Friday, December 5, 2025

Branded!

 


Chapter 1: A Normal Day

The knock on the frat house door came at exactly 5:15 AM, as it did every morning. Not a polite knock. Three sharp raps that could wake the dead.

"Rise and shine, you lazy sumbitches!" Pops' gravelly voice cut through the darkness from the hallway. "Daylight's burning!"

Billy groaned from the top bunk, pulling his pillow over his head. Next to him, Jake didn't even stir. On the opposite bunk, Celeb sat up immediately, rubbing his eyes. Colt, the seventeen-year-old on the mattress wedged between the two bunks, just rolled over.

From the bottom bunk below Billy, Jr.'s voice came out muffled: "It's still dark out, Pops."

"Don't sass me, boy. I was humping through rice paddies before you were a twinkle in your daddy's eye. Now get your asses up!"

The door swung open and Pops stood there in his doorway from his bedroom next door, seventy-six years old and still built like a fence post. He wore his standard uniform: worn Wranglers, a pearl-snap shirt, and boots that had seen three decades of ranch work. A cigar hung unlit from the corner of his mouth.

"Billy! Jake! I ain't gonna tell you twice!"

"We're up, we're up," Jake muttered, swinging his legs over the side of his bunk.

"Like hell you are." Pops flipped on the overhead light. All five boys groaned in unison.

Billy squinted against the brightness and caught Pops grinning. The old man loved this part of his morning routine.

"Breakfast in twenty minutes. Your mama's making biscuits and gravy, and if you're late, I'm eating your portion." Pops pointed the cigar at each of them. "That means you too, Colt. Get that Louisiana ass in gear."

"Yes sir, Pops," Colt mumbled, his Cajun accent thick with sleep.

Pops headed toward the stairs, his boots heavy on the second-floor hallway. The entire upstairs belonged to them—the frat house, the command center next door, and Pops' room at the end. Their own little kingdom above the main house.

Billy dropped down from his bunk and nearly landed on Jr., who was still sprawled in the bottom bed.

"Move it, Jr. You heard the man."

"I'm sixteen. Child labor laws, Uncle Billy."

"Child labor laws don't apply on a ranch, genius. Besides, you're on the payroll now. That means Pops owns your ass at 5:15 AM."

Jr. grinned and kicked off his covers. "At least I get paid to be abused. You do it for free."

Jake threw a pillow at him. "Shut up and get dressed before Pops comes back."

The five of them moved in practiced chaos—grabbing jeans and shirts from various piles on the floor, fighting over the small bathroom, brushing teeth, and splashing water on their faces. Celeb found a six-pack of beer under the loose floorboard near his bunk and held it up.

"Breakfast beer, anyone?"

"At five-thirty in the morning?" Billy shook his head. "You trying to get us killed? Put that back before Mama finds it."

"Pops wouldn't care," Jake said.

"Pops isn't the one who'll whip our asses. Mama is."

Celeb reluctantly stashed the beer back under the floorboard.

By 5:35, all five of them thundered down the stairs and tumbled into the kitchen where the smell of coffee, bacon, and fresh biscuits filled the air. The long wooden table was already crowded. Tom and Sarah sat at one end—their bedroom was just off the living room, so they were always first to the kitchen. Pops took his usual seat at the head of the table with a mug of coffee spiked with what everyone pretended was just cream.

Ray emerged from the extension hallway that led to his room and the finance office, already dressed and carrying his tablet—probably reviewing feed costs or cattle futures. Josh came from the opposite direction, from the kitchen extension where he and Rebecca had their own space. He stood by the counter with his coffee, looking alert and ready despite the early hour.

Rebecca, Josh's wife, was pouring orange juice. She worked night shifts at Kings County Hospital and had just gotten home an hour ago, but she still insisted on being there for family breakfast.

"Morning, boys," Sarah said, her eyes soft with affection as the frat house crew filed in. "Billy, you look like you got dragged through a knothole backwards."

"Thanks, Mama. Love you too."

Jake dropped into his usual chair. "We'd look better if Pops didn't wake us up in the middle of the night."

"Middle of the night?" Pops barked. "Son, when I was in 'Nam, we were on patrol by 0400. You boys got it easy."

"Here we go," Ray muttered without looking up from his tablet.

"Don't you 'here we go' me, boy. You little shits don't know how good you got it. Three hots and a cot, no Charlie shooting at your ass—"

"Pops," Sarah warned. "Language."

