Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Mistaken Identity

 


Chapter 1: The Switch

Colt Beaumont stood in the doorway of the frat house, white undershirt tucked into his Wranglers, boots scuffed from a year of hard ranch work. He'd rolled up an old feed invoice and was tapping it against his palm like a clipboard.

"Billy Junior!" he called out in an exaggerated drawl, mimicking the way Tom Benson summoned his grandson. "Get your ass down to the south pasture and check them fence posts before I tan your hide!"

Billy Jr. looked up from his bunk where he'd been lacing his boots and flipped Colt off with a grin. "You sound more like Pops than my granddad, jackass."

"That's 'cause Pops raised all y'all right," Colt shot back. "And since you're headed to town with the real men, somebody's gotta do your job."

Jake Benson leaned against the doorframe, coffee mug in hand, watching the show. "He's got you there, Jr. Colt's been pulling double duty all week while you been sweet-talking Anna."

"Anna's worth it," Jr. said, standing up and adjusting his belt. "And Colt volunteered to cover for me."

"Damn right I did." Colt struck a pose, hands on his hips. "How do I look? Authentic Billy Junior? White shirt, tight jeans, boots that've seen some shit?"

Celab, Colt's cousin, snorted from his top bunk. "You even smell like him now. That's disturbing."

"That's called commitment," Colt said, grinning. "When the Bensons look back at today, they're gonna say, 'Remember when Colt dressed up as Jr. and did his chores better than he ever did?'"

Jr. threw a boot at him. Colt dodged it easy.

"Alright, alright," Billy called from the hallway. "Y'all coming or what? We're burning daylight, and Pops wants to get to the feed store before lunch."

Jake drained his coffee and clapped Colt on the shoulder as he passed. "Don't let the cows give you any trouble, Junior."

"Screw you, Jake," Colt laughed.

Within minutes, the house had emptied. Tom, Pops, Billy, Jake, Celab, and Jr. all piled into the two trucks headed for the feed store in town—a monthly run that always turned into an hours-long affair once Pops started telling stories to the guys at the co-op.

Colt stood on the porch, watching the dust trails disappear down the drive. The ranch stretched out quiet under the late morning sun. He pulled on his work gloves and headed toward the south pasture.

It felt good, being trusted with the work. Being one of them.

He didn't see the truck idling a quarter mile down the road, its driver watching through binoculars.

Didn't see the men in the cab nodding to each other.

White undershirt. Jeans. Boots.

That's him.

Chapter 2: The Grab

The south pasture fence line ran along the edge of the Benson property, where mesquite and scrub oak provided scattered shade. Colt worked methodically, checking each post for rot or looseness, his gloves already dark with sweat despite the morning hour.

He was three-quarters through when he heard the truck.

Not unusual. Ranchers drove these back roads all the time. He glanced up, shading his eyes against the sun, and saw a beat-up Chevy rolling slow along the fence line on the county road.

Colt turned back to the post he was testing, giving it a shake.

The engine sound changed. Closer.

He looked up again. The truck had pulled off onto the shoulder, maybe thirty yards out. Two men were getting out.

"Hey there!" one of them called, waving. Ball cap, flannel shirt despite the heat. "Y'all got a phone we could borrow? Ours is dead and we got a flat."

Colt straightened, pulling off his gloves. "Yeah, sure. Give me a sec—"

They were moving faster now, cutting across the ditch toward the fence.

Something in Colt's gut clenched.

"Actually, I can just call someone for you—" he started, but the first man was already climbing through the barbed wire, and the second was moving around to flank him.

"Nah, we just need the phone, Billy," the first man said, grinning. "Your daddy's got plenty of money for a new one."

Billy.

They thought he was Jr.

Colt's hand moved toward his belt, where his consortium radio was clipped, but the second man was already on him. A forearm crashed into his throat and Colt went down hard, the air knocked from his lungs. He tried to twist away, tried to yell, but a calloused hand clamped over his mouth and nose.

"Get his legs! Get his goddamn legs!"

Colt bucked, drove an elbow back into ribs, heard a grunt—but then his arms were wrenched behind him and rough rope bit into his wrists. They wound it tight, cinching the loops until his hands were locked together, then he felt them threading the rope through his belt loops—left side, right side, back through the center.

"That'll hold him," one of them grunted, yanking the rope taut. Colt's wrists were pulled hard against the small of his back, immobilized. He couldn't move his hands at all now, couldn't reach anything.

One of them unclipped his radio and wallet. "Got his phone and some kinda walkie-talkie. Bag it."

"Feisty little shit, ain't he?"

"Rich kid thinks he's tough. Get him in the truck."

Colt tried to scream but a rag was shoved into his mouth, another tied around his head to hold it in. His boots scraped in the dirt as they dragged him backward, his shoulders screaming from the angle of his bound arms.

The truck bed. They threw him in like a feed sack and he landed on his shoulder, pain lancing through his arm. A tarp came down over him, musty and stinking of motor oil.

The doors slammed. The engine roared.

And then they were moving, the truck bouncing over ruts, and Colt was alone in the dark, hands bound and immobilized behind him, gagged, his heart hammering so hard he thought it would crack his ribs.

They think I'm Jr.

They think I'm Jr. and nobody knows where I am.

The truck picked up speed.

Chapter 3: The Barn

The truck bounced to a stop and Colt heard the doors open, boots hitting gravel. The tarp was yanked back and sunlight stabbed his eyes. Rough hands grabbed him under the arms and hauled him out. His boots hit dirt and his legs nearly gave out—how long had he been in that truck bed? Twenty minutes? An hour?

"Easy there, Billy boy," one of them said, steadying him with a grip on his shoulder. "Don't want you falling and cracking that pretty head before Daddy pays up."

Colt's vision cleared enough to take in his surroundings. An old barn, weathered gray wood and a rusted tin roof. No other structures visible. Just scrub brush and flat Texas nothing stretching in every direction.

