Chapter 1: The Silence
"This is Billy Jr at the Ranch House..... Uncle Billy, Come in....Uncle Jake....Respond.....Celab...Come in please."
Silence. Just static.
"Dad, they still don't answer."
Josh Benson looked up from the fence post he was repairing, wiping sweat from his forehead. "Calm down son, maybe they left their radios in the truck while working."
"No way, they keep it on their belt like I do." Billy Jr.'s voice had an edge to it now, higher pitched. "I'm going to hit the 911. They will hear it on the three radios and answer."
"Jr. you'll get the whole consortium in a panic."
"No dad. I'll quickly explain." The boy was already reaching for the emergency button.
Josh hesitated, then nodded. "OK kid, do it."
Billy Jr. pressed the button three times in rapid succession. The mechanical voice echoed across every radio in the network: "911 Billy Jr. 911 Billy Jr. 911 Billy Jr."
"Listen, this is just a test. My uncles and Celab have not been answering. This is just a call to them... Billy, Jake, Celab, respond to base!!!!"
No answer.
The static seemed louder now, filling the silence with white noise that made Billy Jr.'s stomach twist. He looked at his father, saw the concern starting to crease Josh's face.
Two minutes later, Billy Renzo's voice crackled through. "Jr., were they working at the NE corner near our property?"
"Affirmative."
"We're near them and will check." A pause. "Thanks."
Billy Jr. stared at the radio in his hand, willing it to come alive with his uncles' voices, with Celab's laugh.
Five minutes felt like an hour.
Then the radio exploded with sound.
"911 Billy Renzo. 911 Billy Renzo. 911 Billy Renzo."
Billy Jr.'s hand was shaking as he raised the radio.
"This is Billy Renzo. This is not a drill." The young man's voice was breaking, fighting for control. "Their truck is partially overturned in a ditch. No sign of them, but—" He choked up, struggling to get the words out. "I think they might have been tied up because there is rope all around the truck!"
Billy Jr. felt the ground tilt under his feet.
At that moment, all hell broke loose.
Chapter 2: Convergence
The ranch house had never seen anything like it.
Trucks roared up the long drive, kicking up dust clouds that hung in the still air. Car doors slammed. Boots pounded across the wooden porch. Within twenty minutes of Billy Renzo's transmission, the Benson Ranch had become ground zero.
Tom and Sarah Benson stood in the living room, Sarah's hand gripping her husband's arm so tight her knuckles had gone white. They'd heard Billy Renzo's message. Rope. Tied up. No sign of them.
Their sons. Billy and Jake. And Celab, who'd become like a third son.
The Nelsons arrived first. Sheriff Wade Nelson came through the door with his wife Mary, their faces grim. Behind them came Wilson and Ryan, both in deputy uniforms, hands already resting near their sidearms. Rebecca—Josh's wife—ran straight to her husband, tears streaming down her face.
"Where's Billy Jr.?" Wade asked immediately.
"Out back with the radio," Josh said. "Still trying to raise them."
The Beaumonts burst through the door next. Robert's face was ashen, Caroline already sobbing. "Celab," she kept saying. "Oh God, Celab."
Sarah moved to embrace her, both mothers clinging to each other.
Then came the Renzos, the Matterns, the Rodriguezes. The entire consortium, converging on the ranch like a gathering storm. Families who'd known each other for generations, bound by land and blood and now by crisis.
And then Pops emerged from the back hallway.
Tom's father was eighty-two, a Vietnam vet with a limp from shrapnel and a vocabulary that could make grown men wince. He carried a tumbler of brandy in one hand and a half-smoked cigar in the other. His eyes—still sharp, still dangerous—swept across the crowded living room.
"Alright, listen the fuck up," he barked, and the room fell silent. "My grandsons are out there somewhere, tied up by some sonofabitch cowards. We're gonna find 'em and we're gonna bring 'em home. Wade, you got jurisdiction?"
"Only in Kings County," Wade said carefully. "If they've been moved—"
"Then we go wherever the hell they are." Pops took a long pull from his brandy. "Tom, get every able-bodied man armed. Sarah, Caroline, Mary—I need coffee, lots of it, and food for the kids. The little ones don't need to see us losing our shit."
The room exploded into motion.
Billy Jr. appeared in the doorway, his three buddies—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez—clustered behind him. All four boys had iPads in their hands.
"Pops," Billy Jr. said, his voice steady despite the fear in his eyes. "We need to check the surveillance cameras. If they took them from the NE corner, the cameras on the Renzo property might've caught something."
Pops looked at his great-grandson and nodded slowly. "Good thinking, kid. You four get on that. Set up in the dining room—mission control starts now."
The boys disappeared down the hall.
Josh looked at his grandfather. "Pops, they could call any minute with demands—"
"Let 'em call," Pops growled. He crushed out his cigar in an ashtray and looked around the room. "Every man who didn't bring iron, follow me to the gun safe. Wade, you got a problem with that?"
The sheriff met his eyes. "Off the record? Those are my nephews out there too. My daughter's husband's brothers. Hell no, I don't have a problem with it."
"Good." Pops drained the rest of his brandy. "Because when we find these bastards, they're gonna wish they'd never heard the name Benson."
In the kitchen, Sarah worked alongside Caroline and Mary, mechanically making pot after pot of coffee. Younger children—twelve and under—were being shepherded into the playroom by some of the other mothers, given snacks, told everything would be okay.
But in the living room, the men were checking magazines, holstering weapons, and waiting.
Waiting for proof of life.
Waiting for demands.
Waiting for Billy Jr. to find something—anything—on those cameras.
The ranch house had become a fortress. A command center. A gathering of families ready to go to war.
And somewhere out there, Billy, Jake, and Celab were running out of time.
