Chapter 1: The Fair
The Nebraska State Police finished posting the Missing Persons Notice to all media around the Jenson Ranch. There was the photo of 19-year-old Ryan Jenson sitting at the county fair. Baseball cap. White tank top. Powerful arms folded in front of him. Jeans. Boots. His usual outfit. It was taken by his kid brother Billy at the livestock exhibit just hours before Ryan vanished.
"I'm gonna check out the cattle barn," Ryan had told Billy, tossing his empty Coke can into a trash barrel. "Meet some buddies over there."
Billy had nodded, more interested in the demolition derby lineup than his brother's plans. The fair was in full swing—carnival music mixing with the bellowing of prize bulls, the smell of funnel cake and manure heavy in the August heat.
Six hours later, Billy was anxious. Ryan never disappeared like this. Not without checking in. Not without coming back for Billy like he'd promised.
Billy called their father first. Then their oldest brother Jake. Within an hour, both were at the fairgrounds, methodically walking every row of exhibits, every food stand, every ride. They asked carnies, 4-H kids, anyone who might have seen Ryan's distinctive build and cocky swagger.
Nothing.
The Jenson men searched until the fair closed at midnight. Flashlights sweeping empty spaces between trailers. Calling Ryan's name until their voices went hoarse.
At 12:47 AM, Dale Jenson made the call to the State Police.
By dawn, Ryan's photo was everywhere. The tough middle son who'd never met a fight he couldn't win, who could throw a calf single-handed, who protected his younger brother like a guard dog—vanished without a trace from the one place he should have been safe.
The county fair, where everyone knew the Jenson name.
Chapter 2: The Chair
Ryan's head pounded as consciousness crept back. His mouth was packed with cloth, tape sealing his lips. More tape covered his eyes, pressing tight against his skull. The air tasted stale, metallic.
He tried to move and pain shot through his arms.
What the hell—
His wrists were bound high, rope cutting into flesh, arms yanked up and back to his neck. Any attempt to lower them pulled the cord tighter around his throat. But worse—much worse—were his upper arms. Rope bit deep into his biceps, wrapped tight like tourniquets, crushing muscle against bone.
Can't feel my hands.
Ryan tested his legs. They were pushed back under the chair, ankles tied together, then connected by rope to his wrists. The whole system was engineered torture—every muscle he tried to use strangled him a little more.
His shirt hung in tatters. Cool air hit his chest.
Footsteps. Two sets. Moving around him in the darkness.
Say something. Give me something.
But they were silent. A phone buzzed. Then another. Text messages being exchanged inches from his head, but Ryan might as well have been furniture.
The rope around his biceps pulsed with his heartbeat, cutting deeper with each pump of blood. His arms were already going numb.
How long have I been here?
A camera clicked. Then another. The shutter sound echoing in what felt like a large, empty space.
They were documenting this. Photographing the ropes crushing into his flesh.
Dad's going to see this. Billy's going to see this.
Ryan tried to lean forward, forgetting the connection to his throat. The rope jerked tight, cutting off his air. He gasped through his nose, vision sparking behind the blindfold.
More footsteps. More camera clicks.
Then silence.
Ryan sat alone in the dark, arms screaming, barely able to breathe, understanding with growing horror that this was only the beginning.
Chapter 3: First Struggle
Test the ropes. Find the weak spot.
Ryan had gotten out of tough situations before. Bar fights, wrestling matches where guys tried to pin him down. There was always a way if you were strong enough, smart enough.
He flexed his biceps against the rope tourniquets.
Fire shot through his arms. The rope didn't budge—it carved deeper into muscle, cutting off what little circulation remained. His hands were completely dead now, hanging like meat from his wrists.
Okay. Different approach.
Ryan tried to slide his ankles apart under the chair. The rope connecting them to his wrists went taut, yanking his arms higher behind his back. The cord around his neck bit in.
He couldn't breathe.
Panic flared. Ryan jerked forward instinctively, trying to get air. The hogtie rope snapped tight like a noose. His vision exploded with stars behind the blindfold.