They shoved him through the barn door into dim, dusty air. The place smelled like rotted hay and motor oil. They pushed him face-down onto the dirt floor and Colt grunted through the gag as his chest hit hard.

"Hold him still."

One of them planted a knee between Colt's shoulder blades while the other rummaged through something outside. Boots scraped, then returned.

"This'll work."

A thick branch—maybe three feet long, rough bark still on it—was shoved under Colt's upper arms, across his back. The pressure made his shoulders scream.

"Thread it through. Yeah, like that."

They worked fast, pulling his bound wrists up higher behind him, adjusting the branch until it sat just under his armpits. Then came more rope, wrapped around his biceps and the branch, cinching tighter and tighter until Colt felt like his arms would pop from the sockets. They frapped the rope between his arms and the branch, making everything rigid and immovable.

"Now the feet."

Colt tried to kick but they grabbed his ankles, yanked his boots back toward his bound wrists, and looped rope from his ankles to the rope binding his wrists. They pulled it taut—hogtied—until his back arched and his chest lifted off the ground.

"There we go. Perfect."

The pressure was immediate and brutal. Every muscle in his back and shoulders burned. He couldn't straighten out. Couldn't move.

"Alright, pictures."

They rolled him onto his side and ball cap pulled out a phone—Colt's phone. The flash went off. Once. Twice. Three times. They adjusted him, made sure the ropes were visible, made sure his face showed fear.

"Get a good one of the knots. Bensons need to see we mean business."

Another flash.

Then ball cap lowered the phone and started tapping at the screen, grinning. "Tom Benson's gonna shit himself when he sees these. 'We got your boy Billy Junior. Wire two million to this account or you get him back in pieces.' Nice and simple."

Colt's stomach dropped. They were texting from his phone—Jr.'s father Josh would see it come from "Billy Jr.'s" number. They'd think it was real.

They don't know. They still think I'm him.

Ball cap pocketed the phone and tossed Colt's wallet and radio into a corner near some old feed sacks. "We'll check back in a few hours. Once Daddy wires the money, we're gone."

"What about the kid?"

"We'll figure it out. Maybe cut him loose on some back road. Bensons won't call the cops over two mil."

They walked out, and the barn door creaked shut behind them.

Colt was alone.

He lay on his side, hogtied, the branch digging into his arms, every breath shallow and painful. The gag was cutting into the corners of his mouth. His shoulders screamed.

And ten feet away, in the corner, his consortium radio sat in the dirt.

The emergency button. If I could just reach it.

Colt closed his eyes and tried to slow his breathing through his nose.

Jr.'s family is about to see those photos. They're going to think it's him.

Nobody knows where I am.

Chapter 4: Empty House

The two trucks rolled back into the Benson Ranch just before eleven-thirty, packed full of feed sacks, fencing supplies, and whatever else Pops had decided they needed after three hours at the co-op.

Jake hopped out first, stretching his back. "I swear Pops tells the same damn stories every time and acts like they're brand new."

"That's 'cause half the guys at the co-op can't remember 'em either," Billy said, grinning as he pulled a fifty-pound bag onto his shoulder. "Old man strategy."

Jr. was already heading toward the house, checking his phone. "Anna texted. I told her I'd call her back after lunch."

"Course you did," Celab called after him. "God forbid you go four hours without—"

"Boys!" Sarah's voice cut across the yard from the porch. She was wiping her hands on a dish towel, her brow furrowed. "Any of y'all seen Colt?"

Celab looked up. "He's been out at the south pasture. Doing Jr.'s fence work."

"I know that," Sarah said. "But he hasn't checked in and it's nearly noon. I've called him twice on the radio. Nothing."

Billy set down his feed sack and pulled his own radio from his belt. "Colt, you copy? This is Billy."

Static.

Jake tried next. "Colt, brother, where you at? We brought back lunch."

More static.

Celab frowned and keyed his radio. "Colt, it's Celab. You fall asleep out there or what?"

Nothing.

Tom came around the side of the truck, brushing dust off his jeans. "What's going on?"

"Colt's not answering," Sarah said, her voice tighter now. "He should've been back by now. Or at least checked in."

Tom exchanged a glance with Pops, who was leaning against the truck bed, lighting a cigar. The old man's eyes narrowed.

"How long's he been out there?" Tom asked.

"Since y'all left," Sarah said. "Three hours, maybe a little more."

"Could be his radio died," Jake offered, but his voice didn't sound convinced.

Jr. was already heading back toward them, phone still in hand. "You want me to drive out there and—"

Josh's phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out, glanced at the screen, and his face went white.

"Dad?"

Josh didn't answer. He was staring at his phone, his thumb frozen over the screen.

"Josh?" Tom stepped closer. "What is it?"

Josh turned the phone around.

The image hit them all at once: a kid hogtied on a barn floor, white undershirt, jeans, boots. Rope everywhere. Face twisted in fear. The branch across his back, arms bound tight to it, boots pulled back to his wrists.

Below the photo, a message:

We got your boy Billy Junior. Wire $2 million to this account or you get him back in pieces. You have 24 hours.

Jr. stared at the screen, his face draining of color. "That's... that's not me."

"What?" Tom grabbed the phone.

"That's not me!" Jr.'s voice cracked. "I'm right here! That's—"

"Colt," Celab whispered. His eyes were locked on the photo. "That's Colt."

The yard exploded.

"WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU MEAN THAT'S COLT?!" Pops roared, cigar dropping from his hand.

Jake snatched the phone from Tom, staring at the image. "Jesus Christ. They think he's Jr. They grabbed the wrong kid."

Jr.'s hands were shaking. "They think that's me. They sent it to my dad. They think—"

Celab let out a sound like a wounded animal and turned, slamming his fist into the side of the barn. Once. Twice. The wood splintered under his knuckles.

"CELAB!" Tom barked.

But Celab hit it again, blood streaking his knuckles. "THEY HAVE HIM! THEY HAVE COLT!"

Jr. was already moving, radio in hand. He keyed the emergency button—three long presses.

