer's door. The sleeves were rolled up tight against his biceps, the way he liked them - showing off the muscle he'd built through years of training. The fabric strained against his arms, a constant reminder of his physical prowess.

"Enter," came the gruff voice from inside.

Henderson stepped into the office, his posture perfect, shoulders back. Captain Morrison looked up from a stack of paperwork, his weathered face breaking into a slight smile.

"Henderson. Take a seat. We've got something special for you."

The lance corporal settled into the chair across from Morrison's desk, curious. Special assignments usually meant recognition, advancement, or at least something that would look good on his record.

"We're putting together a training video," Morrison began, sliding a thick document across the desk. "No holds barred POW escape training. Real as it gets. We need someone tough enough to handle it."

Henderson picked up the contract, scanning the pages. His eyes caught on phrases like "realistic interrogation techniques," "physical restraint," and "psychological pressure." At the bottom, a figure that made his eyebrows raise: $5,000 training bonus.

"Sir," Henderson said with a grin, "I've been tied up since I was a scout. It's just muscle against restraints. Hell, even these sleeves remind me of restraints on my arms, they're so tight on my biceps." He flexed slightly, the fabric pulling taut.

Morrison chuckled. "Occupational hazard of being built like a tank. But Henderson, this isn't boy scout rope. You'll be drugged, bound, put through interrogation techniques that may include waterboarding, stress positions, the works. All real. The goal is to not break and try to escape. Can you handle that?"

Henderson's confidence never wavered. "Yes sir. How do we begin?"

"Sign the form. Then the medic injects a knockout drug. When you wake up, the interrogation begins." Morrison's tone was matter-of-fact, almost casual.

Henderson grabbed the pen without hesitation, his signature bold and confident across the bottom of the release form. "Ready when you are, sir."

Morrison nodded toward the corner where a medic had been quietly preparing a syringe. "This is it, Henderson. Last chance to back out."

"Not a chance, sir." Henderson extended his arm. The medic approached and pushed up the tightly folded sleeve just a fraction of an inch, exposing a small patch of skin. "Let's do this."

The needle slid in smoothly. Henderson felt the cold liquid enter his bloodstream, and within seconds, the room began to blur. His last conscious thought was pride - pride in his strength, his courage, his unshakeable confidence.

He never saw the look that passed between Morrison and the medic as his body slumped forward onto the desk.

Chapter 2: The Interrogation

Henderson's consciousness returned slowly, like surfacing from deep water. His head pounded, and his mouth tasted of copper and chemicals. He tried to move and felt the bite of rope against his wrists.

He was sitting in a metal chair, arms pulled behind him, wrists bound. The room was concrete - walls, floor, ceiling - lit by a single harsh bulb that made his eyes water. This wasn't the base. This wasn't anywhere he recognized.

"Ah, sleeping beauty's awake."

Henderson turned toward the voice. A man in unmarked fatigues stood in the corner, face obscured by shadow. Not Morrison. Someone he'd never seen before.

"Where am I?" Henderson's voice came out rougher than he intended.

"That's not how this works, Marine. You don't ask questions." The man stepped forward, and Henderson could see his face now - angular, cold, with eyes that seemed to find genuine pleasure in Henderson's confusion. "You answer them."

"This is training, right?" Henderson tested his bonds. Standard rope, nothing he couldn't handle. "The POW escape scenario?"

The man smiled, and something about it made Henderson's stomach clench. "Oh, this is very real training, Henderson. More real than you can imagine."

The interrogation began simply. Name, rank, serial number. Henderson gave the standard responses, playing his part. But as hours passed, the questions became more invasive, more personal. Details about base security, about other Marines, about things no training exercise would ever ask.

"I'm not telling you shit," Henderson said after the fourth hour, sweat beading on his forehead despite the cold room.

"We'll see about that."

They moved him to a different position then - arms pulled up behind him, rope threaded through a pulley in the ceiling. The strappado. Henderson had heard about it in briefings, but feeling his shoulders strain as they lifted him onto his toes was different. The pain shot through his joints like fire.

"Ready to talk now?"

Henderson gritted his teeth. The tight sleeves of his uniform bit into his biceps as his arms were wrenched upward. "Go to hell."

They left him like that for an hour. His shoulders screamed, his uniform sleeves cutting circulation as the ropes pulled his arms higher. When they finally lowered him, Henderson's legs gave out.

"Just getting started, Marine."

The waterboarding came next. They strapped him to a tilted board, arms still bound behind him, the ropes cutting deeper with every movement. Henderson had trained for this, knew the techniques to survive it.

Stay calm. Control your breathing. It's not real drowning.

But the moment the cloth covered his face and the first splash of water hit, every piece of training evaporated. The water filled his nose, his mouth, and his body exploded into panic. He jerked violently against the restraints, his back arching, every muscle straining against the ropes.

Can't breathe can't breathe oh God I'm drowning—

His thrashing made the arm restraints bite deeper, the ropes sawing against his biceps. The tight sleeves of his uniform became tourniquets as his arms swelled from the restricted circulation. More water came, and Henderson's body bucked so hard the board shook.