Stop. Stop moving.
He forced himself still, gasping through his nose in short, desperate pulls. The rope around his throat loosened just enough to let thin streams of air through.
Jesus Christ.
Every instinct screamed at him to fight, to struggle, to use the strength that had never failed him before. But every movement made it worse. The system was perfect—his own body weight and muscle tension working against him.
They know exactly what they're doing.
Footsteps again. Slow, measured. Circling him like he was livestock at auction.
Another camera click.
They're enjoying this.
Ryan tried to steady his breathing, to think past the pain in his arms and the pressure on his throat. But the rope around his biceps was relentless, crushing tighter with each heartbeat, turning his greatest asset into agony.
How long can I last like this?
The footsteps stopped directly behind him. Ryan felt breath on his neck, close enough to whisper.
But they said nothing at all.
Chapter 4: Hour Six
Six hours. Has to be six hours.
Ryan had been counting heartbeats, breaths, anything to track time. The rope around his biceps had settled into a constant crushing ache. His hands were gone—just dead weight hanging from purple wrists.
Don't move. Don't even think about moving.
Every few minutes, his body would forget. A muscle cramp would make him shift, or his shoulders would try to adjust position. The ankle rope would pull tight, dragging his arms up, closing off his windpipe. Then seconds of panic, gasping through his nose, waiting for the system to settle back into its baseline torture.
They built this thing to kill me slow.
Phone buzzes nearby. Two short vibrations. A response buzz from across the room.
Still here. Still watching.
Ryan tried to picture the room. Concrete floor—he could tell from the echo of footsteps. High ceiling. Cold. Maybe a warehouse or garage. But the blindfold was too tight, the darkness too complete.
Dad's probably got the whole county looking for me by now.
The thought brought a flicker of hope, then crushing reality. Even if they found this place, what would they find? Ryan trussed up like livestock, rope marks carved into his flesh, barely breathing.
Billy's going to blame himself.
That hurt worse than the tourniquets. His little brother would replay their last conversation forever, wondering if he should have gone with Ryan to the cattle barn.
Another phone buzz. Longer this time. Multiple messages being exchanged.
Planning something new.
Ryan's breathing was getting shallower. Not from panic—from the gradual tightening of everything. The ropes didn't loosen. They only got tighter as his body swelled and shifted, as circulation failed and tissue gave way.
Smart. Real smart. No evidence. No voices. Just rope and time.
Footsteps approached. Ryan forced himself to stay perfectly still as hands adjusted something behind the chair.
The tourniquet around his left bicep twisted one notch tighter.
Oh God—
The pain was instant, crushing. Ryan bit down on the gag, every muscle in his body wanting to thrash against the new pressure.
Don't move. Don't move. Don't move.
The footsteps retreated. Another camera click.
Hour six. Forty-two to go.
Chapter 5: Tightening
Left arm's going completely dead.
The adjustment had been surgical—one twist of rope that sent Ryan's bicep into screaming agony before the numbness crept in. Now his left arm hung like a side of beef, completely useless.
Phone buzz. Response buzz. Coordination.
They're taking turns. Shift change.
New footsteps. Heavier. Moving around the chair with the same clinical precision as the others. Ryan felt hands near his right arm, fingers testing the rope tension like a technician checking equipment.
No. Please, no.
The right tourniquet twisted tighter.
Ryan's jaw clenched against the gag as fresh fire exploded through his bicep. The rope bit deeper, finding new flesh to crush. His right arm—his dominant arm, his strong arm—began the same dying process as his left.
Both arms. They're killing both arms.
More camera clicks. Multiple angles. The documentation was thorough, methodical. Every stage of the rope's work captured for the family to see.
Mom's going to see this. They're going to send her pictures of what they're doing to me.
The thought was almost worse than the physical pain. His mother, who still worried when he was an hour late from town, would have to look at photos of her son being systematically destroyed.
They want her to see every rope mark. Every burn. Every—
His breathing hitched as the ankle rope shifted, pulling his arms higher. The connection to his throat tightened a fraction, forcing him to take smaller, more careful breaths.