"—shooting at your rear end," Pops corrected himself, completely unrepentant. He winked at Jr. and the younger boys, who were grinning.

Sarah set a massive platter of biscuits and gravy in the center of the table, followed by eggs, bacon, and hash browns. The family descended on it like locusts.

"So what's the plan today, Josh?" Tom asked between bites.

Josh set down his coffee and pulled out a small notebook. As general manager, he coordinated all the ranch operations. "We've got fence repairs on the north pasture—Jake, I want you and Celeb on that. Ray, you're meeting with the Beaumont and Nelson families this afternoon about the feed order for the consortium."

Ray nodded, still focused on his tablet.

"Colt, you're with me checking the water pumps on the east side. Jr., you're helping your grandma and the wiz kids in the command center—I want that new satellite system fully tested before the weekend."

Jr. fist-pumped. "Yes! Tech day."

"Don't get too excited. You're also mucking out stalls after lunch."

Jr.'s face fell. "Aw, man."

"What about me?" Billy asked.

Josh consulted his notes. "You're solo today. Need you to ride out to the south ridge and check on that herd we moved yesterday. Make sure they've got enough water, count heads, look for any injuries or strays. Should take you most of the morning."

"Solo?" Jake said. "Why can't I go with him? Celeb can handle fence repairs."

"Because I need you both in different places," Josh replied. "You two work together fine, but I've got a full day of assignments to cover."

Billy and Jake exchanged looks but didn't argue.

"Besides," Josh continued with a grin, "you both could use a day apart. Give the rest of us a break from the twin act."

"We're not twins," they said in unison, then glared at each other.

The table erupted in laughter.

"See?" Josh said. "That's exactly what I'm talking about."

Pops chuckled and took a long pull from his spiked coffee. "You boys are something else. Reminds me of me and my brother back in the day. Best friends and worst enemies all at once."

Sarah reached over and squeezed Pops' weathered hand. "We appreciate having all you boys together. Not every family is this lucky."

"Damn right," Pops said.

"Language!"

By six o'clock, the table was cleared and everyone was heading out to start their day. Billy grabbed his hat from the hook by the door and checked his belt—knife, phone, the small satellite communicator that Jr. had programmed for the consortium's 911 system.

Jake caught him at the door. "Hey, be careful out there alone."

Billy punched his shoulder. "It's the south ridge, not Afghanistan. I'll be fine."

"Yeah, well. Just saying."

"You going soft on me?"

"Never." Jake grinned. "Just want you alive so I can keep beating you at everything."

"In your dreams."

They clasped hands briefly—their usual goodbye—and Billy headed out into the cool Texas morning. The sun was just starting to paint the horizon pink and gold. He could hear the horses in the stable, the distant lowing of cattle, the familiar sounds of the ranch waking up.

It was going to be a good day.

He had no idea it would be his last normal day for a very long time.

Chapter 2: The Capture

The south ridge was quiet except for the wind moving through the tall grass and the occasional low of a steer. Billy had been checking the herd for about two hours, counting heads, looking for injuries, making sure the water troughs were full. Everything looked good. The cattle had settled into the new pasture just fine.

He was making notes on his phone when he heard the truck.

Odd. Nobody's supposed to be out here today.

Billy looked up and saw a white pickup bouncing across the ridge toward him. Not one he recognized. He shielded his eyes against the morning sun, trying to make out the driver, but the windshield caught the glare.

The truck slowed as it approached, pulling up about twenty feet away. Two men got out—both wearing jeans, work shirts, and ball caps pulled low. Billy didn't recognize either of them.

"Morning," Billy called out, keeping his tone friendly but cautious. "Y'all lost?"

The driver, a stocky guy with a thick beard, grinned. "Nope. Right where we need to be."

Something in his voice made Billy's stomach tighten. His hand drifted toward his belt where his knife was sheathed.

"This is private property," Billy said, his voice firmer now. "Benson Ranch. You're trespassing."

"We know," the second man said. He was taller, leaner, with cold eyes that didn't blink.

Run.

The thought hit Billy like a lightning bolt, but before he could move, the bearded man pulled a gun from behind his back.

"Don't," the man said simply.

Billy froze. His heart hammered in his chest. The satellite phone. Hit the emergency button.

His hand moved slowly toward his belt.

"Touch that and I'll put a bullet in your leg," the bearded man said. "Nice and slow, cowboy. Take it off and toss it over here."

Billy's mind raced. Stall. Think. There's got to be a way out of this.