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

The mechanical voice broadcast across the entire consortium frequency.

Tom was already pulling out his phone, dialing Robert Beaumont. "Robert. Get to the ranch. Now. Bring Caroline. It's Colt."

Pops grabbed his rifle from the truck.

Sarah's hand was over her mouth, tears already streaming.

And somewhere out there, Colt was tied to a branch in a barn, waiting for someone to find him.

Chapter 5: The Kidnappers Discover

Ball cap leaned against the truck, scrolling through the phone they'd taken off the kid. "Two million. Shit, can you believe it? We're actually gonna pull this off."

His partner—a wiry guy named Dale—was smoking a cigarette, watching the barn. "How long you think before they wire it?"

"Couple hours, maybe? Rich folks like the Bensons, they'll pay fast to get their boy back." He grinned. "Easiest money we ever made."

Dale took a drag. "What about the kid? We really just gonna dump him?"

"What else we gonna do? We get the money, cut him loose somewhere remote, and we're gone before anyone knows what happened." Ball cap pocketed the phone. "Let me check his wallet, see if there's anything useful."

He walked over to the corner of the barn where they'd tossed the kid's belongings. Picked up the wallet, flipped it open.

His grin died.

"What?" Dale said.

Ball cap stared at the driver's license. Texas ID. Photo of the kid in the barn, no question about it.

Colt Beaumont. Age 17. Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

"Fuck."

"What?" Dale dropped his cigarette and crossed to him.

Ball cap held up the license. "That's not Billy Benson Junior."

Dale's face went gray. "What do you mean that's not—"

"I MEAN THAT'S NOT HIM!" Ball cap threw the wallet against the barn wall. "His name is Colt Beaumont! He's not even a Benson!"

"Jesus Christ." Dale ran his hands through his hair. "Jesus Christ, we grabbed the wrong kid."

Ball cap paced, breathing hard. "Okay. Okay, we sent the ransom. They're gonna see the photos and realize it's not Jr."

"They're gonna call the cops."

"They're gonna call EVERYONE." Ball cap kicked at the dirt. "We gotta go. Now."

"What about him?" Dale gestured toward the barn.

Ball cap looked at the door, then back at Dale. "Leave him."

"Leave him?"

"We didn't get any money. We cut our losses and get the hell out of Texas before every cop in the state is looking for us."

Dale hesitated. "He saw our faces."

"He's tied up good. By the time anyone finds him, we'll be three states away." Ball cap was already moving toward the truck. "Come on!"

Dale grabbed the duffel bag and followed. "What if he gets loose?"

"He won't. Not with that branch setup. He's not going anywhere."

They climbed into the truck, engine roaring to life.

Inside the barn, Colt heard the sound. Heard the tires spitting gravel.

And then silence.

They were gone.

Colt lay on his side, hogtied, arms bound to the branch, every muscle screaming. The rope cut into his wrists, his ankles, his biceps. His back arched at an angle that made breathing hard.

They left me.

They know I'm not Jr. and they just left me here.

Ten feet away, his consortium radio sat in the corner where they'd tossed it.

The emergency button.

Colt tested the ropes again. No give. The branch kept his arms immobilized. The hogtie kept him curled tight.

But if he could roll. If he could get onto his back. If he could drag himself across the floor...

It would hurt. God, it would hurt.

But nobody was coming unless he called them.

Colt took a breath through his nose and started to move.

Chapter 6: Mobilization

The consortium radio crackled to life in houses across three counties.

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

Within minutes, trucks were converging on the Benson Ranch.

Robert Beaumont's SUV skidded into the driveway first, gravel spraying. He was out before it stopped moving, Caroline right behind him.

"Where is he?" Robert's voice was raw. "Where's my nephew?"

Tom met him halfway across the yard, phone in hand. "We don't know. They sent ransom photos. They think they have Jr., but it's Colt."

Caroline's knees buckled. Sarah caught her, both women clinging to each other.

"Show me," Robert demanded.

Tom handed him Josh's phone. Robert stared at the image—Colt hogtied on a barn floor, the branch across his back, rope everywhere—and his jaw clenched so tight Tom heard his teeth grind.

"How long?"

"We got back from the feed store thirty minutes ago. He wasn't answering his radio. Then this came through maybe ten minutes ago."

Sheriff Wade Nelson's truck pulled in next, followed by his sons Wilson and Ryan in their deputy vehicles. Wade was out and moving fast despite his age.

"Talk to me."

Tom filled him in while more trucks arrived. The Renzos. The Matterns. The Rodriguezes. Within twenty minutes, the yard was full of armed men and the command center in the house was operational.

Inside, Jr. and his three friends—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez—had every screen lit up. Tablets, laptops, the satellite phone network.

"I'm triangulating his radio signal," Billy Renzo said, fingers flying across his keyboard. "If it's still on, we can narrow the location."

"Get the drones up," Jr. said, his voice tight. "Thermal imaging. Start with a five-mile radius from the south pasture."

Daniel was already launching the first drone from the porch. "Going up now."

Ryan Mattern pulled up surveillance footage from the ranch cameras. "Got something. Beat-up Chevy, two males, drove past on the county road at 10:47 this morning. Right around when Colt would've been at the fence line."

"Can you get a plate?" Wade asked, leaning over his shoulder.

"Partial. Running it now."

In the corner, Celab stood with his back against the wall, fists clenched, knuckles still bleeding from where he'd punched the barn. Jake had a hand on his shoulder, keeping him steady.

"We're gonna find him," Jake said quietly.

"They had him tied up like a fucking animal," Celab choked out. "And I was at the goddamn feed store listening to Pops tell stories."

"Hey." Billy was suddenly in front of him. "Don't do that. You couldn't have known."

Celab shook his head, eyes burning. "He was covering for Jr. He was doing Jr.'s job because we all went to town and he—"

"Stop." Jr.'s voice cut through from across the room. He was staring at his phone, at the ransom photos, his face ashen. "Don't put this on me."