This isn't training this is real I'm going to die here—

The cloth clung to his face, water streaming into his lungs. Henderson's world narrowed to one desperate need: air. His body convulsed, every nerve screaming. The ropes around his arms felt like they were cutting through to bone as he fought uselessly against them.

Please stop please God make it stop—

They lifted the cloth for five seconds. Henderson gasped, choking, water streaming from his nose and mouth. Before he could catch his breath, the cloth came down again.

For thirty minutes, they repeated the cycle. Pour, drown, lift, gasp, pour again. Henderson's mind shattered. He begged, he cried, he promised them anything. His powerful body, the source of all his confidence, had become his enemy - every instinctive struggle to survive only tightened the ropes that held him.

I'm not tough I'm not strong I'm nothing I'm nothing please—

By the end, Henderson wasn't fighting anymore. He lay limp on the board, his arms purple and swollen behind him, making soft whimpering sounds as the water cascaded over his face.

When they finally pulled the cloth away for good, Henderson couldn't speak. He could only make gasping, animal sounds as water poured from his lungs.

"Please," he heard himself whisper, and hated the word as it left his lips.

"Please what?"

Henderson said nothing, but his silence was answer enough. They could break him. He could be broken.

By hour eight, they had bound his arms differently - elbows and forearms pressed together behind his back, rope wound so tight around his biceps that his hands had gone completely numb. The pressure forced his arms deep into his spine, and every breath was agony. His uniform sleeves, folded so tight against his muscles, had become part of the torture - cutting off circulation, creating pressure points that screamed with every heartbeat.

"Look at those big strong arms now," his interrogator mocked, running a finger along Henderson's swollen biceps where the sleeve fabric had embedded itself into his flesh. "Not so impressive when they're useless, are they?"

Henderson could no longer feel his hands. His shoulders had separated partially from the strain, held in place only by the ropes. The confident Marine who had signed that contract twelve hours ago was gone, replaced by something raw and desperate.

"I'll tell you whatever you want," Henderson whispered.

"Too late for that, Marine. We're way past information now."

The man leaned close, his breath hot against Henderson's ear. "Now we're just having fun."

Chapter 3: The Hunt

After twelve hours, they dumped Henderson in a small concrete room. His arms were still bound in that impossible position - elbows and forearms pressed together, rope wound so tight around his biceps that the circulation had been cut off for hours. A blindfold covered his eyes, tape sealed his mouth. He could feel the tightness of his folded sleeves working with the ropes, creating a tourniquet effect around his swollen arms.

I have to get out. I have to try.

Henderson scraped his face against the rough concrete wall until the tape peeled away from his mouth. Then he worked at the blindfold, rubbing and twisting until it slipped down. His legs weren't tied - they'd wanted him mobile for what came next.

He stood on unsteady legs and stumbled to the door. One desperate kick and it burst open.

Cool night air hit his face. Woods. He was surrounded by trees, no buildings in sight except the small concrete structure behind him.

How the fuck are they going to record this? How did they record anything? What is really going on?

He turned back toward the building and froze. Captain Morrison stood there with the interrogators, all of them laughing.

"Fuck you, Henderson," Morrison called out, his voice filled with genuine pleasure. "I enjoyed every minute of that. Now run, boy. We'll track you down with the dogs, and when we find you, you'll be tortured to death and buried where nobody will find you. Just another Marine that went AWOL."

Not training. Never was training. They're going to kill me.

Henderson ran.

The forest was dense, full of branches that caught at his uniform and roots that sent him stumbling. But worse were his arms - the rope connecting his wrists ran between his legs and around his waist. Every movement of his arms sent crushing pressure to his groin. If he moved them even slightly, he'd double over in agony.

Have to keep moving. Can't stop.

Behind him, he heard the baying of dogs.

Twenty minutes in, Henderson reached a creek. The water was waist-deep and moving fast. With his arms bound, crossing would be treacherous, but the dogs were getting closer. His biceps had swollen so much that his uniform sleeves looked ready to burst, the fabric stretched tight as drumskins around the dead tissue underneath.

Water will kill their scent. Have to try.

He waded in, and immediately the current knocked him sideways. His bound arms made balancing impossible. He went under, swallowing muddy water, his shoulders screaming as the ropes pulled against the current. The cold water hit his swollen arms like a shock - the ropes contracted, shrinking tight as the water temperature dropped his body heat. His already purple hands turned gray.

Can't feel my hands anymore. Arms are dying.

When he surfaced, gasping, blood was streaming down his arms where the contracting ropes had cut through skin that had no feeling left. The sleeve fabric had absorbed so much blood it was black in the moonlight. His biceps looked grotesquely inflated, twice their normal size, the rope completely buried in swollen flesh.

The water was so cold his muscles began to cramp, but he could hear the dogs growing distant. He'd bought himself time.

Forty minutes later, a low branch caught the rope around his biceps and jerked him to a stop. The impact sent fire through his shoulders as the partially separated joints twisted. Henderson panicked, pulling frantically as he heard voices in the distance. Each desperate tug made the branch tear deeper into the embedded rope, which had become part of his flesh.