Chapter 3: Captive
The bunkhouse smelled of rotting wood and diesel fuel. Billy's vision swam as he tried to focus, his left eye nearly swollen shut. Every breath sent sharp pains through his ribs where the boots had connected, over and over.
How long have we been here? An hour? More?
His arms were wrenched behind him, wrists bound together with rough rope that bit into his skin, then his elbows forced together until they touched, cinched tight with more rope. The position was agonizing, forcing his shoulders back and his chest forward in an unnatural arch. Already he could feel the joints beginning to separate, a deep burning that promised worse to come. His torso was lashed to the wooden chair with what felt like a dozen loops of rope. His ankles had been tied together, then pulled back under the seat and hogtied to his wrists, arching his spine backward.
Can't move. Can't barely breathe. God, it hurts.
The bandanna stuffed in his mouth tasted like oil and dirt, held in place by layers of duct tape wrapped around his head. He tried to work his jaw, to get any relief, but it was useless.
Across from him, Jake's face was a mask of blood and bruises. His nose was clearly broken, blood still trickling down to stain his white undershirt. Their eyes met, and Billy saw the same terror he felt reflected back at him.
Jake. My brother. We're in this together. We always are.
Jake's chest heaved as he struggled against his bonds, the ropes creaking but not giving. His face was contorted with effort, veins standing out on his neck. The elbow bondage was torture—his shoulders felt like they were being pulled from their sockets.
Gotta get loose. Gotta get us out of here. Think, Jake, think. But I can't—can't feel my hands anymore. Shoulders are on fire. How long before they dislocate?
To Billy's left, Celab sat in the same tortured position. His face was swollen worse than either of them, both eyes blackened, his lip split and bleeding. Sweat mixed with blood ran down his face in dark rivulets, soaking into his white undershirt.
Mom. Dad. I'm sorry. God, I'm so sorry. Came to Texas for a fresh start and now—
Celab tried to shift his weight, seeking any position that would ease the agony in his shoulders, but the hogtie made it impossible. The slightest movement sent lightning bolts of pain through his body. His elbows, forced together behind him, created pressure that radiated up into his shoulder blades.
Can't feel my fingers. Rope's cutting off everything. How long before permanent damage? Does it even matter if—no. Don't think that. They're coming. The consortium. Pops. They'll find us.
Three men stood near the door, faces obscured by bandannas, baseball caps pulled low. One of them—the tallest—held a phone.
"Alright, boys," he drawled. "Smile pretty for the camera."
He raised the phone, angling to get all three of them in the frame. Billy tried to look away, but there was nowhere to go. The flash went off.
The tall one studied the screen, then nodded with satisfaction. "Perfect. Three rich ranch boys all trussed up like hogs at slaughter. Let's see how much Daddy's willing to pay."
He tapped at the phone for a moment, then hit send.
"There we go. Just sent it to Tom Benson and every name on that consortium paperwork. All those rich fuckers who think they own half of Kings County." He walked closer, squatting down in front of Billy. "You know how much land your families control? The equipment? The cattle? We did our homework, boy. Y'all are sitting on millions."
They're never going to let us go, Billy thought, his stomach turning to ice. Even if they pay—we've seen their faces, heard their voices.
Jake made a muffled sound behind his gag, thrashing against the ropes. One of the other men stepped forward and backhanded him across the face. Jake's head snapped to the side, fresh blood spraying from his broken nose.
"Shut the fuck up," the man snarled. "You don't talk unless we take that gag off. And trust me—you don't want us to take that gag off."
I'll kill you, Jake thought, rage burning through the pain. I swear to God, if I get loose, I'll kill every one of you.
But his hands were numb. His shoulders were separating. And the rope wouldn't budge.
Celab's breathing was coming in short, panicked gasps through his nose. The bandanna and tape made it hard to get enough air, and the pain was making him lightheaded.
Can't pass out. Can't. If I pass out, I might not wake up. Stay awake. Stay alive. They're coming. They have to be coming.
The tall man stood up, checking his phone again. "Message delivered. Now we wait. Seventy-six hours, boys. That's how long your families have to get us our money." He grinned behind his bandanna. "And just so they know we're serious—one of you dies every twenty-four hours if they don't pay up."
The words hit like a physical blow.
Twenty-four hours. One of us. Dead.
Billy looked at Jake, then at Celab. All three of them bound, beaten, helpless. The rope cut deeper with every breath, every slight movement. The pain was becoming unbearable, but the fear—the knowledge that they were on a clock—was worse.
Hold on, Billy thought desperately. Just hold on. They're coming. I know they're coming.
But in the silence of that rotting bunkhouse, with nothing but the sound of their own labored breathing through their noses and the creak of rope against wood, hope felt very far away.
Chapter 4: The Demand
The alert came simultaneously across every phone and iPad in the ranch house.
A sharp chime. Then another. And another.
Tom Benson's phone. Wade Nelson's. Robert Beaumont's. Josh's. Every consortium leader, every father—all at once.
"What the—" Tom pulled out his phone.
Around the room, men were doing the same. Unknown number. A text message with an attachment.
"They sent it to everyone," Wade said, his face going pale as he stared at his screen.
The photo loaded.
Billy. Jake. Celab.
All three tied to chairs, faces beaten and bloody. Billy's left eye was swollen completely shut, a dark purple bruise spreading across his cheekbone. Jake's nose sat crooked on his face, blood crusted on his upper lip and chin. Celab's face was the worst—both eyes blackened, his lip split open, swelling that made him almost unrecognizable.
Their arms were wrenched behind them, elbows and wrists bound tight. Rope wrapped around their torsos, lashing them to the chairs. Even in the photo, you could see the strain in their shoulders, the unnatural angle of their arms.