Getting worse. It's all getting worse.
Both phone buzzed simultaneously. Long messages being exchanged. Planning. Coordinating the next phase.
Ryan tried to find a position that didn't make something hurt worse. There wasn't one. The chair had become a machine designed to turn his own body against him, and it was working perfectly.
They've done this before.
The realization hit him like ice water. This wasn't improvised cruelty—it was practiced technique. Somewhere, someone else had sat in this chair, felt these same ropes cutting off circulation, struggled for the same thin streams of air.
How many others? How many photos did other families get?
Footsteps circled behind him. Hands checked the wrist restraints, tested the throat connection, examined their handiwork like craftsmen inspecting a project.
Another camera clicked.
Chapter 6: The Photos
Detective Sarah Martinez spread the photographs across the conference table like evidence cards. Dale Jenson sat rigid in his chair, flanked by his sons Jake and Billy. None of them had spoken since the envelope arrived at the ranch that morning.
"We've enhanced what we can," Martinez said quietly. "But there's nothing identifiable in the backgrounds. No faces, no voices on the recordings."
Dale's weathered hands trembled as he picked up the first photo. Ryan bound to a wooden chair, arms yanked behind him, rope cutting deep grooves into his biceps. The muscle bulged around the tourniquets, purple and swollen.
"Jesus," Jake whispered. "Look what they're doing to his arms."
Billy turned away, but Dale forced himself to study every detail. The rope system was elaborate, professional. Wrists bound high to the neck. Ankles hogtied underneath, connecting to the same cord that would choke Ryan if he moved wrong.
"This is engineered," Dale said, his voice hoarse. "Whoever did this knows exactly what they're doing."
Martinez nodded. "The rope work is sophisticated. We've consulted with experts. This kind of restraint system..." She paused. "It's designed for prolonged torture."
The second photo showed fresh rope burns on Ryan's biceps, the tourniquets twisted tighter. His shirt hung in tatters, revealing cigarette burns across his chest.
Billy bolted from the room.
"How long?" Dale asked.
"Based on the swelling, the tissue damage..." Martinez hesitated. "These photos span at least twelve hours. Maybe more."
Jake slammed his fist on the table. "Then why can't we find him? How do you just disappear someone in this county?"
"We've searched every abandoned building, every ranch, every—"
"It's not enough!" Jake's voice cracked. "They're killing him while we sit here looking at pictures!"
Dale set down the photos with steady hands. "Who hates us this much, Martinez? Who would do this to our boy?"
"We're working through your family history, Mr. Jenson. Business disputes, land deals, anything that might—"
"Twenty years I've been asking that question," Dale interrupted. "Ever since Ryan was born. Who did we hurt bad enough to want revenge on our children?"
Martinez gathered the photos back into the envelope. "The FBI profiler says this level of planning, this methodical approach—it's personal. Someone who's been thinking about this for years."
"Then why don't they want anything?" Dale's voice was barely a whisper. "No ransom. No demands. Just... this."
"Because watching you suffer is the point," Martinez said. "These photos aren't just documentation. They're psychological warfare. Against all of you."
The silence stretched until Jake spoke up. "When's the next one coming?"
"We don't know. But Mr. Jenson..." Martinez met Dale's eyes. "You need to prepare yourself. Based on the progression we're seeing, this isn't over."
Dale stood slowly, aging ten years in ten seconds. "Then we keep looking. Every hour, every minute. Because somewhere out there, my boy is still fighting."
But as they left the conference room, all three men knew the truth that Martinez hadn't said aloud: they were running out of time, and Ryan was running out of strength.
Chapter 7: Hour Twelve
Can't feel anything below my shoulders.
Both arms hung like dead meat now. The tourniquets had done their work—cutting off blood flow so completely that Ryan's biceps felt like wooden blocks strapped to his body. Purple and grotesquely swollen, they bulged around the rope like sausages ready to burst.
Twelve hours. Halfway through the first day.
The math was brutal but it kept his mind focused. Forty-eight hours total—that's what his gut told him. Long enough to document everything, short enough to avoid decomposition. Professional.