"What do you want?" Billy asked, his voice steadier than he felt.

"You," the tall man said.

Billy's blood went cold.

"Me? Why?"

"Money," the bearded man said with a shrug. "Your family's got plenty. They'll pay to get you back. Now quit asking questions and throw me that phone. And the knife."

If I give them up, I've got nothing.

But the gun was pointed right at his chest. Billy slowly unclipped the satellite phone and his knife, tossing them into the dirt near the men's feet. The tall man picked them up and pocketed them.

"Good boy," the bearded man said. "Now turn around. Hands behind your back."

"Look, you don't have to—"

"Turn. Around."

Billy turned slowly, his mind still scrambling for options. Scream? No one's close enough to hear. Fight? Not with a gun on me. Run? I'd be dead before I took three steps.

The tall man grabbed Billy's wrists and yanked them behind his back. Billy felt the rough bite of rope cutting into his skin as the man tied his wrists together—tight, professional knots that didn't give at all when Billy tested them.

But they didn't stop there. More rope came out, wrapping around Billy's arms and torso, pinning his arms to his sides. The rope circled his chest, his shoulders, his upper arms—layer after layer, each loop pulled tight until Billy could barely expand his chest to breathe.

"Please," Billy said, hating the tremor in his voice. "You don't have to do this. We can figure something out—"

A hand shoved him forward and he stumbled, barely keeping his balance. The bearded man grabbed his shoulder and spun him around.

"Open your mouth."

"What—"

The man slapped him hard across the face. Billy's head snapped to the side, his cheek burning, ears ringing.

"I said open your mouth."

Billy's eyes watered from the blow, but he clenched his jaw shut. The tall man grabbed his hair from behind and yanked his head back. Billy gasped in pain and the bearded man shoved a rag into his mouth—deep, making him gag. Before Billy could spit it out, duct tape was being wrapped around his head, over his mouth, sealing the gag in place.

Then more tape. Over his eyes. Around and around his head, covering his cap, sealing him in complete darkness.

Can't see. Can't breathe. Can't breathe.

Panic exploded through him. Billy tried to suck air through his nose, his chest heaving against the ropes.

"Relax, kid," the bearded man's voice came from somewhere in the darkness. "Breathe through your nose. You'll be fine."

Fine? I'm tied up, blind, in the middle of nowhere with two armed men and you're telling me I'll be fine?

Billy felt hands on his ankles—more rope wrapping around them, cinching them together. He tested the bonds—nothing. He couldn't move his hands, couldn't move his arms, couldn't kick, couldn't scream, couldn't see.

Jake. Josh. Pops. Somebody's got to notice I'm missing.

But who? Josh said it would take most of the morning. It wasn't even nine o'clock yet. No one would come looking for hours.

The bearded man grabbed Billy under the arms and the tall man grabbed his legs. They carried him—Billy had no idea where, everything was black—and then dumped him onto something hard and metal. The truck bed. Billy's shoulder hit hard and pain shot through his arm.

This is really happening. This is really happening.

He felt something heavy thrown over him—a tarp—and heard it being tied down. The darkness somehow got darker, more suffocating.

The heat hit him almost immediately.

The Texas sun had been warming the metal truck bed all morning, and now Billy was trapped under a thick tarp with no ventilation, blind, gagged, bound. Sweat broke out across his forehead, soaking into the duct tape wrapped around his head. His white undershirt was already damp, sticking to his skin.

Breathe. Just breathe. Through your nose. Stay calm.

But calm was impossible. The truck engine roared to life and Billy felt the vehicle lurch forward, bouncing across the rough terrain. Every bump sent Billy sliding across the truck bed, his tied body helpless to brace himself. His shoulder slammed into the wheel well. His head cracked against the metal.

How long? How far are they taking me?

The heat was suffocating. Sweat poured down his face, soaking his shirt until it clung to him like a second skin. Billy couldn't wipe his eyes, couldn't see anyway, couldn't do anything but lie there in the darkness and the heat and pray this would end.

The rag in his mouth tasted like oil and dirt. His jaw ached from being forced open. His wrists screamed where the rope cut into his skin. The ropes around his torso made every breath a struggle.

Jake. Mama. Pops. Somebody help me.

Billy tried to shift his position, tried to find some relief from the heat, but the ropes held him tight. Every movement just made the bonds dig in deeper.

Think. Focus. What would Pops do? What would Jake do?