White undershirts stained with blood and sweat.
Bandannas stuffed in their mouths, duct tape wrapped around their heads.
Eyes wide with fear and pain.
Sarah grabbed Tom's phone from his hand. Her scream pierced the air.
"No! No, no, no—Billy! Jake!"
Caroline Beaumont had her own phone out, staring at Celab's brutalized face. "Oh God. Celab. My baby—" Her knees buckled and Robert caught her as she collapsed.
The photo was spreading. Someone—Billy Jr. in the dining room, probably—had already pushed it to the network. Within thirty seconds, every cell phone, every iPad in the house chimed with the image.
Women gasped. Younger teenagers crowded around their parents' phones. Someone was sobbing—maybe Rebecca, maybe Mary, maybe all of them.
Another simultaneous chime.
The message.
$5 million. 76 hours. Wire transfer instructions to follow. No cops. One dies every 24 hours if you don't pay. Starting with the new kid.
"Five million dollars," Robert Beaumont read aloud, his voice shaking.
"Seventy-six hours," Wade added grimly.
"One every twenty-four hours," Josh whispered. "They're going to kill them. Starting with Celab."
The ranch house erupted.
Mothers crying. Men cursing. Voices overlapping, panicked, angry, desperate.
"We don't have that kind of cash—"
"The banks won't move that fast—"
"We have to call the FBI—"
"No cops, it says no cops!"
"They're going to kill my son!"
A gunshot cracked through the chaos.
Everyone froze.
Pops stood in the center of the living room, his pistol pointed at the ceiling, smoke curling from the barrel. His brandy glass sat abandoned on the side table, his face a mask of cold fury.
"Everybody shut the fuck up," he growled.
Silence fell like a curtain.
Pops looked around the room, his eyes hard as flint. "Listen to me. All of you. My grandsons are tied up in some shithole, beaten half to death by cowards who think we're soft because we got land and money." He held up his phone, the photo of Billy, Jake, and Celab filling the screen. "You see this? This is what we're dealing with. Amateurs. Redneck trash who saw some news story and thought they'd get rich quick."
"Pops—" Tom started.
"I'm not done." Pops walked to the center of the room, and despite his limp, despite his eighty-two years, every man there stood straighter. "Seventy-six hours. That's what they gave us. But Celab's got twenty-four before they put a bullet in him. So here's what we're gonna do. Wade, you're gonna call your buddy Dutch Carmichael over in Garza County. Keep it quiet, keep it off the books."
Wade nodded slowly.
"Tom, Robert, Josh—you start working the money angle. Liquidate what you can, but don't spend too much time on it because we're not paying these fuckers a goddamn dime."
"Then what—" Robert started.
"We find them first." Pops turned to the dining room where Billy Jr. and his three buddies stood frozen in the doorway, iPads in hand, staring at their phones. "Boys. Mission control. Now. I need those surveillance cameras checked, and I need those new drones of yours prepped and ready to fly."
Billy Jr.'s face was white, but his voice was steady. "Yes sir."
"Everyone else—" Pops looked around the room. "Mothers, keep the little ones calm. Feed 'em, distract 'em, whatever it takes. Every able-bodied man, you're with me. Gun safe. We arm up, we organize, and when those boys find something on those cameras, we move."
Tom looked at the photo on his phone one more time. His sons. Beaten. Bound. Helpless.
"We're bringing them home," he said quietly.
"Damn right we are," Pops growled. "And those bastards who did this? They're gonna wish they'd never been born."
The room exploded back into motion, but this time it was organized. Purposeful.
The men followed Pops toward the gun safe.
The mothers gathered in the kitchen, brewing coffee, making sandwiches, their hands needing something to do.
Billy Jr. and his three buddies spread out in the dining room, iPads and laptops covering the long table.
And on every phone in the house, the photo remained—a constant reminder of what was at stake.
Seventy-six hours.
Twenty-four until Celab died.
The clock was ticking.
Chapter 5: Mission Control
The dining room had become a war room.
Billy Jr., Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez had pushed aside the chairs and spread six iPads across the long oak table. Laptops flanked either end, power cords snaking across the floor to every available outlet. The boys moved with practiced efficiency, fingers flying across screens, pulling up surveillance feeds from every camera on consortium property.
"Start with the northeast corner," Billy Jr. said, his voice tight but controlled. "That's where they were working."
Ryan pulled up the Renzo property cameras. "Got it. Scrubbing back to this morning."
Behind them, Josh Benson stood in the doorway, watching his son work. Rebecca was beside him, one hand pressed to her mouth, the other gripping her husband's arm.
"There," Daniel pointed. "10:47. Two vehicles coming down the access road."
The footage was grainy but clear enough. Two pickup trucks, both old, both in rough shape. Primer-spotted doors. Cracked windshields. One had a camper shell that looked ready to fall off.
"Can you get plates?" Josh asked.
"Already tried," Billy Renzo said, zooming in. "They're covered. Mud, maybe spray paint. Deliberate."
Billy Jr. leaned closer to the screen. "Keep going. We need to see where they went."
Ryan fast-forwarded. "There. 11:13. Same trucks heading back."
The pickup beds were harder to see through the camper shell and the distance, but there was clearly something—someone—loaded in the back of the lead truck.
"That's them," Billy Jr. whispered. "That's Uncle Billy, Uncle Jake, and Celab."
"They're heading north," Daniel said, tracing the route with his finger. "Toward the county line. Garza County."
Billy Jr. straightened up, his jaw set. "We need the drones. Now."
The four boys moved to the side of the dining room where six hard-shell cases sat stacked against the wall. The new drones—top-of-the-line quadcopters that had replaced the ones they'd lost in the storm last month. A gift from the consortium, meant for surveying cattle and checking fence lines.