They're coming they're coming get free GET FREE—

Blood poured from the torn tissue as he wrenched against the branch. His shoulder fully dislocated with an audible pop, but the combination of swelling and rope held it in a twisted, unnatural position. When the rope finally tore free, it left chunks of flesh and fabric on the branch behind him.

Something's wrong with my arms. Really wrong.

Henderson tried to flex his fingers, to make a fist, anything. Nothing happened. No sensation, no movement, no response at all. It was like his hands had simply stopped existing.

No feeling. Nothing. They're dead.

By the hour mark, Henderson realized he was leaving a blood trail. Every step sent drops of dark fluid from his arms onto the forest floor. His sleeves had become saturated tourniquets, the only thing preventing him from bleeding out completely. The irony wasn't lost on him - the tight uniform he'd been so proud of was killing his arms while keeping him alive.

Keep moving. They can track the blood anyway.

An hour and twenty minutes in, Henderson found what looked like an abandoned hunting blind. He crawled inside, hope flaring in his chest. Maybe he could rest, work on the knots with his nerveless fingers.

He tried to bend his arms to reach the ropes, but they wouldn't respond. It was like trying to move someone else's limbs. The flesh around his biceps had turned black and started to smell - the sweet, sick odor of dying tissue.

Just need a few minutes. Just need to—

Laughter echoed from the trees around him. They'd been watching. Waiting. Playing with him.

"Having fun yet, Henderson?" Morrison's voice came from somewhere in the darkness. "Look at those useless arms. All that muscle, completely worthless now."

They could have caught me anytime. They're enjoying this.

Henderson burst from the blind and ran again, tears of rage and terror streaming down his face. The crotch rope had become unbearable, sawing into him with each stride. His running gait became a hobbling crouch as he tried to minimize the agony while his dead arms swung uselessly behind him.

Can't go on. Can't stop. Dying anyway.

By the ninety-minute mark, Henderson couldn't tell where his arms ended and the ropes began. Everything from his shoulders down had merged into one mass of swollen, discolored flesh and embedded fabric. His uniform sleeves had disappeared entirely into tissue that looked like raw meat.

Arms are gone. Doesn't matter. Keep moving.

At two hours, hypothermia and blood loss finally dropped him. Henderson collapsed in a clearing, his body shaking uncontrollably. He could hear the dogs getting closer, but he couldn't make his legs work anymore. When he tried to shift position, he realized his arms were no longer attached to his shoulders in any meaningful way - just hanging by skin and sinew.

This is it. This is how I die.

He closed his eyes and waited for Morrison's men to finish him.

Instead, he heard different voices. Urgent. Professional.

"Jesus Christ, we found him! Medic! MEDIC!"

Henderson opened his eyes to see men in real military uniforms - not Morrison's team. Special Forces patches. One of them was cutting the blindfold completely away while another worked on his restraints.

"Son, can you hear me? You're safe now. We know what happened. We've been tracking Morrison for months."

The medic who cut the first rope immediately stepped back, hit by the smell of rotting flesh and the gush of dark fluid that poured out. Henderson's arms didn't move when freed - they were completely dead weight, grotesquely swollen and discolored.

"His sleeves," the medic said quietly to his partner, examining the embedded fabric. "They're the only thing that kept him from bleeding out. But Jesus... we might have to amputate both arms."

Henderson tried to speak but could only make a rasping sound.

"Don't try to talk," the medic said. "We're getting you out of here."

As they loaded him onto a stretcher, Henderson heard one of the soldiers radio in: "We need immediate evac. Multiple casualties from Morrison's operation. This one's barely alive. Tell the hospital to prep for possible bilateral amputation."

Morrison's operation. How many others?

But consciousness was fading again, and Henderson let the darkness take him, finally safe.

Chapter 4: The Collapse

Henderson drifted in and out of consciousness during the helicopter ride. Through the haze of pain medication, he caught fragments of urgent radio chatter.

"...bilateral compartment syndrome...tissue necrosis...prepare OR 3..."

"...Morrison in custody...found three other victims...one didn't make it..."

Three others. One didn't make it.

The medical team worked frantically around him. Someone was cutting away what remained of his uniform, the blood-soaked fabric peeling away from his arms like bandages from a mummy. Henderson tried to speak, to ask about his arms, but the words wouldn't come.

"Jesus," one of the medics whispered. "Look at this. The sleeves are completely embedded in the tissue."

Henderson felt pressure, tugging, but no pain in his arms. Nothing at all.

At the base hospital, chaos erupted around his gurney. Doctors barked orders, nurses rushed IV lines, and Henderson found himself staring up at harsh fluorescent lights that reminded him of that concrete room.

No. I'm safe. They said I'm safe.

"Lance Corporal Henderson, can you hear me?" A surgeon leaned over him, her face kind but grave. "I'm Dr. Martinez. We're going to take good care of you."

Henderson managed a nod.

"Your arms sustained severe damage. We need to operate immediately. There's a chance we can save some function, but..." She paused, choosing her words carefully. "You need to understand, the circulation was cut off for too long. We're going to do everything we can."

Some function. Not full function.