But his mind was hazy from the heat and fear. All he could think about was the gun, the slap, the way the men had looked at him like he was cargo, not a person.

How much are they going to ask for? Will my family pay? Of course they will. They have to.

But what if something went wrong? What if these men got spooked and just—

Billy forced the thought away. He couldn't go there. Not yet.

The truck turned onto what felt like a paved road—smoother now, faster. Billy had no idea which direction they were heading. North? South? East? West? They could be taking him anywhere. He was completely blind, completely helpless.

Stay alive. That's all that matters. Stay alive until they find you.

The heat under the tarp was unbearable. Billy's breathing was too fast, too shallow. He tried to slow it down, tried to pull air through his clogged nose, but panic was taking over.

Don't pass out. Stay awake. You have to stay awake.

But the darkness, the heat, the pain—it was all too much. The truck bounced over something and Billy's head cracked against the metal again.

And then everything went black.


When Billy came to, the truck had stopped.

He didn't know how long he'd been out—minutes? Hours? He was still blind under the duct tape, still bound, still gagged. His head throbbed. His mouth was so dry he couldn't swallow. His white undershirt was completely soaked through with sweat, clinging to his skin.

He could hear voices outside, muffled through the tarp.

"...got him secure?"

"Yeah. Checked the ropes twice. He ain't going anywhere."

"Good. Let's get him inside before someone sees. And get the camera ready."

Camera? Inside where?

The tarp was yanked off and Billy felt the sun on his face—or what little he could feel through the duct tape. He still couldn't see anything. Just darkness.

"Still out?" one of the voices said.

"Nah, he's awake. I can see him breathing."

Hands grabbed him—rough, careless—and hauled him out of the truck. Billy's legs gave out when they tried to stand him up. He collapsed onto gravel, his knees hitting hard. A muffled sound escaped through the gag.

"Get up," the tall man's voice growled.

Billy tried, but his legs wouldn't cooperate. The circulation had been cut off too long. He felt hands grab him by the shirt and drag him forward. His boots scraped uselessly against the ground.

Where are they taking me? What are they going to do?

A door creaked open. The temperature dropped slightly—inside, then. They were taking him inside somewhere. Billy's heart pounded so hard he thought it might burst through his chest.

They dragged him across what felt like a wooden floor and then dumped him. Billy landed hard on his side, his bound hands crushed beneath him, the ropes around his torso cutting off what little air he could get. He groaned into the gag.

"Hold on," the bearded man's voice said. "Need to set up the shot first."

Shot? Camera. They said camera.

Billy heard footsteps, movement, something being set up. Then hands grabbed him again, rolling him onto his back. More hands on his arms—rough fingers pushing up the sleeves of his shirt, bunching them up past his elbows, exposing his shoulders.

Why? Why are they doing that?

A sick feeling settled in Billy's stomach. The exposed skin on his shoulders felt vulnerable, wrong. What were they planning?

"There. That's good," one of the men said. "Make sure you get his face. Well, what you can see of it with all that tape."

Billy heard a beep—a camera turning on. Even though he couldn't see it, he could feel it. Someone was recording him. Recording him tied up, blind, helpless on the floor.

No. No no no.

Billy shook his head frantically, tried to roll away, but there was nowhere to go. The ropes held him tight.

"Perfect," the bearded man said. "Keep rolling. This'll get their attention real quick."

And Billy realized with cold, sickening certainty that his family was going to see this. They were going to see him like this—bound, blind, helpless, terrified.

And this was only the beginning.

Chapter 3: First Blood

Billy lay on the dusty floor, his chest heaving as he tried to pull air through his nose. The duct tape over his eyes kept him in complete darkness. He could hear the two men moving around the room, their boots heavy on the old wooden floorboards.

Why did they push up my sleeves? What are they going to do to my shoulders?

The thought terrified him more than anything else. There was something deliberate about it, something planned. They weren't just tying him up—they were preparing him for something.

"Camera still rolling?" the bearded man asked.

"Yeah. Got a good angle on him."

The camera. They're recording this. Whatever they're about to do, they want my family to see it.

Billy's stomach churned. He thought about his mama seeing this, about Jake, about Pops. The shame was almost as bad as the fear.

"Please," Billy tried to say through the gag, but it came out as nothing more than a muffled grunt.

"What's that, cowboy?" the bearded man said, his voice mocking. "Can't hear you."

Billy heard footsteps approaching. Then a boot connected with his ribs.