Now they'd be used for something else entirely.
Billy Renzo popped open the first case. "DJI Matrice 300. Forty-five-minute flight time, thermal imaging, 4K zoom camera, and laser rangefinder. Range is fifteen miles."
"Six of them," Ryan added, opening another case. "We can launch from the yard and cover the entire search area into Garza County."
Daniel was already syncing the controllers to the iPads. "We'll need to coordinate flight paths. Can't have them running into each other or burning battery on redundant coverage."
Billy Jr. pulled up a satellite map of Kings County and Garza County on one of the laptops. "We start here." He tapped the screen where the trucks had crossed the county line. "Forty-five miles from the ranch. Daniel, you and Ryan plot a grid search pattern. Billy, help me get the rest of the drones prepped."
Pops appeared in the doorway, a rifle slung over his shoulder and a cigar clamped between his teeth. Behind him, a dozen armed men filed past toward the living room.
"Talk to me, boys," Pops said. "What've we got?"
"Two trucks, northeast access road, 10:47 this morning," Billy Jr. reported without looking up from the drone he was assembling. "They headed north into Garza County. We're prepping the drones now for aerial search. We'll launch from the yard—these have fifteen-mile range."
"How long till you're airborne?"
"Ten minutes for final checks, then we launch."
Pops nodded. "Good. And boys—sync those feeds to every iPad and phone in the house. Everyone needs to see what you're seeing."
"Already on it," Daniel said, fingers flying across his screen. "Pushing the drone feeds to the network now."
Throughout the ranch house, phones and iPads chimed as the connection went live. Six blank screens appeared on every device, waiting for the drones to launch.
Tom Benson came into the dining room, staring at his phone where the six empty feeds waited. "Billy Jr.," he said quietly. "Find them, son."
Billy Jr. looked up at his grandfather. "We will, Grandpa Tom. I promise."
The boys carried the six drones outside to the ranch yard. Men were still coming and going from the gun safe, arming themselves. Women stood on the porch, coffee cups in hand, watching. Every single person had a phone or iPad, the six-screen feed displayed and waiting.
Billy Jr. set his drone on the gravel, powered it up, and listened to the props spin to life. "Drone One ready for launch."
"Drone Two ready," Billy Renzo called.
"Drone Three ready," Ryan Mattern said.
"Drone Four ready," Daniel Rodriguez confirmed.
They launched the remaining two drones, and within sixty seconds, all six were airborne, rising above the ranch house in a coordinated formation.
Inside and outside, every screen came alive.
Six aerial views. Six cameras streaming live footage. Six different angles as the drones banked north toward Garza County.
"Drone One heading zero-three-five degrees," Billy Jr. called out, his voice carrying across the yard. "Altitude three hundred feet, speed forty miles per hour."
"Drone Two, zero-four-five degrees," Billy Renzo shouted. "Matching altitude and speed."
The boys coordinated loudly, calling out positions and headings so everyone could follow along. On the porch, Sarah Benson stood with Caroline Beaumont, both women watching the iPad screens with desperate hope.
"They're spreading out," Josh explained to the crowd. "Fan pattern. Each drone covers a different sector."
"Drone Three approaching county line," Ryan called. "Switching to thermal imaging."
On the screens, one of the feeds shifted to heat-signature mode—blue and purple landscape with occasional yellow-orange blooms where cattle grazed in distant fields.
"Drone Five, I've got the two trucks!" Daniel shouted. "Coordinates incoming!"
Every eye fixed on the fifth screen as the drone descended. There—two battered pickups parked behind what looked like an abandoned barn, partially hidden by overgrown brush.
"That's them," Wade Nelson said, moving closer to stare at his phone. "That's definitely them."
"Drone Five holding position," Daniel called. "Altitude five hundred feet to stay out of sight. Switching to zoom."
The camera zoomed in. The trucks were empty, doors hanging open.
"Drone Six moving to investigate the structure," Billy Renzo yelled. "Looks like an old bunkhouse, maybe half a mile from the trucks."
On the sixth screen, the drone descended toward a sagging, single-story building with a rusted tin roof.
"Thermal scan," Billy Jr. ordered.
The feed switched. And there—inside the bunkhouse—three bright orange-yellow shapes. Human-sized. Sitting.
"Contact!" Ryan shouted. "Three heat signatures inside the structure! Stationary!"
The ranch yard erupted.
"That's them!"
"They found them!"
"Oh thank God—"
Pops fired his pistol into the air again, silencing the chaos. "Locations! I need exact GPS coordinates! Wade, call Dutch Carmichael right fucking now!"
Billy Jr. was already reading off numbers. "Coordinates uploading to the network now. It's an abandoned bunkhouse, forty-seven miles northeast, just over the Garza County line."
On every screen in the ranch, a GPS map appeared alongside the drone feeds, a red pin marking the exact location.
"Boys," Pops barked. "Keep those drones up. I want eyes on that building at all times. If anyone comes or goes, I want to know immediately."
"Yes sir!" all four boys shouted.
The men were already moving, loading into trucks, checking weapons. Wade was on his phone with Dutch Carmichael, his voice low and urgent.
On the screens, Drone Six circled the bunkhouse slowly, the thermal feed showing three unmoving shapes inside.
Billy. Jake. Celab.
Still alive.
Mission control had found them.
Now it was time to bring them home.Chapter 6: Mobilization
Pops' F-350 led a convoy of death.
In the passenger seat, Billy Jr. had his iPad mounted on the dashboard, all six drone feeds displayed. Behind him, Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez were crammed in the extended cab, each with their own iPad and controller, fingers dancing across screens.
Pops drove with one hand on the wheel, the other holding a cigar. His rifle rode shotgun between him and Billy Jr. The scrambled radio network crackled constantly with voices.