Phone buzz from across the room. A response. Then silence.
Shift change again. They're probably taking breaks, eating lunch, going home to their families.
The casual horror of it made him sick. While Ryan sat dying by degrees, his captors were living normal lives. Checking their phones, maybe grabbing coffee, then coming back to twist the ropes tighter.
Mom's probably seen the photos by now.
His mother would be the one insisting on looking at every image, memorizing every detail, searching for clues the police missed. She'd study the rope burns on his arms, count the cigarette marks on his chest, trying to understand what was happening to her middle son.
She's going to blame herself. They all are.
Ryan tried to shift his weight and immediately regretted it. The ankle rope pulled tight, dragging his dead arms higher, closing his windpipe. He gasped through his nose, tiny sips of air, waiting for the system to settle back to its baseline agony.
Don't move. Don't even think about moving.
But his body was betraying him in new ways. Muscle cramps from sitting motionless. The beginning of circulation problems in his legs. Pressure sores where the ropes cut deepest.
This is what dying feels like. Not quick. Not dramatic. Just... fading.
Footsteps approached from behind. Hands examined the wrist bindings, checking for looseness. Finding none. The rope around his throat was tested next—a finger sliding underneath, measuring the gap.
Too tight. The finger adjusted the knot, making it fractionally tighter.
They want me conscious. Alert. Feeling everything until the very end.
Another camera click. Then another. The documentation continued, each photo a timestamp of his deterioration.
Hour twelve. Thirty-six to go.
Ryan closed his eyes behind the blindfold and tried to remember what his arms used to feel like when they worked.
Stay strong. Dad's looking. Jake's looking. Someone's going to find this place.
But deep in his chest, a smaller voice whispered the truth he didn't want to face: they were never meant to find him alive.
Chapter 8: Documentation
They're setting up for something big.
More footsteps than usual. Multiple phones buzzing in sequence. The sound of equipment being arranged—tripods, camera gear, something metallic scraping across concrete.
Professional photo shoot. For the family.
Ryan's stomach clenched. The casual snapshots had been bad enough, but this felt different. Methodical. Like they were creating a portfolio of his destruction.
A camera flash went off, then another. Bright white light bleeding through the blindfold, momentarily blinding him even in darkness.
Fighting panic as breathing becomes more restricted.
His throat was closing up—not from the rope, but from swelling. Twelve hours of restricted breathing, of gasping through his nose, had inflamed his airways. Each breath was a conscious effort now.
In through the nose. Slow. Steady.
But panic kept creeping in. What if his nose got blocked? What if the swelling got worse? The gag made mouth breathing impossible, and any movement that might clear his airways would trigger the hogtie rope.
More camera clicks. Different angles. Someone was directing the shoot—pointing, adjusting equipment, though they remained silent.
They're documenting the rope burns. The way my arms look.
His biceps had turned a sick purple-black where the tourniquets cut deepest. The rope had carved permanent grooves into the muscle, channels that would probably never heal right. If he lived long enough to find out.
Focus on something else. Anything else.
Ryan tried to picture the ranch. Morning chores with Jake. Teaching Billy how to throw a calf. Dad's approval when Ryan handled the bulls that spooked everyone else.
That strength didn't mean shit here.
A phone buzzed twice. Response buzz. Then footsteps approaching.
Hands grabbed his chin, tilting his head up. The camera clicked directly in front of his face—capturing the blindfold, the tape over his mouth, probably the way his chest rose and fell in shallow, desperate breaths.
They want Dad to see me gasping. Want him to know I'm suffocating.
The hands released his chin. More photos from different angles. The clinical documentation of a dying animal.
Eighteen hours. Maybe twenty. Hard to tell anymore.
Time was becoming fluid, measured only in the rhythm of his restricted breathing and the periodic tightening of ropes. Each photo session marked another milestone in his systematic destruction.
Mom's going to get these tonight. While she's trying to sleep.
The thought was almost unbearable. His mother opening an envelope of photos showing her son's arms rotting from rope burns, his face a mask of tape and desperation.