The pain exploded through his side. Billy tried to curl up, to protect himself, but the ropes held him rigid. He couldn't move, couldn't shield himself, couldn't do anything but take it.

Another kick, this time to his back. Billy's body jerked against the bonds, a muffled scream trapped behind the gag.

Jake. Jake, where are you? Somebody help me.

"That's for making us drive all the way out to that ridge," the bearded man said. "You Bensons think you own half of Texas."

Another kick. Billy's head snapped forward, his face scraping against the rough wooden floor.

Stay conscious. Don't pass out. If you pass out, you don't know what they'll do.

But the pain was overwhelming. His ribs screamed. His back throbbed. Every breath sent sharp daggers through his chest.

"Alright, that's enough," the tall man said. "Save some for later. Let's give them what they're really gonna pay for."

What? What does that mean?

Billy heard movement again—something metallic scraping, a clinking sound. Then the smell hit him.

Smoke. And something else. Something acrid, burning.

No. No no no no.

"Hold him steady," the bearded man said.

Hands grabbed Billy's shoulders, pressing him flat against the floor. He tried to thrash, tried to roll away, but the ropes made it impossible. His bound arms and torso wouldn't let him move more than an inch.

What are they doing? What is that smell?

"This is gonna hurt," the tall man said, almost conversational. "But that's kind of the point."

Billy's mind was racing, panic flooding every thought. Fire? Are they going to burn me? The sleeves—they pushed up my sleeves so—

The searing heat touched his left shoulder and Billy's world exploded into white-hot agony.

He screamed into the gag—a sound he didn't recognize as human, didn't recognize as his own voice. The pain was beyond anything he'd ever experienced. It wasn't just burning—it was like his entire shoulder was being ripped apart, like every nerve in his body was on fire.

The branding iron pressed harder, held in place. One second. Two seconds. Three.

Billy thrashed against the ropes with strength he didn't know he had, his body convulsing, trying desperately to get away from the source of the pain. But the hands held him down, and the iron kept burning, burning, burning.

Make it stop make it stop make it stop—

Finally, the iron lifted.

Billy collapsed against the floor, his body shaking violently. Tears soaked into the duct tape covering his eyes. His shoulder felt like it was still on fire, the pain radiating down his arm, across his back, through his entire body.

He couldn't think. Couldn't process anything beyond the agony consuming him.

"Got it," the bearded man said, satisfaction in his voice. "Nice and clear. They'll see that mark real good."

A brand. They branded me like cattle.

The realization cut through the pain for just a moment. These men had marked him, scarred him permanently. Like he was property.

"Get a close-up of his shoulder," the tall man said. "Then we'll send it."

Billy felt the camera move closer, felt them adjusting his body to get a better angle. He couldn't stop shaking. His muffled sobs were the only sound he could make.

Mama. Jake. Pops. Please. Please come find me.

"Beautiful," the bearded man said. "His family's gonna lose their minds when they see this. Now let's get him trussed up proper and wait for their response."

More rope. Billy barely registered it as they pulled his ankles back toward his bound wrists, connecting them in a tight hogtie. Every movement sent fresh waves of pain through his branded shoulder.

Can't move at all now. Can't even shift position. Can't do anything.

"There we go," the tall man said. "Ain't going nowhere now, are you, cowboy?"

Billy heard their footsteps retreating, heard a door close. Then silence.

He lay there in the darkness, blind, gagged, hogtied, his shoulder screaming in agony. The smell of his own burnt flesh hung in the air.

How long until they notice I'm missing? How long until Jake realizes something's wrong? How long until they find me?

But he had no answers. Only pain, and darkness, and the terrifying certainty that this wasn't over.

Not even close.

Chapter 4: The Red Alert

Jr. was in the command center on the second floor, running diagnostics on the new satellite system, when the alert pinged on his screen.

Incoming video file. Unknown sender. Encrypted.

"That's weird," Jr. muttered, clicking to open it. The wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, and Daniel Rodriguez—were supposed to arrive in an hour to help with the testing.

The video loaded. Jr. hit play.

The image was shaky at first, then stabilized. It showed the interior of an old house—dusty, abandoned. Two men dragging someone across the floor. Someone bound with ropes, duct tape wrapped around their head, a white undershirt soaked with sweat.

Jr. leaned closer to the screen, his stomach tightening.

The men dumped the bound figure onto the floor. Hard. The person's body jerked from the impact, a muffled sound escaping.