Ahead of them, Wade Nelson's truck led the way, Wilson and Ryan Nelson—both in deputy uniforms—riding with him. Behind Pops came a line of pickup trucks stretching back down the county road like a war party. Tom and Josh Benson. Robert Beaumont. Billy Renzo's father. Ryan Mattern's father. Daniel Rodriguez's father. Every able-bodied man from the consortium, armed to the teeth.
"Turn coming up in two miles," Billy Jr. said into the radio, his voice steady. "County Road 47. Left turn."
"Copy that," Wade's voice crackled back.
On the iPad, Drone Six held position five hundred feet above the bunkhouse. The thermal imaging showed three shapes inside. Still stationary. Still alive.
"Drone One, circle wide," Billy Renzo said into his radio. "I want eyes on all approach roads."
"Drone Two, check the perimeter," Ryan Mattern added. "Look for sentries, lookouts, anything."
Daniel Rodriguez was zooming in with Drone Three. "I've got movement. Two—no, three figures outside the bunkhouse. Looks like they're smoking. Just standing around."
"Armed?" Pops asked, his voice a growl.
"Can't tell from this altitude. Switching to zoom." Daniel's fingers flew. "Yeah. Rifles. Maybe shotguns. Hard to say."
"Three outside, three inside," Wade said over the radio. "That's six hostiles minimum."
"We've faced worse odds," Pops muttered. He keyed the radio. "Dutch, you in position?"
Sheriff Dutch Carmichael's voice came through, rough and West Texas. "Affirmative. I got four deputies on the north side of the structure. We're holding at a quarter mile out, staying low."
"Good. We're ten minutes out."
Billy Jr. watched the GPS map on his screen, their convoy a cluster of blue dots moving steadily toward the red pin. "Turn in one mile," he said into the radio. "County Road 47."
The trucks slowed, then turned as one, kicking up dust. The road got rougher, less maintained. They were deep in Garza County now, miles from anything resembling civilization.
"Drone Five, thermal scan update," Billy Jr. ordered.
On his screen, the feed from Drone Five showed the bunkhouse interior in heat-signature mode. Three orange shapes, still sitting, still bound.
Uncle Billy. Uncle Jake. Celab. Hold on. We're coming.
"Five minutes out," Billy Jr. reported. "The access road comes in from the southwest. There's about a hundred yards of open ground before the tree line, then another fifty yards to the structure."
"That's a kill zone if they see us coming," Wade said.
"They won't," Pops growled. "Because we're not driving up to the front door. Billy Jr., is there cover on the north side?"
Billy Jr. zoomed in with Drone Two. "Yeah. Old equipment, rusted tractors, some kind of collapsed shed. Good cover for an approach."
"Dutch, you hear that?"
"Copy. We're on the north side already. Say the word and we move."
The convoy slowed, pulling off onto a dirt track that led into a stand of mesquite trees. The trucks stopped, engines cutting one by one. Men piled out, checking weapons, chambering rounds.
Pops climbed out of his truck, rifle in hand. The four boys followed, iPads clutched tight, drone controllers hanging from neck straps.
Tom Benson appeared at Pops' side, shotgun in hand. Josh was right behind him. Robert Beaumont looked pale but determined, gripping a hunting rifle.
"Alright, listen up," Pops said, his voice carrying across the assembled men. "Wade and his boys go in from the south. Dutch and his deputies take the north. The rest of us form a perimeter—nobody gets in, nobody gets out. Billy Jr., you and your crew keep those drones up. We need real-time intel."
"Yes sir," Billy Jr. said.
Wade stepped forward, his deputy sons flanking him. "When we breach, it's gonna be loud and it's gonna be fast. Dutch, you ready?"
"Born ready," came the drawled response over the radio.
"Three hostiles outside," Daniel reported, watching his screen. "Still smoking. They don't know we're here."
"Keep it that way," Pops said. He keyed his radio. "All units, move to positions. Stay low, stay quiet. On my signal."
The men spread out, moving through the trees like ghosts. The four boys stayed with Pops, their iPads glowing in the fading afternoon light.
On the screens, six different angles of the bunkhouse. The three men outside, laughing about something. The two pickup trucks, empty and rusted. The collapsed shed providing cover on the north side.
And inside—three heat signatures, unmoving, waiting.
"Everyone in position," Wade's voice crackled through. "We're a go on your signal, Pops."
Pops looked at Billy Jr. "How many inside? Just the three hostages?"
Billy Jr. studied the thermal feed. "I see... wait. Four heat signatures. Three sitting, one standing. Moving around."
"So one guard inside with them," Josh said grimly.
"That makes four total," Wade calculated. "Three outside, one inside."
"Those are shit odds," Pops said with a wolfish grin. "For them." He raised the radio. "All units. On three. One... two..."
Billy Jr. held his breath, watching the screens.
"Three. GO GO GO!"
On every iPad screen, chaos erupted.
Chapter 7: The Breach
The bunkhouse door exploded inward.
Wade Nelson and his deputies came through first, weapons raised, shouting commands. Dutch Carmichael and his men burst through the back simultaneously, trapping everyone inside.
But Billy Jr., watching the iPad screen from outside, had already seen what was happening.
"They've got him!" he screamed into the radio. "They've got Celab! Noose around his neck!"
Inside the bunkhouse, chaos.
Celab's feet were lifting off the ground, toes scraping the dirt floor. The rope around his neck was already taut, tied to a roof beam. His hands were still bound behind him, still lashed to the chair they'd cut him free from moments before. His chest—shaved raw with a knife, blood and hair matted across the wounds—heaved as he tried to gasp for air.
Billy and Jake were screaming, their gags ripped off so they could beg.