"I'm not—"

"They think that's me!" Jr.'s voice cracked. "They sent my dad pictures of Colt tied up and gagged with my name on it! You think I don't—" He couldn't finish.

Pops stepped between them, rifle in one hand, bottle of whiskey in the other. "Both of you shut the hell up. We got work to do."

He took a swig, then handed the bottle to Celab. "Drink. Then get your head straight. We're bringing your cousin home."

Tom's phone rang. He answered, listened, then looked at Wade. "That partial plate. Registered to a Dale Hoskins. Address in Laredo."

"I know him," Wade said grimly. "Small-time. Been in and out of trouble. If he's involved, he's probably working with someone."

"Billy!" Ryan Mattern called out. "Radio signal! I got a hit!"

Everyone crowded around the screen.

"It's faint, but it's there. Consortium frequency. Approximately fifteen miles southeast."

Jr. was already marking coordinates on the map. "That's a lot of ground."

"Then we cover it," Robert said, checking his rifle. "All of it."

Pops drained the whiskey bottle and set it down hard. "Mount up. We're going hunting."

Chapter 7: Alone

The barn was silent except for Colt's ragged breathing through his nose.

He'd been testing the ropes for what felt like hours. Rolling his shoulders, trying to find any slack in the bindings around his biceps. Flexing his wrists where they were locked behind him, threaded through his belt loops. Nothing moved. The branch kept his arms rigid, immobilized across his back. The hogtie kept his boots pulled tight to his wrists, his spine arched at an angle that made every breath shallow.

His consortium radio sat ten feet away in the corner. Might as well have been ten miles.

Think. There has to be a way.

Colt shifted his weight, trying to roll from his side onto his stomach. Pain shot through his shoulders as the branch dug deeper into his armpits. His leg muscles cramped from the hogtie, trembling with the effort of staying curled.

He managed to get onto his stomach, face pressed into the dirt. Dust filled his nose around the gag. He gagged, fought down panic, forced himself to breathe slowly.

Okay. Now what?

The radio was to his left. If he could inch forward. If he could use his knees, his chest, drag himself across the floor...

Colt tried to push with his knees but the hogtie pulled his boots tighter against his wrists, bending his back further. He cried out through the gag, the sound muffled and desperate.

Stop. Think.

He lay still, panting, sweat running down his face.

His radio crackled to life.

"Colt, you copy? This is Billy."

Colt's heart lurched. He tried to yell, but the gag turned it into nothing.

Static, then Jake's voice. "Colt, brother, where you at? We brought back lunch."

I'm here! I'm here!

More static. Then Celab. "Colt, it's Celab. You fall asleep out there or what?"

Colt squeezed his eyes shut. They were looking for him. They knew something was wrong.

The emergency button. I have to hit it.

He opened his eyes and stared at the radio in the corner. Ten feet. Maybe less.

But to reach it, he'd have to roll onto his back. With the branch across his shoulders and his arms bound to it, all his weight would crush down on his biceps, on the ropes cutting into his flesh.

It would be agony.

Colt took a breath and started to roll.

The first shift sent lightning through his shoulders. The branch caught on the ground, leverage working against him, pressing harder into his upper arms. He got halfway onto his side before the pain made him stop, gasping.

Come on. Don't stop.

He rolled further. The branch scraped across the dirt, the ends sticking out on both sides catching and grinding. His full weight came down on his bound biceps and Colt screamed through the gag.

But he was on his back now. Staring up at the barn rafters. The branch beneath him, his arms crushed under his own body weight.

Every second was torture.

Move. Now.

Colt dug his heels into the dirt and pushed, arching his back, using the leverage to inch himself backward across the floor. Six inches. A foot. His shoulders screamed. The ropes cut deeper. Blood slicked the inside of his elbows where the bindings had rubbed raw.

He pushed again. Another foot.

The radio was close now. Maybe three feet.

Colt's vision blurred. His muscles were shaking, cramping. The pain in his arms was white-hot, constant.

Almost there.

One more push. His fingers—numb and swollen behind his back—brushed against something.

The radio.

Colt twisted his wrists, feeling for the emergency button. His fingers were clumsy, barely responsive. He found the edge of the device, traced it with his fingertips.

There.

He pressed the button. Three long pushes.

The mechanical voice echoed through the barn:

"911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt."

Colt let his head fall back against the dirt, tears streaming down his face.

They would hear it. They would come.

He just had to hold on.

Chapter 8: The Hunt Narrows

The mechanical voice cut through every device in the consortium network—eighteen iPads, eighteen satellite phones, all at once:

"911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt."

In the kitchen, Sarah dropped the dish she was holding. It shattered on the floor.

"COLT!" Caroline screamed, grabbing her iPad with shaking hands.

Out by the trucks, Pops froze mid-step, cigar falling from his mouth. "That's my boy. That's my goddamn boy!"

Rebecca Nelson clutched her iPad to her chest, tears already streaming. "He's alive. Oh God, he's alive."

Mary Nelson grabbed Wade's arm. "He activated it himself. Wade, he got to his radio!"

Everyone ran.

The command center flooded with bodies—Pops first, rifle in one hand, iPad in the other, pushing through the door. Tom and Robert right behind him. Sarah and Caroline and Rebecca and Mary crowding in. Jake and Billy and Celab shoving their way to the screens.

Jr. and his crew were already at the computers, Billy Renzo's fingers flying across the keyboard.

"TALK TO ME!" Pops roared.

"Signal's live!" Billy Renzo shouted back. "He activated it himself! Triangulating now!"

Jr. was staring at his screen, hands gripping the edge of the desk. "Come on, come on..."

"Got it!" Billy Renzo's screen flashed with coordinates. "Southeast, approximately fourteen miles from the south pasture. Signal strength indicates he's stationary."

Robert pushed forward. "Where exactly?"

Jr. was already marking it on the tactical map. "Three-square-mile area. Mostly abandoned ranch land."

"Drone's almost there," Daniel Rodriguez called from his station. "Two minutes out."