The anesthesia took him under before he could process what that meant.

Henderson woke three days later to the steady beep of monitors and the antiseptic smell of the ICU. His arms were wrapped in thick bandages, elevated on pillows. He tried to move his fingers.

A slight twitch. Barely perceptible, but movement.

"Easy there, Marine." A nurse appeared at his bedside. "You're in the ICU at Walter Reed. You've been out for three days."

"My arms," Henderson croaked, his voice barely a whisper.

The nurse's expression brightened slightly. "Dr. Martinez will be in soon to talk to you. But I saw your fingers move just now. That's a very good sign."

When Dr. Martinez arrived, she sat beside his bed, but her expression was cautiously optimistic.

"We managed to save both arms," she began, and Henderson's heart leaped. "The damage was extensive - massive tissue death, nerve damage, vascular compromise. The fabric of your uniform actually saved your life. It acted like a tourniquet, preventing you from bleeding out."

Henderson waited, watching her face.

"It's going to be a long recovery. Months of physical therapy, probably some permanent scarring. The nerve damage was severe, but we're seeing some encouraging signs. You moved your fingers this morning."

"Will I..." Henderson's voice caught. "Will I get full use back?"

Dr. Martinez leaned forward. "Lance Corporal, three days ago I wasn't sure we could save your arms at all. The fact that you have any sensation returning is remarkable. With time, with therapy, with determination... yes, I believe you can make a full recovery. Your body is young, strong. It wants to heal."

Full recovery. The words felt impossible after what he'd been through.

"There's something else," Dr. Martinez continued. "The FBI wants to talk to you when you're ready. About Captain Morrison and his operation. What happened to you... it wasn't the first time."

Henderson looked back at her. "How many?"

"They're still investigating. At least a dozen Marines over the past two years. All of them strong, confident young men like yourself. All of them volunteers for 'special training.'"

A dozen. Jesus Christ.

"One of them didn't make it," she said quietly. "Private Collins. He was only nineteen."

Henderson closed his eyes. Nineteen years old. Some kid who thought he was tough enough to handle anything, just like Henderson had thought.

Could have been me. Should have been me.

"The others," Henderson asked. "Did they recover?"

"Most of them, yes. Some took longer than others. You're actually the worst case we've seen who survived. What Morrison did to you..." She shook her head. "But you're alive, and you're going to heal."

Henderson stared at his bandaged arms. The pain was returning as the medication wore off, but with it came sensation. He could feel the bandages, feel pressure when the nurse checked his pulse.

I'm going to heal. I'm going to be whole again.

"There will be a trial," Dr. Martinez continued. "Your testimony will be crucial. Morrison is facing life in prison, but only if we can prove what he did."

Henderson nodded slowly. "I'll testify. I'll tell them everything."

Every humiliating detail. Every moment I begged. Every second I broke.

"When you're ready," she said gently. "Focus on healing first."

After she left, Henderson flexed his fingers again. More movement this time, clearer sensation. The monitors beeped steadily, and for the first time since waking up, Henderson felt something other than despair.

I survived. I'm going to recover. And I'm going to make sure Morrison pays for what he did.

Outside his window, Henderson could see the flag flying at full staff. Soon, he knew, there would be ceremonies. Awards. Recognition.

Purple Heart, definitely. Maybe more.

Medals for surviving. Ribbons for enduring.

Henderson closed his eyes, and while the nightmares still came, they were tempered now by something else: the knowledge that he would heal, that he would be strong again, that Morrison hadn't broken him permanently.

The road back was going to be long, but Henderson was ready to walk it.

Chapter 6: The Instructor

Six months later, Second Lieutenant Ryan Henderson stood before a classroom of twenty fresh-faced Marine recruits at the SERE training facility. His dress sleeves were rolled up tight against his biceps in the familiar way, but now the rope scars were clearly visible - twisted white lines that told a story none of these young Marines knew yet.

"Gentlemen," Henderson began, pacing in front of the class, "welcome to Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape training. I'm Lieutenant Henderson, and I'm going to teach you how to survive as a prisoner of war."

The recruits sat at attention, most of them barely twenty years old, all of them radiating the same cocky confidence Henderson remembered from his own early days. He could see it in their posture, hear it in the whispered comments about how tough they were, how they'd never break.

Just like I was.

"Before we begin," Henderson continued, "I want to know who thinks they're the toughest Marine in this room."

A dozen hands shot up immediately. Henderson's eyes settled on one recruit in particular - Private Martinez, built like a tank, jaw set with absolute certainty.

"You, Martinez. Front and center."

Martinez stood and marched to the front of the classroom, chest out, shoulders back. Henderson recognized the swagger, the unshakeable belief in his own physical superiority.

"Tell the class about your background, Martinez."

"Sir, I was state wrestling champion in high school, powerlifting champion at boot camp, and I've never been in a fight I couldn't handle, sir!"

Some of the other recruits chuckled appreciatively. Henderson pulled out a coil of standard military rope.

"Outstanding, Martinez. Since you're so confident, you're going to help me demonstrate something very important about prisoner of war scenarios."