"No! Please! Don't kill him!"
"Celab! CELAB!"
Their voices were raw, desperate, terrified. Still bound to their chairs, still hogtied, they could only watch as their friend was lifted toward death.
The tall kidnapper—the one who'd been holding the rope—spun toward the door, reaching for his rifle.
He never made it.
Wade's first shot took him in the chest. The man dropped, the rope falling from his hands.
Celab crashed to the ground, the noose still tight around his neck, choking, unable to breathe.
The other kidnappers reached for weapons. Gunfire erupted—deafening in the confined space. Wilson Nelson took down the man near the door. Ryan Nelson's shot hit another in the shoulder, spinning him around before Dutch Carmichael finished him with a headshot.
The fourth man—the one who'd been guarding Billy and Jake—raised his hands.
"Don't shoot! Don't—"
"On the ground! NOW!" Wade roared.
The man dropped, and Ryan was on him in seconds, zip-tying his wrists.
Josh Benson burst through the door, Pops right behind him, Tom stumbling in after. Their eyes found the boys immediately.
Billy and Jake, still tied to chairs, faces beaten and swollen, shoulders pulled back at agonizing angles from the elbow bondage. Blood and sweat soaked their white undershirts.
And Celab—collapsed on the ground, the noose still around his neck, his chest a horror show of raw, bleeding wounds where they'd shaved him with a knife. His eyes were wide, panicked, unable to draw breath.
"Get that rope off him!" Tom shouted.
Pops was already there, knife out, sawing through the noose. The rope fell away and Celab gasped, a horrible wheezing sound, sucking air into his lungs.
Josh moved to Billy and Jake, cutting the ropes that bound them to the chairs. "I got you. I got you, boys. You're safe now."
Billy's arms fell forward as the elbow bondage came loose, and he screamed. The circulation returning was agony. Beside him, Jake was sobbing, trying to move his arms and failing.
"Don't move yet," Josh said, his voice breaking. "Let the blood flow back. Just breathe."
Robert Beaumont was through the door now, falling to his knees beside Celab.
"Son. Oh God, son." He cradled Celab's head, careful of the rope burns around his neck, his hands hovering over his mutilated chest but afraid to touch.
Celab's eyes found his father's. His lips moved, trying to form words, but only a croak came out.
"Shhh. Don't talk. You're safe. You're safe now."
Pops stood over the bodies of the kidnappers, his rifle still in hand. His face was cold, emotionless. "Anybody still breathing?"
"This one," Ryan Nelson said, nudging the zip-tied man with his boot.
"Good." Pops looked at Dutch Carmichael. "He's all yours, Sheriff. Anonymous tip led you here, kidnapping in progress, you had to use lethal force. Clean and simple."
Dutch nodded slowly. "That's how it'll read in my report."
Wade was already on his radio, calling for EMTs. "I need three ambulances at these coordinates. Multiple injuries, possible strangulation, severe trauma. Move fast."
Billy Jr. appeared in the doorway, his three buddies behind him, all four boys staring at the scene inside. The bodies. The blood. Their uncles and Celab, broken and brutalized but alive.
"Uncle Billy," Billy Jr. whispered. "Uncle Jake."
Billy looked up, his good eye focusing on his nephew. "Jr. You... you found us."
"The drones," Billy Jr. said, tears streaming down his face. "We found you with the drones."
"Smart kid," Jake rasped, trying to smile through split lips. "Just like his uncles."
Tom knelt beside his sons, his hands shaking as he touched their faces. "You're coming home. Both of you. You're coming home."
The EMTs arrived twenty minutes later, loading all three boys onto stretchers.
"Hospital," the lead paramedic said firmly. "All three of them. Dislocated shoulders, possible internal injuries, strangulation trauma—"
"No hospital," Billy said through gritted teeth. "We're fine. Just take us home."
"Like hell you're fine," the paramedic shot back. "Look at you."
"I said no," Jake added, wincing as they tried to stabilize his shoulders. "We just want to go home."
The paramedic looked at Celab. "And you?"
Celab's hand went to his throat, feeling the rope burns. His eyes dropped to his chest, the raw, bleeding mess. He tried to speak, but his voice was gone. Instead, he nodded slowly.
Yes. Hospital.
"Two out of three isn't bad," the paramedic muttered. He looked at Tom and Josh. "Your boys are idiots, but that one's got sense. We're taking him. You two—" he pointed at Billy and Jake, "—are going too, whether you like it or not. Those shoulders are dislocated and you've got God knows what else wrong with you."
"Fuck that," Billy said.
"Watch your mouth," Tom snapped, but there was no heat in it. He was too relieved to be angry.
Pops limped over, cigar back in his mouth. "Boys, shut the fuck up and get in the ambulance. That's an order."
Billy and Jake looked at each other, then at Pops.
"Yes sir," they said in unison.
Outside, the four teenagers stood with their iPads, watching the stretchers being loaded. The drone feeds still showed the bunkhouse from above, men moving in and out, the whole scene captured in six different angles.
"We did it," Ryan Mattern said quietly.
"Yeah," Billy Jr. said, unable to look away from the screen. "We did."
But his hands were shaking. And when he closed his eyes, all he could see was Celab's feet lifting off the ground, the noose tightening, the seconds ticking away.
They'd made it just in time.
Just barely in time.
Chapter 8: The Hospital
The hospital room was too small for three beds, but they'd crammed them in anyway.
Billy, Jake, and Celab sat propped up against pillows, IV lines running into their arms. Billy's left shoulder had been relocated—a process that had him screaming obscenities that made the nurses blush. Jake's broken nose had been reset and bandaged. Celab's chest was wrapped in specialized dressings, antibacterial ointment covering the raw wounds where the knife had scraped away hair and skin. The rope burns around his neck were treated and wrapped as well.