Ryan Mattern pulled up satellite imagery. "There's an old barn in that zone. Hasn't been used in years. Here." He tapped the screen.

Tom leaned in. "That's the old Hutchinson place. Been empty since '09."

"That's gotta be it," Jake said.

Celab's voice was raw. "Then let's GO!"

"Confirmation first," Wade said, his hand on Celab's shoulder. "Daniel, get that drone over the barn. Thermal scan."

On the laptop screen, the drone's feed appeared—grainy infrared shifting to thermal imaging as it approached the structure.

"Coming up on the location now," Daniel said, adjusting the controls.

The barn appeared on screen. A heat signature glowed inside.

"There!" Ryan Mattern pointed. "Single heat signature. Human-sized. On the ground."

Caroline let out a sob. Sarah held her.

Jr.'s voice cracked. "Is he moving?"

"Barely. Looks like... yeah, he's alive. Movement's minimal but it's there."

Celab slammed his fist on the table. "Then let's GO!"

"Wait." Billy Renzo was scanning a different screen. "I'm checking the surveillance footage again. That truck—I got a better angle." He pulled up the enhanced image. "Plate reads 4-Alpha-Tango-7-2-9. Registered to Dale Hoskins, Laredo."

Wade pulled out his phone. "Ryan, Wilson—get that plate out to every unit in three counties. I want roadblocks on every highway heading south and west."

Wilson Nelson's voice crackled through the radio. "On it, Dad."

"What about the barn?" Robert demanded. "My nephew is in there tied up and—"

"We're going," Tom said, grabbing his rifle. "Wade, you coming?"

Wade nodded. "I'll coordinate the roadblocks from the field. Let's move."

Pops was already headed for the door. "Anybody not going, stay the hell out of the way."

Jr. grabbed his iPad and tactical pack. "We're coming too."

"Boys—" Josh started.

"We know that equipment better than anyone," Jr. said. "And Colt's gonna need help getting untied." His voice was steady but his eyes were fierce. "We're going."

Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez were already grabbing their gear.

Pops stopped them at the door. "Hold up." He pulled four pistols from his gun safe—Glocks, well-maintained. "You boys are going into a hot zone. Take these."

He handed them out one by one. Jr. took his without hesitation, checked the magazine, holstered it.

"Yes sir," Billy Renzo said.

"Thank you, Pops," Daniel added.

"Radio headsets," Jr. said, pulling four from the equipment rack. "Sync them to the open channel, not encrypted. We need to coordinate with everyone."

The boys quickly synced their headsets to match the iPad network, testing the connection.

"Command, this is Jr. Radio check."

Sarah's voice came through clearly from the command center. "We read you, Jr."

Tom nodded once. "Let's move."

The yard exploded with activity. Men and boys loading into trucks, checking weapons, radios crackling with updates.

The women gathered at the command center—Sarah and Caroline at the main screens, Rebecca and her sisters Edna and Anna Nelson monitoring the thermal feeds, Mary Nelson coordinating communications. Mrs. Renzo, Mrs. Mattern, and Mrs. Rodriguez arrived within minutes, adding their support to the vigil.

"We'll keep the channel open," Sarah said into the radio. "You bring our boy home."

"Yes ma'am," Tom's voice came back.

Caroline gripped Sarah's hand, watching the thermal signature on screen. "Bring him home."

Engines roared to life.

The convoy rolled out—Tom and Pops in the lead truck, Robert and Celab right behind them, Jr. and the wiz kids in the third truck with their equipment and iPads, Wade and his deputies bringing up the rear.

Jr. kept his eyes on his iPad, tracking the drone feed. "Thermal's still active. He's there."

"How long?" Billy Renzo asked from the driver's seat.

"Twenty-three minutes at this speed," Jr. said. "Terrain's rough out there."

In the back, Daniel had the drone controller. "I'm keeping overhead coverage. Nobody's getting in or out of that barn without us knowing."

Ryan Mattern's radio crackled. "All units, this is Deputy Wilson Nelson. Roadblock established on Highway 83 south. We got eyes on a beat-up Chevy matching the description. Two males inside. We're moving to intercept."

Wade's voice came through. "Do NOT let them run. Box them in."

Jr. looked at his friends. "They're gonna get them."

"Good," Daniel said darkly.

On the iPad screen, the thermal signature shifted slightly.

Colt was still fighting.

Chapter 9: Breaking Point

Colt didn't know how long he'd been on his back. Minutes? Hours? Time had dissolved into nothing but pain.

The branch beneath him crushed his bound biceps with his full body weight. Every breath was agony. His shoulders felt like they were tearing apart. The ropes around his wrists had gone from cutting pain to numbness, and he didn't know which was worse.

Move. You have to move.

He tried to shift his weight, but the hogtie kept him locked in position. His boots were still pulled tight to his wrists, his spine arched backward.

The radio was still clutched in his numb fingers. He'd managed to hit the button once. They'd heard him.

But are they coming? How long will it take?

Another wave of pain rolled through his arms and Colt screamed into the gag, the sound muffled and desperate.

I can't stay like this. I'll pass out. I'll die here.

He tested the branch again, trying to feel for any weakness. The wood was thick, green enough that it had bent under pressure but hadn't snapped.

But I've been on it for hours. Crushing it. Grinding it into the dirt.

Colt took as deep a breath as the gag would allow and jerked his body violently to the side.

The branch creaked.

He did it again, throwing all his weight, using the leverage of the hogtie to twist. Pain exploded through his shoulders but he didn't stop.

CRACK.

The branch splintered beneath him.

Colt gasped, tears streaming down his face. He twisted again, feeling the wood give way more. Another jerk. Another crack.

The branch broke in half.

His arms were still bound to the pieces, still immobilized, but the rigid bar across his back was gone. He could move.

The hogtie. Get out of the hogtie.

Colt rolled onto his side, panting through his nose. His fingers were swollen and numb behind his back, barely responsive. He felt for the rope connecting his ankles to his wrists, found the knot.

Come on. Come on.