That's the point. They want her to see exactly what they're doing to me.
The camera equipment was being packed up. Phones buzzing with completion messages. Another successful documentation session.
Ryan sat alone again in the silence, fighting for each breath, wondering how many more photo shoots he had left in him.
Just keep breathing. In through the nose. Don't think about anything else.
But the panic was always there now, lurking at the edge of consciousness, waiting for the moment when his airways would finally close completely.
Chapter 9: The Burn
Something's different. They're back sooner than usual.
Footsteps moved with purpose. No casual checking of equipment this time. Ryan heard the scrape of metal, the flick of a lighter.
The first three burns weren't enough. They want more.
The smell hit him first—cigarette smoke drifting past his nose. Then the heat. Close to his chest, hovering just above his skin near the older burns that still throbbed.
Can't move. Can't pull away. Any movement chokes me.
The cigarette touched his left nipple. Ryan's body convulsed reflexively, trying to arch away from the burning. The ankle rope snapped tight, yanking his arms up, crushing his windpipe.
Can't breathe can't breathe can't—
He forced himself motionless, gasping through his nose as the cigarette held against the sensitive skin. The smell of burning flesh mixed with tobacco smoke.
Stay still. Don't move. Let it burn.
The cigarette lifted away. Camera click. Then it moved to his right nipple.
They're being systematic. More intimate. More humiliating.
Ryan bit down on the gag, every instinct screaming to fight back. But fighting meant choking. Fighting meant dying faster.
The next cigarette pressed into his belly button. The pain was different here—deeper, more violating. Ryan's vision exploded with white-hot agony behind the blindfold.
Mom's going to see these marks. All of them.
Phone buzz. Response buzz. Coordination.
A dozen more. They're planning a dozen more burns.
The lighter flicked again. This cigarette followed the trail of hair from his belly button down toward his belt line. Each burn calculated, each one photographed.
They're mapping my body with pain.
Another burn on his left side, just above his hip. Then his right side. The cigarettes moved methodically across his torso, creating a pattern of destruction that would be documented and sent to his family.
Twenty hours. Maybe more. Hard to tell when you're counting in cigarette burns.
The smell was overwhelming now—burned flesh, stale smoke, his own sweat and fear. But worse was the knowledge that every mark being carved into his body was a message to his family.
They're writing on me. Using my skin like paper.
More burns followed the waistline of his jeans. Each one a fresh explosion of pain, each one held just long enough to leave a permanent mark.
How many photos are they taking? How many different angles of each burn?
Ryan tried to retreat into his mind, to find some place the pain couldn't reach. But there were too many cigarettes, too many fresh wounds throbbing across his torso.
Fifteen burns total now. Fifteen messages for the family.
The lighter went quiet. Footsteps retreated. The extended photo session was over.
Ryan sat alone with a dozen fresh burns joining the original three, knowing that somewhere across the county, an envelope was being prepared with detailed photographs of every mark they'd carved into his flesh.
His family would count each burn, study each placement, and understand exactly how methodical his destruction had become.
Chapter 10: Final Hours
Twenty-four hours down. Twenty-four to go.
Ryan's mind drifted in and out of focus. The pain had become background noise—constant, overwhelming, but somehow distant. His body was shutting down piece by piece.
The rope around my biceps. Cut so deep. Purple and black and swollen.
He could picture what his arms looked like now. The tourniquets had carved permanent grooves into the muscle. Tissue dying from lack of blood flow. The rope burns would be photographed, studied, remembered forever.
The burns on my chest. Fifteen of them. Each one a message.
His nipples. His belly button. The trail of hair leading down. His sides. They'd mapped his torso with cigarettes, creating a pattern of destruction for his family to decode.
Consciousness fading.
Time became elastic. Minutes or hours passed—impossible to tell. Ryan would slip under, then surface back to awareness when his breathing became too shallow, triggering some survival instinct.
Thirty hours. Maybe more.
The hogtie rope. Ankles to wrists to throat. Every movement choking me.