Henderson walked behind Martinez and began binding his arms behind his back - not the brutal torture tie that had destroyed his own limbs, but a simple, secure binding that any captor might use.

"The rest of you, pay attention," Henderson called out as he worked. "Martinez here represents every one of you. Young, strong, absolutely certain that his physical power makes him invincible."

He finished the binding and stepped back. Martinez's arms were pulled behind him, wrists tied, but nothing like the devastating position Henderson had endured.

"Now, Martinez, I want you to try to escape while I tell these gentlemen a story."

Martinez immediately began straining against the ropes, muscles bulging as he tried to break free or slip the bonds.

"Six months ago," Henderson began, walking to the front of the class, "I was a Lance Corporal just like all of you. Strong, confident, absolutely certain I could handle any challenge the Corps threw at me. I volunteered for what I thought was advanced training."

Behind him, Martinez continued struggling, his face reddening with effort.

"I told my commanding officer that I'd been tied up since I was a scout, that it was just muscle against restraints." Henderson flexed his own biceps, showing the scars. "I was proud of these arms, proud of my strength."

The class was listening now, noticing the scars for the first time, beginning to understand that their instructor wasn't just lecturing from a manual.

"What I learned that night," Henderson continued, "is that real interrogators don't care how strong you are. They don't care about your confidence or your training or your pride. They care about one thing: breaking you."

Martinez had stopped struggling now, breathing hard, sweat beading on his forehead. The simple rope restraint hadn't budged.

"The enemy doesn't play fair, gentlemen. They don't follow the Geneva Convention. They don't stop when you've had enough." Henderson's voice grew quieter, more intense. "They keep going until you break, and if you think your strength makes you immune to breaking, you're already lost."

He walked back to Martinez, who was now looking less confident and more frustrated.

"How are those ropes feeling, Martinez?"

"Sir, they're... they're cutting off my circulation, sir."

"And we've only been at this for five minutes." Henderson began untying the knots. "Real captors leave you like this for hours. Days. They add stress positions, water torture, psychological pressure you can't imagine."

As the ropes came free, Martinez rubbed his wrists, rope burns already visible on his skin.

"The point of this exercise," Henderson said to the class, "isn't to scare you. It's to save your lives. The Marine who thinks he's too tough to break is the Marine who dies in captivity because he never learned the real skills that matter."

He held up the rope for all to see.

"This isn't about overpowering your restraints - it's about outsmarting them. It's not about being tough enough to resist torture - it's about being smart enough to survive it. And it's not about never breaking - it's about controlling what you give them when you do."

The classroom was dead silent now.

"Because here's the truth, gentlemen: everyone breaks. Everyone. The question isn't whether you'll break - it's whether you'll break smart or break stupid."

Henderson coiled the rope and set it on his desk.

"Martinez, how do those wrists feel?"

"Sore, sir. Really sore."

Henderson nodded. "And the class can see you've got rope burns after just five minutes of struggle. Now imagine twelve hours of professional torture."

Martinez's face had gone pale.

"Tomorrow, we start learning the real skills. How to conserve your strength. How to protect your mind. How to survive when strength fails you." Henderson looked each recruit in the eye. "Because strength always fails you eventually. Intelligence doesn't."

As the class filed out, Henderson heard the conversations - quieter now, more serious, the cockiness replaced by thoughtful concern.

Good, he thought. Maybe I just saved a few lives.

He looked at the rope on his desk and flexed his scarred arms. They worked perfectly now, full strength and sensation restored. But the scars would always remind him - and his students - that real toughness isn't about never falling down.

It's about getting back up.

And teaching others not to fall in the first place.

Iowa State High School championship

 


Chapter 1: After Practice

The weight room had that familiar smell of sweat and rubber mats that Jake Morrison had come to love. He racked the barbell after his final set, feeling the satisfying burn in his biceps. Two hundred and twenty-five pounds for eight reps—not bad for a high school senior, especially one carrying the hopes of Valley High's entire football program on his shoulders.

Tomorrow's the championship. State finals. Four years of work comes down to this.

Jake grabbed his towel and wiped the sweat from his face, catching his reflection in the mirrored wall. His arms looked good—really good. All those hours in the gym had paid off. His biceps had that defined peak that made him look older than seventeen, more like the college recruiters expected their prospects to look.

"Nice session, Morrison," called Coach Williams from across the room. "Get some rest tonight. We need you at one hundred percent tomorrow."

"Yes sir." Jake slung his gym bag over his shoulder and headed for the door. The hallways of Valley High were empty now, just the echo of his footsteps on the polished floor. Most of the team had cleared out an hour ago, but Jake always stayed late. Extra reps, extra sets. That's what separated good players from great ones.

The parking lot was nearly deserted, just a few cars scattered under the yellow glow of the security lights. Jake's truck sat alone in the far corner where he always parked it. He was fishing for his keys when he heard footsteps behind him.

"Jake Morrison?"

He turned around. Three men stood about ten feet away, but something about their positioning made his athlete's instincts kick in. They weren't just asking for directions.

"Yeah?" Jake's hand tightened around his keys, threading them between his fingers the way his older brother had taught him.

"We need you to come with us."