His fingers fumbled at it, clumsy and slow. The rope was tight from hours of strain. He picked at it, working the knot, feeling for any give.

One loop loosened.

There.

He kept working, his breath coming in ragged gasps. Another loop. The rope slackened.

The hogtie came free.

Colt's legs dropped to the ground and he cried out in relief and pain as his cramped muscles released. For a moment he just lay there, shaking.

No. Keep moving.

His boots. The rope connecting his ankles was still tied, and with his hands bound behind him through his belt loops, he couldn't reach to untie them.

But I can slip out of my boots.

Colt worked his feet, pushing one boot off with the other. It took minutes that felt like hours, but finally his right foot came free. Then his left. The rope fell away with his boots.

He pushed himself up onto his knees, then to his feet. His legs nearly gave out—how long had he been tied?—but he steadied himself against the barn wall.

The branch. Get it off.

The broken pieces were still tied to his upper arms, the ropes frapping them tight. Colt wiggled his shoulders, working his arms back and forth despite the screaming pain. The branch pieces shifted. He kept moving, grinding through the agony, and slowly the ropes began to slide down his biceps.

Down to his elbows.

Down to his forearms.

Down to his wrists, where they bunched up with the rope already binding him there.

The branch pieces fell to the ground with a clatter.

Colt stood there panting, hands still bound behind him at the wrists, the rope still threaded through his belt loops, but his arms were free of the branch.

The radio was still clutched in his hands behind his back. He could feel it.

I have to get outside. Have to see if anyone's coming.

Colt stumbled toward the barn door, still gagged, hands still bound behind him, barefoot. He kicked at the door with his foot until it swung open.

Sunlight hit him like a fist.

And there, in the sky above—

A drone.

Colt's heart lurched. He looked up at it, squinting against the sun, and raised his bound hands behind him as high as he could, waving the radio.

Then he fumbled for the emergency button and pressed it again. Three long pushes.

"911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt."

He stood there in the doorway, barefoot and swaying, watching the drone circle above him.

They see me. They're coming.

Colt turned back into the barn, grabbed his boots, forced his swollen feet back into them despite the pain. Then he was moving again, out of the barn, into the open.

He could hear engines in the distance now. Trucks.

Run.

Colt started running toward the sound, hands still bound behind him, gagged, every step sending pain through his cramped legs but he didn't stop.

The drone followed overhead.

And in the distance, dust trails rose on the horizon.

They were coming.

Chapter 10: Second Signal

In the command center, the mechanical voice cut through again:

"911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt. 911 Emergency. Colt."

Caroline's hands flew to her mouth. "He hit it again! He's—"

"He's moving!" Rebecca shouted, staring at the thermal feed. "Look! The signature's moving!"

Sarah leaned over the screen. The heat signature that had been stationary on the barn floor was now upright. Mobile.

"Oh my God," Mary Nelson breathed. "He got himself free."

Mrs. Renzo grabbed the radio. "Tom! Tom, are you getting this? Colt's moving!"

Tom's voice crackled back, tight with emotion. "We heard it. We're five minutes out!"

On the iPad screen, the drone feed showed a figure stumbling out of the barn. White undershirt. Jeans. Boots.

"There he is!" Edna Nelson pointed. "That's him!"

Caroline was crying, her hand gripping Sarah's so tight it hurt. "He's on his feet. He's on his feet."

The figure on screen raised his arms behind his back—still bound—waving something at the drone.

"He sees the drone," Rebecca said, her voice breaking. "He knows we're coming."

Anna Nelson wiped her eyes. "He's running. Look, he's running toward them."

Mrs. Mattern keyed her radio. "Ryan, baby, can you see him? Is he okay?"

Ryan Mattern's voice came through from the convoy. "Thermal shows he's mobile. Dad, he's heading northeast from the barn. Looks like he's running toward the access road."

Jr.'s voice cut in, fierce and steady. "We see him. Dad, turn left at the next fork. We can intercept."

"Copy that," Tom replied.

On screen, the tiny figure kept moving, stumbling but not stopping.

Mary Nelson put her arm around Caroline. "That boy's a fighter."

"He's a Benson," Sarah said, tears streaming down her face. "Bring him home."

Chapter 11: Convergence

Tom saw him first.

A figure in the distance, stumbling across the scrubland, hands behind his back, moving toward them.

"THERE!" Tom slammed on the brakes and pointed.

The convoy skidded to a stop, dust billowing. Doors flew open before the trucks fully stopped moving.

"COLT!" Robert was out and running, rifle forgotten.

Celab was right behind him, sprinting across the uneven ground.

Colt saw them and his legs nearly gave out. He kept moving, kept pushing forward, and then Robert reached him and caught him before he fell.

"I got you. I got you, son." Robert's arms wrapped around him, careful of his bound hands. "Jesus Christ, we got you."

Celab crashed into them both, his hands shaking as he reached for the gag. "Hold still. Hold still, I got it."

He untied the cloth, pulled the rag from Colt's mouth. Colt gasped, coughing, trying to speak but nothing came out but a raw croak.

"Don't talk," Robert said. "Just breathe."

Tom and Pops arrived next, Jake and Billy right behind them.

"Get his hands," Tom said, pulling out his knife. "Careful now."

He cut through the rope threaded through Colt's belt loops first, then the bindings at his wrists. The rope fell away and Colt's arms dropped to his sides. He cried out—his shoulders screaming from hours locked in position.

"Easy. Easy." Pops steadied him, his rough hand on Colt's shoulder. "You're okay now, boy. You're okay."

Jr. and the wiz kids came running up, iPads and equipment forgotten in the trucks.

"Holy shit," Billy Renzo breathed, staring at the rope burns on Colt's wrists, the blood on his arms.

Jr. couldn't speak. He just stood there, staring at Colt, his face pale.

Colt looked at him and managed a weak grin. "Sorry... about your... chores."

Jr. let out a sound between a laugh and a sob and stepped forward, gripping Colt's shoulder. "You stupid asshole."