All three boys looked like they'd been through a war.
"Overnight observation," the ER doctor said, clipboard in hand. "IV antibiotics, pain management, and monitoring for complications. We'll reassess in the morning."
"No," Billy said immediately. "We're going home."
"Absolutely not," the doctor replied. "You have dislocated shoulders, possible internal injuries—"
"I said we're going home," Jake interrupted. "We've been tied up for hours. The last thing we want is to be stuck in another goddamn room."
"Language," the doctor said wearily. "And you're staying. All three of you."
Celab tried to speak, but only a rasp came out. He pointed at his throat, then shook his head.
"You especially," the doctor said to Celab. "Strangulation trauma, possible damage to your trachea, not to mention those wounds on your chest. You're not going anywhere."
The door burst open and Billy Jr. rushed in, followed by Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez. All four boys had their iPads in hand, and the screens were already lit up with video calls.
"Uncle Billy! Uncle Jake!" Billy Jr. moved to the bedside. "Celab!"
On the iPads, faces crowded the screens. Sarah and Caroline in one frame, Rebecca and Mary in another. The mothers back at the ranch, desperate to see their boys.
"Oh my God," Sarah's voice came through the speaker. "Billy. Jake. You're okay. You're really okay."
"We're fine, Mom," Billy said, even though he clearly wasn't.
Caroline was crying on the screen. "Celab, baby, can you hear me?"
Celab nodded at the iPad Billy Jr. held up, tears in his eyes. He pointed at his throat and shook his head.
"He can't talk," Billy Jr. explained. "The rope—"
"I know, sweetie," Caroline said, her voice breaking. "I know."
The door opened again and Tom, Josh, Pops, and Robert Beaumont filed in, along with Wade Nelson and his deputy sons. The room was getting crowded.
Rebecca's voice came through Billy Jr.'s iPad, firm and professional. "Doctor, I'm Rebecca Benson, registered practical nurse. I've reviewed the treatment plan you sent over. These boys can be released to my care in the morning with home IV antibiotics, wound care supplies, and pain management protocols."
The doctor looked skeptical. "Mrs. Benson, with all due respect—"
"I've handled worse on this ranch," Rebecca said from the iPad screen. "Broken bones, compound fractures, a goring incident last year. I'm fully capable of monitoring vitals, changing dressings, and administering medications. And frankly, Doctor, these boys will heal better at home than they will in that hospital room bitching and moaning all night."
Billy and Jake grinned despite themselves.
"Besides," Rebecca continued, her eyes narrowing on the screen, "if they give me any trouble, I'll tie them up and gag them again myself."
The room exploded with laughter.
Pops slapped his knee, cigar ash falling to the floor. "Do it, Rebecca! Tie their asses up!"
Even the ER doctor cracked a smile. "Mrs. Benson, I appreciate your confidence, but—"
"Doctor," Rebecca said, her tone brooking no argument. "I'm taking them home in the morning. You can discharge them into my care, or I can sign them out AMA. Your choice."
The doctor sighed, looked at the three boys in their beds, then back at the iPad. "Fine. Morning discharge. But I want detailed instructions followed to the letter. Any complications, you bring them back immediately."
"Agreed," Rebecca said.
"And boys," the doctor added, looking at Billy and Jake, "if you give her any trouble, I'm sending you back here for another week."
"Yes sir," they mumbled.
The doctor left, shaking his head.
Pops moved to the bedside, looking down at his grandsons. "You boys did good out there. Held on long enough for us to find you. I'm proud of you."
"Billy Jr. and the drones," Billy said quietly. "They're the ones who found us."
"That kid's got balls," Pops agreed. "Just like his uncles." He looked at Celab. "And you, kid. You're tougher than you look. Welcome to the family."
Celab's eyes welled up, but he couldn't speak. He just nodded.
Robert Beaumont moved to his son's side, his hand resting gently on Celab's uninjured shoulder. "We're going to head back to the ranch. Let you boys rest. Some of us will come back in the morning to bring you home."
"Get some sleep," Tom added. "All of you."
Josh looked at his brothers. "You need anything, you call. Rebecca's monitoring the nurse's station remotely, and she'll know if your vitals change."
"We're fine," Jake said. "Just tired."
"Then rest," Josh said.
The men filed out one by one. Billy Jr. and his three buddies were last, setting their iPads on the bedside tables so the video calls could continue.
"We'll be back in the morning," Billy Jr. said. "Love you, Uncle Billy. Uncle Jake."
"Love you too, kid," Billy said.
The four teenagers left, and Pops was last to go, pausing at the door to look back at the three boys.
"See you in the morning, you stubborn bastards."
The door closed. The iPads stayed on the tables, the mothers' faces still visible on the screens, watching over their boys.
"We're going to let you sleep," Sarah said softly from the screen. "But we're here if you need us."
"Thanks, Mom," Billy said.
The video calls ended, screens going dark.
For a long moment, the room was silent except for the beeping of monitors and the hiss of IV pumps.
Then Billy shifted in his bed, wincing. "Well. That sucked."
Jake laughed, then groaned because it hurt. "Understatement of the year."
Celab tried to laugh too, but it came out as a wheeze. He pointed at his throat and shrugged.
"You'll get your voice back," Billy said. "Doctor said a few days, maybe a week."
Celab nodded, then pointed at his chest. His eyes asked the question he couldn't speak.
"Yeah," Jake said quietly. "That was... that was bad. When they started cutting you—" His voice broke. "We thought they were going to kill you right there."
Billy's jaw clenched. "And then the noose. Jesus, Celab. Your feet were off the ground. Another thirty seconds and—"
He couldn't finish.