Then Jr. saw the boots. The jeans. The build.

No. No no no.

"BILLY!" Jr. screamed, his hands flying to the keyboard.

On screen, one of the men kicked Billy in the ribs. Then again. And again. Billy's body convulsed with each blow, unable to protect himself, unable to fight back.

Jr.'s hands were shaking as he slammed the emergency alert button—the 911 system he and Billy had built together.

"911 EMERGENCY. BILLY BENSON. 911 EMERGENCY. BILLY BENSON. 911 EMERGENCY. BILLY BENSON."

The mechanical voice echoed through every satellite phone, every tablet, every device in the consortium network. Eighteen phones, sixteen tablets, all screaming the same message simultaneously.

Jr. couldn't look away from the screen. The men were doing something—moving around Billy, adjusting the camera angle. They pushed up Billy's sleeves, exposing his shoulders.

Why? What are they—

Then Jr. saw it. The branding iron, glowing red-hot.

"NO!" Jr. shouted at the screen, as if he could somehow stop it.

The iron pressed against Billy's shoulder.

Even through the gag, even through the video, Billy's scream was inhuman. His body thrashed against the ropes, convulsing in agony. The brand held for three seconds—three seconds that felt like an eternity.

When they pulled it away, Jr. could see the mark burned into Billy's skin. Clear. Deliberate. Permanent.

Jr. was crying now, tears streaming down his face, but he couldn't stop watching. The video showed a close-up of Billy's branded shoulder, then panned to his tape-covered face, his body still shaking violently.

Then the screen went black.

Text appeared: "We have Billy Benson. $2 million. Instructions to follow. Tell the police and he dies."

Jr. was already pulling up the surveillance system, his fingers flying across multiple keyboards. Camera feeds from across the ranch flooded the screens—every angle, every pasture, every road.

He heard footsteps thundering up the stairs. The door to the command center burst open.

"Jr.! What's happening?" Josh was there first, Rebecca right behind him. "The emergency alert—"

"They took Billy," Jr. choked out, his voice breaking. "They—they have him. They're hurting him."

"Who? Who has him?"

"I don't know! The video just came in—" Jr. pulled it up on the main screen.

Josh and Rebecca watched in horror as the video played again. Billy being dumped. Beaten. Branded.

Rebecca gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. Josh's face went white, then red with rage.

"Where is he? Can you trace it?"

"I'm trying—I'm pulling up everything—"

More footsteps on the stairs. Tom and Sarah burst in, then Ray, then Jake and Celeb still covered in dirt from the fence work.

"What's going on?" Sarah demanded. "The alert said—"

She saw the video playing on the screen. Her knees buckled. Tom caught her.

"Oh God. Oh God, that's my baby—"

Jake stared at the screen, watching his best friend—his brother in everything but blood—being tortured. His face went from confusion to horror to pure, incandescent rage.

"I'm gonna kill them," Jake said quietly. "I'm gonna find them and I'm gonna kill them."

"Jake—" Tom started.

"I'M GONNA KILL THEM!" Jake roared, slamming his fist into the wall. The drywall cracked.

Celeb grabbed Jake's shoulders, holding him back. "We're gonna get him back, brother. We're gonna get him back."

Pops appeared in the doorway, still holding his coffee mug, his face carved from stone. He'd seen the alert. He watched the video once without saying a word.

When it ended, he set down his mug carefully. "Jr., pull up every camera. Find out when Billy went missing and where. Ray, call Wade Nelson. Tell him to get here now with his boys. Tell him to come armed."

"Pops, they said no police—" Sarah sobbed.

"Wade's family, not police. Not right now." Pops' voice was cold, controlled—his combat voice. "Josh, get every able-bodied man in this consortium ready to move. Tom, check the armory. Make sure we've got everything we need."

"I'm going," Jake said, his voice shaking with fury.

"Damn right you are," Pops said. "But you're gonna follow orders and you're gonna think with your head, not your fists. You understand me, boy?"

Jake nodded stiffly.

Jr. was already pulling up footage, his hands still shaking. "Billy left for the south ridge at 6:15 this morning. That's the last time anyone saw him."

"South ridge," Josh repeated. "That's where I sent him. Solo." The guilt was thick in his voice.

"Not your fault," Pops said sharply. "Focus. Jr., can you track Billy's truck?"

"Already on it." Jr.'s fingers flew across the keyboard. "Billy's truck has GPS. If it's still out there, I can find it."