"They thought... I was you," Colt rasped.

"I know." Jr.'s voice cracked. "I saw the pictures. I thought—"

"I'm okay." Colt swayed on his feet. "I'm okay."

Jake snorted. "You look like hell, brother."

"Feel worse," Colt said.

Billy grinned through his tears. "You broke yourself out. That's the most Benson thing I've ever seen."

"Beaumont," Colt corrected, but he was smiling.

"Same thing," Pops growled, pulling Colt into a rough hug. "Same goddamn thing."

Wade's voice crackled through the radios. "All units, suspects in custody. Repeat, suspects in custody. Roadblock was successful. We got them."

A cheer went up from the group.

Celab's hand tightened on Colt's shoulder. "They got them. You hear that? They got the bastards."

Colt nodded, his legs finally giving out. Robert and Celab caught him, lowered him to the ground.

"Get him some water," Tom ordered.

Daniel Rodriguez was already there with a bottle. Colt drank, coughed, drank more.

Ryan Mattern was on his iPad. "Command, we have Colt. Repeat, we have Colt. He's mobile, conscious, talking. Heading home now."

Through the radio, they heard the women's voices—Sarah and Caroline crying, Rebecca shouting updates, all of them talking at once.

"We see you!" Sarah's voice came through. "The drone feed—we see you! Bring him home!"

Tom keyed his radio. "On our way. ETA twenty minutes."

They helped Colt to his feet, supporting him between Robert and Celab as they walked back to the trucks.

"Can you make it?" Robert asked quietly.

"Yeah." Colt's voice was stronger now. "Yeah, I can make it."

Pops walked beside them, rifle over his shoulder, cigar back in his mouth. "Damn kidnappers grabbed the wrong kid. Bet they shit themselves when they figured that out."

"They left me," Colt said. "Tied to a branch and just... left."

"Good," Jake said darkly. "Means Wade's boys get them instead of us."

"How'd you get free?" Jr. asked, walking on Colt's other side.

Colt glanced at him. "Broke the branch. Untied the hogtie. Got to the radio."

"While tied up?" Billy Renzo asked, incredulous.

"Had to roll onto my back. Crushed my arms under the branch to reach it." Colt's voice was matter-of-fact, but his hands were still shaking.

The group went quiet.

"Jesus," Daniel muttered.

They reached the trucks. Robert and Celab helped Colt into the back seat of their truck, climbing in on either side of him.

Tom looked back at the old barn in the distance, then at Wade's deputies who'd arrived to process the scene.

"Let's go home," he said.

The convoy turned around, engines rumbling to life.

Colt leaned against his uncle's shoulder, Celab's hand gripping his, and closed his eyes.

They were going home.

Chapter 12: King for a Day

The convoy rolled into the Benson Ranch to find every light in the house blazing and what looked like half the county waiting in the yard.

The moment Robert's truck stopped, Caroline was there, yanking the door open, pulling Colt into her arms before he could even stand.

"Oh God. Oh God, baby, I thought—" She couldn't finish, just held him tight while Robert wrapped his arms around them both.

Sarah was right behind her, then the Nelson sisters, Mrs. Renzo, Mrs. Mattern, Mrs. Rodriguez—all of them crowding in, touching Colt's face, his shoulders, reassuring themselves he was real.

"Alright, alright, give the boy some air!" Rebecca pushed through, practical nurse mode fully engaged. "Inside. Now. I need to clean those rope burns before they get infected."

She grabbed Colt by the elbow and marched him toward the house like a drill sergeant. The crowd parted.

"Yes ma'am," Colt managed, shooting a help-me look back at the guys.

Jake grinned. "Commander Rebecca's got you now, brother. You're in more danger than you were with the kidnappers."

"Shut up, Jake," Rebecca called over her shoulder without looking back.

Inside, Rebecca had already set up a field hospital in the kitchen—antiseptic, gauze, bandages spread across the table. She pointed at a chair. "Sit."

Colt sat.

She grabbed his wrists first, examining the deep rope burns, the raw skin where the bindings had cut through. Her jaw tightened but her hands were gentle as she cleaned the wounds.

"This is gonna sting."

"I can—OW! Jesus!"

"Don't be a baby." But her eyes were wet.

Caroline stood nearby, arms wrapped around herself, watching every move Rebecca made. Sarah brought warm water, clean towels.

Colt looked down at his filthy undershirt—dirt-stained, sweat-soaked, streaked with blood from his rope burns. He pulled it off with a wince and tossed it across the room to Jr., who'd been hovering in the doorway with the wiz kids.

"Here. Thought you might need a spare."

Jr. caught it, stared at it, then started laughing—the kind of laugh that comes after too much fear and too much relief. "You're an asshole."

"So I've been told."

"That thing's going in the trash," Billy said.

"Hell no," Pops appeared in the doorway, fresh cigar between his teeth. "That's going in a frame. 'The shirt that saved a Beaumont.' We'll hang it in the barn."

"You're not hanging my nephew's blood-soaked shirt in the barn," Caroline said, but she was smiling through her tears.

"Watch me." Pops took a long drag. "Boy's a goddamn legend now. Broke himself out of a hogtie and ran five miles with his hands tied behind his back. That shirt's earned retirement."

Rebecca finished bandaging Colt's wrists and moved to his upper arms, where the branch had ground into his biceps for hours. The bruising was already turning purple and black.

"You're gonna be sore for a week," she said quietly.

"Worth it."

She looked up at him, her eyes fierce. "Don't you ever scare us like that again."

"Yes ma'am."

She kissed his forehead and stepped back. "You're cleared. Now go eat. The ladies have been cooking for two hours."

Colt stepped into the dining room and stopped.

The table looked like Thanksgiving and Christmas combined. Platters of fried chicken, roast beef, mashed potatoes, corn, biscuits, three different pies. The ladies had multiplied food like the loaves and the fishes.

"Holy shit," Daniel Rodriguez breathed.

"Language," Mrs. Rodriguez said mildly, setting down another bowl of gravy.