He remembered his first struggles, the panic when he realized fighting back meant dying faster. The system was perfect—his own strength turned against him.
Dad's going to find my body like this. Tied up like an animal.
The thought brought fresh horror. His father would see the rope marks, the burns, the systematic destruction of his middle son's body.
Thirty-six hours.
Ryan's breathing was becoming more labored. Each inhalation a conscious battle. The swelling in his throat, the pressure from the rope, the simple exhaustion of fighting for air for thirty-six straight hours.
Going under again.
Darkness claimed him. When he surfaced, footsteps were approaching. The final check.
Forty-two hours. Maybe forty-four.
Hands tested the wrist bindings one last time. Checked the throat connection. Examined the tourniquet system around his biceps. Everything was still holding perfectly.
A phone buzzed. Two quick vibrations. Response buzz from across the room.
"He's finished. Time to go."
More footsteps. Equipment being packed. Car doors slamming outside.
Then silence.
Complete, absolute silence.
They left me here to die.
Ryan sat alone in the darkness, barely breathing, rope cutting into dying flesh, abandoned to face the final hours alone.
Dad will never know who did this. That's the point.
His mind began to slip again, consciousness fading as his body finally started the process of shutting down completely.
Mom... I'm sorry..
.Chapter 11: Found
Detective Martinez's phone buzzed at 6:47 AM. Anonymous tip. GPS coordinates. A warehouse on the outskirts of the county.
"Could be nothing," she told the tactical team as they suited up. "Could be everything."
The warehouse sat isolated between cornfields, its loading dock facing a gravel road that hadn't seen maintenance in years. No vehicles. No signs of life. Just rusted metal siding and broken windows.
"Quiet entry," Martinez whispered into her radio. "If he's in there, we don't know what condition..."
The side door had been left unlocked. Deliberately.
Inside, the warehouse stretched empty except for a single wooden chair in the center of the concrete floor. And tied to that chair—
"Jesus Christ," Officer Reynolds breathed.
Ryan Jenson sat motionless, head tilted forward, arms yanked behind him at an impossible angle. Rope cut so deep into his biceps that the muscle bulged purple and black around the bindings. His wrists were tied high to his neck, connected by another rope to his ankles, creating a system where any movement would strangle him.
"He's alive," Martinez said, checking for a pulse. Weak but present. "Get the paramedics in here. Now."
Ryan's chest was a map of cigarette burns. Fifteen perfect circles across his torso, each one placed with surgical precision. His shirt hung in tatters, revealing rope burns wherever the bindings had held him.
"Don't move him," the lead paramedic said as his team surrounded the chair. "This whole system—if we cut the wrong rope first..."
"How long?" Martinez asked.
"Based on the tissue damage, the swelling..." The paramedic shook his head. "Forty-eight hours. Maybe more."
They worked methodically, photographing the rope system before dismantling it. The tourniquets around Ryan's biceps had to be cut carefully—the circulation had been cut off so long that sudden blood flow could cause more damage.
When they finally freed his arms, Ryan's shoulders didn't move. Couldn't move. The limbs hung like dead weight.
"Ryan?" Martinez leaned close as they loaded him onto a stretcher. "Ryan, can you hear me?"
His eyes fluttered open behind the blindfold they were carefully removing. Unfocused, struggling to process light after forty-eight hours of darkness.
"We found you," Martinez said softly. "You're safe now."
Ryan's mouth moved behind the gag as they peeled away the tape. When he finally spoke, his voice was barely a whisper.
"They... they knew..."
"Knew what, Ryan? Who did this to you?"
But Ryan had already slipped back into unconsciousness, his body finally allowing itself to shut down now that rescue had come.
As they loaded him into the ambulance, Martinez surveyed the warehouse. No fingerprints. No DNA. No evidence except the chair and the ropes that had held Ryan Jenson for forty-eight hours of systematic torture.
The anonymous tip had led them to a victim, not a perpetrator. Whoever had done this was already gone, vanished as completely as if they'd never existed.
But Ryan was alive. Barely, but alive.
That would have to be enough.