The command center door opened again. Sheriff Wade Nelson stood there with his sons Wilson and Ryan, all three armed. Edna was right behind them, her face pale.

"Someone want to tell me what the hell is going on?" Wade demanded. Then he saw the video frozen on the screen—the close-up of Billy's branded shoulder. "Jesus Christ."

"They want two million dollars," Jr. said, pulling up the ransom text. "Instructions to follow."

"We need to call the FBI—" Wade started.

"No." Pops' voice cut through the room like a knife. "Not yet. They said tell the police and Billy dies. Right now, we're family handling a family problem."

"Pops, I am the police—"

"Right now, you're Billy's uncle. You're Rebecca's father. You're part of this consortium." Pops met Wade's eyes. "I've seen hostage situations go sideways when too many people get involved. We find him first. Then we call in whoever we need."

Wade stared at the old Vietnam vet for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "Alright. But we do this smart. We do this right."

More footsteps on the stairs—the Beaumonts, Robert and Caroline, with Colt right behind them.

Then three sixteen-year-olds came barreling through the door, out of breath from running.

"Jr.! We got the alert—" Billy Renzo stopped short when he saw the video on the main screen. "Oh my God. Is that—"

"Billy," Jr. said, his voice cracking. "They took Billy."

Ryan Mattern and Daniel Rodriguez crowded around the monitors, their faces going pale as they saw the footage.

"Holy shit," Daniel whispered.

"Get over here," Jr. said, gesturing to the workstations. "All of you. I need help pulling surveillance, tracking the GPS, running analysis on the video metadata—"

The three wiz kids immediately split up, each taking a station, their fingers flying across keyboards. Despite their shock, they fell into the rhythm they'd practiced dozens of times—four minds working as one technical unit.

"Got Billy's truck location," Billy Renzo called out. "Still at south ridge. Sending coordinates to everyone's devices now."

"I'm pulling traffic camera feeds from County Road 12," Ryan Mattern said. "That's the closest paved road to the south ridge."

"Analyzing the video file," Daniel Rodriguez added. "Trying to strip metadata, see if there's any location data embedded—"

The parents of the wiz kids appeared in the doorway—the Renzos, Matterns, and Rodriguezes, all responding to the emergency alert. They took one look at their sons working frantically at the computers, at the video on the screen, and stayed quiet, letting the boys work.

Sarah was still crying, held up by Tom. Jake was pacing like a caged animal. Rebecca had her arms around Edna, who was staring at the screen in shock.

Jr. looked up from his monitors. "Got it! Billy's truck is still at the south ridge. Exactly where Josh sent him."

"They left his truck," Ray said. "Took him in their own vehicle."

"Can we get tire tracks? Any surveillance out there?" Wade asked.

"We've got cameras on the main access roads," Jr. said. "Billy Renzo, can you—"

"Already pulling it," Billy Renzo confirmed. "Footage from 6 AM to now on all consortium cameras."

A new alert pinged. Everyone froze.

Another message from the unknown sender.

Jr. opened it with shaking hands.

"You have 48 hours to get the money ready. We'll send instructions for the drop. Come alone. No police. No tricks. Or Billy dies."

Attached was another image. Billy, still hogtied, still blind with tape, curled on his side on that dusty floor. The brand on his shoulder raw and angry.

Sarah let out a broken sob.

Pops' jaw tightened. "Jr., you and your team—I want every piece of surveillance footage from every camera in this consortium from 6 AM until now. Every vehicle that came within five miles of our property. Wade, call your best deputies—the ones you trust with your life. Tell them to get here quietly. Josh, I want a list of everyone who knew Billy would be alone on that ridge today."

"That was just us," Josh said. "Just family. At breakfast."

"Then someone was watching. Or listening. Or got damn lucky." Pops turned to the room. "We've got 48 hours to find my great-grandson before these bastards decide whether he's worth keeping alive. Jr., you and your tech wizards find me that truck. Find me anything that tells us where they took him. The rest of you, we're gonna plan this like a military operation, because that's what it is. And we're not stopping until we bring Billy home."

"What about the money?" Ray asked quietly.

"We'll get it," Tom said. "Whatever it takes."

"Deploying drones now," Daniel Rodriguez called out. "Programming search grid based on south ridge location and estimated travel time."

"I want thermal and night vision capabilities active," Pops ordered. "If they've got him in an abandoned building, those drones will find the heat signature."

"On it," Ryan Mattern confirmed.