"Sorry, Mama."

In the corner of the room, Pops had already set up his whiskey and beer bar—bottles of Jack Daniels, Jim Beam, Maker's Mark lined up like soldiers, with cases of beer stacked underneath.

"That's for after dinner," Pops announced. "And only for those of us who earned it today."

Jr. raised an eyebrow. "Does that include us?"

Pops grinned around his cigar. "You boys ran tactical support, deployed drones, and helped bring one of our own home. You're damn right it includes you."

Tom shot his father a look. "They're sixteen."

"And they did a man's job today." Pops pulled out a bottle of Jack Daniels. "One drink won't kill 'em. Probably."

Sarah sighed. "Just don't let them drive anywhere."

"They're sleeping over," Jr. said quickly. "Billy, Ryan, and Daniel are staying in the frat house."

"Convenient," Jake muttered, grinning.

They ate like starving wolves—Colt especially, realizing he hadn't eaten since breakfast. The banter started slow but built as the food settled and the adrenaline faded.

"So Colt," Billy Renzo said, loading his third helping of mashed potatoes. "Next time we ask you to cover fence duty, maybe don't get kidnapped?"

"I'll try to pencil that in."

"Seriously though," Ryan Mattern added. "You broke a branch with your body weight. That's some superhero shit."

"It was either that or die in a barn," Colt said. "Didn't seem like much of a choice."

Jr. was quiet, pushing food around his plate. Finally he looked up. "They thought you were me."

The table went quiet.

"Yeah," Colt said.

"If I hadn't gone to town—"

"Then they would've grabbed you instead," Colt cut him off. "And you would've done the same thing I did."

"I don't know about that."

"I do." Colt's voice was firm. "You're a Benson. You would've fought."

Pops raised his beer. "Damn right he would've. And so did you. That's what family does."

The meal wound down and the women started clearing plates, shooing the men away when they tried to help.

"Go on," Sarah said. "Y'all have your celebration. We'll handle this."

Pops was already herding the boys toward the frat house, bottles clinking in his arms. "Come on, heroes. Time to properly commemorate this clusterfuck."

The frat house was exactly as they'd left it that morning—bunk beds unmade, boots scattered, the floorboards hiding their secret beer stash. But now it felt different. Heavier. Like a place where something important had happened.

Pops set the Jack Daniels on the makeshift table between the bunks and started pouring shots into whatever clean glasses he could find. The boys settled in—Colt on his mattress between the bunks, Jr. and Jake and Billy and Celab on the lower bunks, the wiz kids cross-legged on the floor.

"Alright," Pops said, handing out shots. "Today was shit. But we got our boy back. Wade's boys got the bastards who took him. And we proved once again that you don't fuck with this family."

He raised his glass. "To Colt. The toughest Beaumont-Benson hybrid Texas has ever seen."

"To Colt!" they all echoed, downing their shots.

Colt grimaced as the whiskey burned. "Jesus, Pops."

"That's the good stuff, boy. Show some respect."

The drinking settled into a slow, easy rhythm. Pops poured another round, then another, but paced them out, letting the conversation flow between.

"When I saw those pictures," Jr. said quietly, staring at his glass, "with my name on them... I thought I was gonna throw up."

"I did throw up," Celab admitted. "Right after I punched the barn."

Jake laughed. "Yeah, we saw. You put a hole clean through."

"Worth it."

"How bad was it?" Billy Renzo asked Colt. "Really."

Colt was quiet for a moment, rolling his glass between his bandaged hands. "The worst part wasn't the pain. It was thinking nobody knew where I was. That I was just... gone."

"But you got to the radio," Ryan Mattern said.

"Yeah." Colt smiled. "And you guys found me."

"Damn right we did," Pops said, refilling glasses. "That's what the consortium's for. One of us goes down, we all come running."

Daniel raised his glass. "To the consortium."

"To the consortium!"

The conversation drifted—stories from the search, Wade's roadblock takedown, the moment the drone spotted Colt running. The whiskey flowed, the beer came out from under the floorboards, and gradually the tone shifted from relief to something looser. Giddier.

Jr. started imitating Celab punching the barn. "THEY HAVE COLT!" boom boom boom

"Shut up," Celab laughed, shoving him.

"I'm just saying, you did more damage to that barn than the kidnappers did to Colt."

"That barn deserved it."

Jake leaned back against his bunk. "Remember when Colt was doing his Jr. impression this morning? 'Get your ass to the south pasture'?"

"Oh God," Jr. groaned.

"That's literally what got him grabbed," Billy said. "He was too good at being you."

"Method acting," Colt deadpanned.

Pops poured another round, slower now, watching the boys with something like pride. "You know what today proved?"

"That kidnappers are idiots?" Daniel offered.

"That too." Pops grinned. "But also that you boys—all of you—are ready. When shit went sideways, you didn't panic. You ran toward the danger. That's what men do."

Jr. looked at the wiz kids. "We did good work today."

"Hell yeah we did," Billy Renzo said.

The night drifted on, the whiskey and beer settling into their bones, making everything warm and soft-edged. They told the story over and over, each retelling adding new details, new jokes.

Eventually, one by one, they started to fade. Daniel dozed off against Ryan's shoulder. Jake's eyes drooped. Billy Renzo was smiling at nothing.

Colt lay back on his mattress, staring up at the bottom of Jr.'s bunk, Celab's hand gripping his shoulder from the bunk above.

"You good?" Celab murmured.

"Yeah," Colt said. "I'm good."

Pops drained the last of his Jack Daniels and stood, swaying only slightly. "Alright, boys. King for a day has to rest. We'll clean this mess up tomorrow."

He stopped at the door, looked back at them all—sprawled across bunks and floor, bandaged and drunk and safe.

"Proud of you boys," he said gruffly. "Every damn one of you."

And then he was gone, leaving them in the warm darkness of the frat house, where the floorboards hid their secrets and family meant everything.

Colt closed his eyes and let sleep take him.

He was home.