Celab reached out with his good hand, the one not hooked to an IV. Billy grabbed it. Jake reached over and gripped Celab's shoulder.
"We made it," Billy said. "All three of us. We made it out."
Celab nodded, tears streaming down his face.
"You're our brother now," Jake said. "Not just roommate in the frat house. You're family. You understand?"
Celab nodded again, squeezing Billy's hand.
The three of them sat there in silence, hands clasped, the weight of what they'd survived settling over them like a blanket.
Outside the room, nurses moved quietly through the halls. Monitors beeped. The hospital hummed with late-night activity.
But in that room, three young men who'd faced death together were finally, finally safe.
And for now, that was enough.
Epilogue
The ranch house had finally quieted down.
The men had left for the hospital. The younger children had been put to bed. The mothers sat in the living room with coffee, talking in low voices, waiting for news.
In the hallway outside the "frat house," Billy Jr. stood with his three buddies—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez. All four boys looked exhausted, still carrying their iPads, drone controllers hanging from their necks.
"Three empty bunks tonight," Billy Renzo said quietly.
"Yeah," Billy Jr. said, looking at the closed door to the room he shared with his uncles and Celab.
"You shouldn't sleep alone," Ryan Mattern added. "Not after today."
Daniel Rodriguez nodded. "Can we stay over? I mean, there's room."
Billy Jr. looked at his friends, then down the hall toward the living room where his grandmother sat. "Let me ask."
Sarah looked up as the four boys filed into the living room, and her heart broke a little. They looked so young. So tired. They'd found their uncles with drones and GPS coordinates, guided armed men through the darkness, and watched the rescue unfold on screens.
Heroes. All of them.
"Grandma Sarah," Billy Jr. said. "Can Billy, Ryan, and Daniel sleep over tonight? The frat house has three empty bunks and—"
"Of course they can," Sarah said immediately.
"I'll call my dad," Billy Renzo said, already pulling out his phone.
Five minutes later, after quick negotiations and promises to be good, all three sets of parents had agreed.
"Alright," Sarah said. "But you boys get some sleep. It's been a long day."
"Yes ma'am," they chorused.
The four teenagers trudged down the hall to the frat house and pushed open the door. Two bunk beds—one against each wall. Billy and Jake's bunk. Celab and Billy Jr.'s bunk. Four bunks total. And now three of them empty, waiting.
They were dropping their iPads on the desk when a knock came at the door.
"Yeah?" Billy Jr. called.
The door opened and Pops limped in, brandy glass in hand, cigar smoke trailing behind him. He looked at the four boys—all of them still in their dusty ranch clothes, exhaustion written on their faces.
"Listen up," Pops said, his voice gruff. "What you boys did today—finding them with those drones, coordinating that whole goddamn operation—that took guts. You're heroes. Every one of you. And I'm proud as hell."
Billy Jr.'s throat tightened. "We just did what we had to, Pops."
"That's what heroes do, kid." Pops took a pull from his brandy. "Your uncles and Celab are alive because of you four. Don't forget that."
The boys nodded, unable to speak.
Pops turned to leave, then paused at the door. "Oh, and boys? If the floorboards squeak tonight, try not to walk on them."
He left, pulling the door closed behind him.
Billy Renzo frowned. "What floorboards?"
Ryan Mattern looked confused. "Why would they squeak?"
Daniel Rodriguez turned to Billy Jr. "What's he talking about?"
Billy Jr. grinned—the first real smile since the radio had gone silent that morning. He walked to the center of the room, knelt down, and pried up a section of the floorboards.
Underneath, nestled in the gap between the joists, sat two six-packs of beer. Ice cold.
"Holy shit," Ryan breathed.
"That's our stash," Billy Jr. said, pulling out the six-packs and setting them on the floor. "Uncle Billy, Uncle Jake, Celab, and me. Pops fills it up every morning."
"Every morning?" Daniel's eyes went wide. "Your great-grandfather supplies you with beer?"
"Yep." Billy Jr. twisted the cap off one and took a swig. "He says if we're gonna drink, might as well do it at home where we're safe."
Billy Renzo laughed and grabbed a bottle. "Your family is insane."
"Best kind of insane," Ryan said, taking one for himself.
Daniel grabbed the last one from the first six-pack and held it up. "To finding them. To the drones. To mission control."
"To mission control," the other three echoed, bottles clinking together.
They settled onto the bunks—Billy Jr. on his, the other three sprawled across the empty ones that belonged to Billy, Jake, and Celab.
"That moment when you saw the heat signatures," Ryan said, shaking his head. "I thought my heart was gonna explode."
"I know," Billy Jr. said quietly. "Three shapes. Just sitting there. I knew it was them."
"And then watching the breach on the screens," Daniel added. "Seeing Celab with that noose—"
"Don't," Billy Renzo said. "We got there in time. That's what matters."
Billy Jr. took another drink, staring at the ceiling. "Another thirty seconds and he'd be dead."
The room went quiet.
Then Ryan raised his bottle again. "But he's not. None of them are. Because we found them."
"Because we found them," Billy Jr. repeated, and this time there was pride in his voice.
They sat there in the frat house, drinking beer that Pops had left them, talking about the drones and the GPS coordinates and the moment Wade and Dutch breached the door. Four fifteen-year-old boys who'd become men in a single day.
Outside, the ranch settled into night. Stars blazed overhead. Somewhere in a hospital forty miles away, three young men lay in beds, alive because four teenagers had refused to give up.
And in the frat house, with empty bunks waiting for their occupants to come home, Billy Jr. and his buddies cracked open another round.
Tomorrow, Uncle Billy and Uncle Jake and Celab would be back. The frat house would be full again. The consortium would celebrate. Life would go on.
But tonight, they were heroes.
And that was enough.