"I don't think so." Jake took a step back toward his truck, but there was a fourth man there now, blocking his path.

This is really happening. This is actually happening.

Jake swung at the nearest man, but they were ready for him. A fist caught him in the ribs, driving the air from his lungs. Another blow landed on his jaw, snapping his head back. He tried to fight, tried to use his strength, but there were too many of them. Hands grabbed his arms, his legs. A knee drove into his stomach and he doubled over, gasping.

They dragged him toward a waiting van, his feet scraping against the asphalt. Jake struggled against their grip, but his vision was blurring from the beating. The van's side door slid open with a metallic screech.

"Get the rope," one of them grunted.

The last thing Jake saw before they shoved him inside was his truck keys glinting on the parking lot pavement where he'd dropped them.

Chapter 2: Bound

Jake's consciousness returned in waves of pain. His head throbbed where they'd hit him, his ribs ached with each breath, but it was his arms that made him gasp awake.

What the hell—

He was sitting on concrete, his back against something cold and hard. A steel rod. His arms were pulled behind him, wrapped around the rod, and bound tight with rope. But it wasn't just his wrists—they'd looped the rope around his biceps too, cinching it so tight that every muscle fiber screamed in protest.

Jesus Christ, my arms.

Jake tried to move, tried to shift position, but the rope bit deeper into his biceps with every motion. The steel rod pressed right into the peak of his muscles—the same biceps he'd been admiring in the mirror just hours ago. All that muscle mass he'd worked so hard to build was now working against him, creating pressure points that made the rope slice into his flesh like wire.

Can't move. Can't get loose. Why are they doing this?

He tested the bonds carefully, trying to find some give, but whoever had tied him knew what they were doing. The rope around his biceps was positioned perfectly to use his own muscle mass as an anchor. Every time he flexed, trying to create space, the rope just cut deeper.

The game. Oh God, the game.

Panic shot through him as the reality hit. The championship was tomorrow. His team needed him. Coach Williams would be expecting him at the team breakfast in—what time was it? How long had he been out?

Jake pulled against the ropes with everything he had, ignoring the way they sliced into his biceps. The pain was incredible, like someone pressing hot knives into his arms, but he had to get free. Had to get to the game.

Come on, come on!

But the harder he struggled, the worse it got. The rope was cutting off circulation, making his hands tingle and go numb. Sweat beaded on his forehead from the effort and the pain, but the knots held firm.

They knew exactly how to do this. They've done this before.

That thought scared him more than anything else.

Chapter 3: Missing

Where is he?

Marcus Morrison checked his phone for the fifth time in ten minutes. Jake was supposed to meet him and his younger son Tyler at Romano's for their traditional pre-game lunch. They'd done this before every important game since Jake made varsity—pizza, trash talk, and Marcus sharing stories from his own playing days at State.

But Jake's chair sat empty, and it was already 12:30.

"Maybe he's just running late," Tyler said, though he didn't sound convinced. Jake was never late. Not for anything that mattered.

Marcus hit Jake's number again. Straight to voicemail.

"This is weird, Dad. Jake always answers his phone."

Meanwhile, across town at Valley High, Coach Williams was staring at his phone in disbelief. The team breakfast was supposed to start in an hour, and Jake Morrison—his team captain, his star player—was nowhere to be found.

This can't be happening. Not today.

Williams had been coaching for twenty-three years, and he'd never had a player just disappear before the biggest game of the season. He'd sent Jake four texts about the final team meeting. All unanswered.

By 2 PM, Marcus was pacing Romano's parking lot, his phone pressed to his ear.

"Honey, have you heard from Jake? No, he never showed up for lunch... What do you mean he's not answering? He always answers for you."

The first real spike of fear hit him then. Jake might ignore texts from teammates, might even blow off coaches when he was focused, but he never ignored his mother. Never.

Tyler emerged from the restaurant, shaking his head. "Manager says he never made a reservation. That's not like him either."

Marcus was already heading for his car. "Something's wrong. We need to check his apartment, the gym, everywhere."

But even as they drove toward Jake's place, Marcus couldn't shake the growing certainty that they weren't going to find him. His son—the one who never missed anything that mattered, who lived his life like clockwork—was gone.

And tomorrow's game was less than eighteen hours away.

Chapter 4: Hours

How long has it been?

Jake had lost track of time completely. The windowless room gave no clues—just concrete walls, a single bare bulb hanging from the ceiling, and the relentless pressure of the steel rod against his back and biceps.

His arms were on fire. Every shift, every attempt to find a more comfortable position only made the rope bite deeper into his biceps. The muscle mass he'd been so proud of had become his enemy. If his biceps weren't so developed, there wouldn't be this bulge pressing against the steel rod, wouldn't be this perfect anchor point for the rope to slice into.

Should have skipped arm day, he thought bitterly, then immediately felt sick for thinking it.

The rope had worked its way through his shirt hours ago. Now it cut directly into skin, and Jake could feel the warm trickle of blood running down his arms. His biceps were raw, scraped clean in places where the rope had rubbed back and forth with his struggles.

The game starts in six hours. Five hours. Four?

He'd tried everything. Twisting his wrists until they bled. Pulling until his shoulders felt like they might dislocate. Trying to slide down the steel rod, but the rope around his biceps held him fast. Every movement just created new friction, new pain, new bleeding.

Come on, Jake. You're stronger than this. You bench press more than most grown men.

But strength meant nothing here. His powerful biceps, the ones that had driven him through countless workouts, were useless. Worse than useless—they were torturing him.

The worst part was the hope. Every few minutes, Jake would convince himself he felt some give in the rope, some loosening, and he'd struggle with renewed energy. But it was always an illusion. The knots held. The steel rod held. His biceps, swollen now from the constriction, held him trapped like a fly in amber.

They're not coming back. Nobody knows where I am. The team's probably warming up right now.

Jake let his head fall back against the steel rod and closed his eyes. His biceps screamed in protest at even that small movement, the rope cutting a little deeper, drawing a little more blood.

I'm going to die here.

Chapter 5: Forfeit

"We can't wait any longer," Coach Williams said, his voice cracking slightly. The locker room was dead silent except for the sound of cleats shifting on concrete. Thirty-seven players in full gear, ready for the biggest game of their lives, and their captain was nowhere to be found.

This is insane. This doesn't happen.

"Jake Morrison is officially listed as missing," Williams continued. "The police are involved. The FBI is involved. Until we know where he is, until we know he's safe, there's no game."

The silence stretched on. Then Jesse Martinez, Jake's best friend and the team's linebacker, spoke up. "Coach, we can still play. Jake would want us to—"

"No." Williams' voice was firm. "We don't leave anyone behind. Team meeting's over. Go home to your families."

Across town, Marcus Morrison was pacing his living room, his phone pressed to his ear. "What do you mean you found his truck? Where? The school parking lot? Why didn't anyone notice it before?"

Agent Sarah Chen from the FBI's local field office was patient but direct. "Mr. Morrison, we're treating this as an abduction. The vehicle shows signs of a struggle. We've got a BOLO out statewide, and we're coordinating with local law enforcement."

"But the game—"

"Has been forfeited. We're exploring all possibilities, including the theory that your son was taken to prevent him from playing."

Taken to prevent him from playing. The words hit Marcus like a physical blow. Someone had stolen his son to fix a high school football game.

Meanwhile, in a dingy apartment across town, four men stared at a television showing the local news. The headline read: "STATE CHAMPIONSHIP CANCELLED - STAR PLAYER MISSING."

"Goddammit!" Tony Vega threw his beer bottle against the wall, where it shattered. "The game's called off! We don't get paid if there's no game!"

"Shut up, Tony," growled the man they called Russo. "We got bigger problems now. Kid's all over the news. FBI's involved."

"So what do we do with him?"

Russo's eyes were cold. "We take him somewhere they'll never find him. And we make his daddy pay."

The plan had been simple: grab the quarterback, keep him tied up for twenty-four hours, collect their money when Valley High lost the championship. But now everything had gone wrong.

Now they were kidnappers. And Jake Morrison had become worth a lot more than any football bet.

Chapter 6: Deep Woods

The van bounced and lurched over dirt roads, each pothole sending fresh waves of agony through Jake's bound arms. He'd been conscious for the entire ride, listening to the thugs argue in the front seats about what to do next.

They're panicking. That's not good.

When the van finally stopped, Jake heard nothing but silence outside. No traffic. No voices. Just the sound of wind through trees.

"Get him out," Russo ordered.

Rough hands dragged Jake from the van. His legs had gone numb hours ago, and he collapsed onto pine needles and dead leaves. Through the trees, he could see the outline of an old hunting cabin, its windows boarded up, roof sagging with neglect.

Middle of nowhere. Nobody's going to find me here.

They hauled him inside and strung him up by his wrists from a ceiling beam, his toes barely touching the floor. The rope around his biceps was still there, still cutting into the swollen muscle, but now his full weight hung from his shoulders. The pain was unimaginable.

"Get the camera," Russo said. "Time to make some real money."

Tony pulled out a digital camera while another thug wrapped duct tape around Jake's mouth, sealing it tight. Jake tried to struggle, but hanging like this, he had no leverage, no strength left.

They're going to kill me. After they get the money, they're going to kill me.

The camera flash went off again and again. Jake's bloodied face, his rope-burned arms, his body suspended like meat in a slaughterhouse. Each photo was evidence of what they'd done to him, proof for his family that he was still alive.

For now.

"Send these to the old man," Russo said, reviewing the photos on the camera's small screen. "Two million dollars. Tell him he's got twenty-four hours, or his golden boy quarterback becomes fish food."

Jake closed his eyes behind the blindfold they'd tied around his head. His biceps screamed where the rope cut into them. His shoulders felt like they were being pulled from their sockets. But worse than the physical pain was the certainty settling in his gut.

Dad's going to pay. And then they're going to kill me anyway.

Chapter 7: Meat Hook

Can't fight anymore. Can't move. Can't think.

It had been almost two days since they'd strung him up in the cabin. Jake's arms were a bloody mess, the rope having carved deep grooves into his biceps where the swollen muscle pressed against the restraints. His face was a patchwork of bruises from the beating they'd given him for the photos—split lip, blackened eyes, blood crusted in his hair.

I'm not even human anymore. Just meat hanging on a hook.

The delirium came in waves now. Sometimes Jake thought he heard voices outside—his teammates calling his name, searching the woods. Other times he imagined Coach Williams standing in front of him, shaking his head in disappointment.

"You let the team down, Morrison. Four years of work, and you let them down."

But mostly there was just the rage. Pure, crystalline hatred that burned in his chest like acid. Not fear anymore—he was beyond fear. Not hope—that had died hours ago. Just fury at his helplessness, at being reduced to this broken thing suspended from a beam.

If I ever get out of here. If I ever get my hands free.

Jake's fantasies had become specific, detailed. What he would do to Russo. How he would make Tony scream. The exact way he would break the bones of every man who had touched him.

They think I'm finished. They think I'm broken.

His biceps throbbed with every heartbeat, the rope having cut so deep he could feel it scraping against muscle fiber. His shoulders had partially dislocated from supporting his weight for so long. Blood had long since stopped flowing from the worst cuts—his body was shutting down, conserving what little it had left.

But the hatred kept him conscious. Kept him alive.

Let them come back. Let them get close enough.

Jake hung there in the dim cabin, no longer struggling against the ropes, no longer hoping for rescue. Just waiting. Burning with a rage so pure it was almost peaceful.

I'm going to kill them all.

Chapter 8: Rescue

Gunshots. More gunshots. Are they real or just in my head?

Jake's mind drifted in and out of consciousness, the sound of splintering wood mixing with the thunder of his own heartbeat. He'd been hearing rescue scenarios for hours now—his teammates kicking down doors, voices calling his name. All hallucinations. All cruel tricks his dying brain was playing on him.

"Jake! Jesus Christ, Jake!"

That voice sounded like Jesse. His best friend, his linebacker, the guy who'd had his back since middle school. But Jesse wasn't real. None of this was real.

"Cut him down! Now!"

Hands touched his face, gentle but urgent. Jake tried to focus, tried to see through the haze of pain and delirium, but everything was spinning.

"I got you, man. I got you."

Jesse's voice again. Closer now. Jake felt his weight shift as strong arms lifted him up, taking the pressure off his dislocated shoulders. The sound of a knife sawing through rope. The blessed relief as the tension around his biceps finally, finally loosened.

Real. This is real.

Jake collapsed into Jesse's arms as the last of the ropes fell away, and suddenly he was sobbing—great, heaving sobs that shook his broken body. All the terror, all the pain, all the hours of thinking he was going to die came pouring out of him.

"Shh, it's over," Jesse whispered, holding him tight. "We got the bastards. Tommy recognized the cabin from the photos—we've been hunting here for years. We knew exactly where you were."

"FBI! Drop your weapons!"

Agent Chen burst through the cabin door to find Jesse cradling Jake on the floor, while the rest of the Valley High football team stood guard over four wounded men sprawled unconscious in the dirt outside.

"Jesus," Chen breathed, holstering her weapon. "Get that ambulance up here now!"

Jake tried to speak, tried to thank his teammates, but he could only sob harder. Jesse just held him, rocking slightly like Jake was still the scared kid he'd been in seventh grade.

"We don't leave anyone behind," Jesse said quietly. "Never."

Chapter 9: Victory

Marcus Morrison's truck skidded to a halt outside the cabin just as the paramedics were loading Jake into the ambulance. Tyler jumped out before the engine stopped, but Marcus caught his arm.

"Wait. Let them work."

Through the ambulance's open doors, they could see Jake—conscious now, talking weakly to the paramedic checking his vitals. His arms were bandaged, his face swollen and bruised, but he was alive.

"Dad?" Jake's voice was barely a whisper, but Marcus heard it.

"I'm here, son. Tyler's here too. You're safe now."

A week later, Jake sat in the Valley High bleachers, his arms still in slings from the shoulder surgery. The doctors said he'd have full use of them again, but the rope scars around his biceps would be permanent reminders of what he'd survived.

The scoreboard read Valley High 28, Central State 13. His teammates had played like men possessed, dedicating every touchdown, every tackle, every victory cheer to their missing captain.

"Morrison! Get down here!"

Coach Williams was waving him toward the field. The game was over, the championship was theirs, and somehow Jake found himself being helped down from the stands by Jesse and Tyler.

Governor Patricia Hayes stood at midfield with a special trophy—not the team championship, but something else entirely.

"Jake Morrison," she announced over the loudspeaker, "your courage and your teammates' loyalty represent the very best of what athletics can be. It is my honor to present you with this year's State Championship MVP award."

The crowd erupted as Jake's teammates lifted him up—carefully, mindful of his injuries—in the same victory celebration they'd dreamed of for four years. But this time, it meant something different. This time, they were celebrating more than football.

They were celebrating the fact that he was alive to see it.

Jake closed his eyes and felt the weight of thirty-six brothers holding him up, felt the roar of the crowd washing over him, and knew that some victories were worth more than any game.