The command center erupted into controlled chaos—people making calls, the four tech wizards coordinating screens and systems, Wade organizing his sons and planning a search grid.

Jake stood at the window, staring out at the ranch, his hands clenched into fists.

"I'm coming, Billy," he whispered. "Hold on, brother. We're coming."

Chapter 5: The Gathering Storm

Sarah couldn't stop shaking.

She sat in the chair by the door, Tom's hand heavy on her shoulder, and watched the frozen image on the screen—her baby boy, bound and branded like an animal. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Billy's body convulsing as that iron burned into his skin. Heard the muffled scream that didn't sound human.

"We're getting him back," Tom said for the fifth time, his voice rough. But his hand trembled against her shoulder.

Josh paced near the windows, his face gray with guilt. "I sent him out there alone. I assigned him solo work. This is on me—"

"Shut up," Jake snarled from across the room. "Just shut the hell up, Josh. You want to beat yourself up? Fine. Do it after we get Billy back."

"Jake—" Tom started.

"No!" Jake spun toward his father, his eyes wild. "I'm done listening to everyone make excuses. Billy's out there getting tortured while we stand around talking!"

Pops stepped between them, his Vietnam-hardened face carved from stone. "Boy, you need to get your head straight right now. Rage is good—we're gonna need it. But stupid rage gets people killed." He grabbed Jake by the shoulders. "You want to help your brother? Then think. Focus. Because when we find these bastards, I need you sharp, not emotional."

Jake's chest heaved, but he nodded stiffly.

Edna sat in the corner, pale and silent. She hadn't spoken since the video ended. Rebecca crouched beside her, one hand on the girl's arm.

"Edna, honey—"

"I can't unsee it," Edna whispered, her voice breaking. "I can't—he was screaming, Rebecca. He was screaming and I couldn't help him."

Rebecca pulled the girl into a hug as she began to sob.

Sheriff Wade Nelson stood near the tech stations, his arms crossed, watching his nephews work. His sons Wilson and Ryan flanked him—both deputy sheriffs, both armed, both looking like caged wolves.

"We should call the FBI," Wade said, though his tone suggested he didn't believe it. "There are protocols—"

"Protocols get hostages killed," Pops cut in. "I've seen it. Vietnam. Embassy situations. You bring in too many agencies, too many jurisdictions, everyone's fighting over who's in charge while the victim bleeds out."

"This isn't a war zone, Pops."

"The hell it isn't." Pops' voice dropped to something cold and deadly. "That's my grandson out there. My blood. And I will burn this whole county to the ground before I let those bastards kill him."

The room went quiet.

Wade held Pops' gaze for a long moment, then nodded. "Forty-eight hours. If we don't have him by then, I'm making calls."

"Fair."

Chapter 6: The Second Video

Billy didn't know how long he'd been alone.

Time had lost all meaning in the darkness. He was still hogtied on the floor, still blind under layers of duct tape, still gagged. His left shoulder was on fire—a constant, screaming agony that radiated down his arm and across his back. Every breath was torture. The ropes around his torso made it impossible to expand his chest fully, and panic kept clawing at the edges of his mind.

Breathe. Just breathe. In through the nose. Out through the nose.

His white undershirt was soaked through with sweat, sticking to his skin. His mouth was so dry he couldn't swallow. The rag tasted like motor oil and dirt, and his jaw ached from being forced open for so long.

How long has it been? An hour? Two? More?

Billy had tried to keep track, counting seconds in his head, but the pain kept scattering his thoughts. And the fear. The overwhelming, suffocating fear that this was it. That he was going to die in this place, alone, and no one would find him in time.

No. Don't think like that. They're coming. Jake's coming. Pops is coming. They're looking for me right now.

But what if they weren't? What if no one had seen the video yet? What if his phone had died and the emergency alert never went out? What if—

Stop it. Focus. Stay alive. That's all that matters.

Billy tried to shift his position, tried to relieve the pressure on his branded shoulder, but the hogtie held him rigid. His wrists and ankles were connected by a short length of rope, pulling his body into an arch that made everything hurt. His muscles screamed. His joints ached.

Water. God, I need water.

His thoughts drifted to the frat house. To Jake in the bunk above him. To Jr. and Colt and Celeb. To breakfast this morning—had that really been this morning? It felt like a lifetime ago. Pops yelling at them to get up. Mama's biscuits and gravy. Josh giving out assignments.

"You're solo today."

If Jake had been with me, this wouldn't have happened. We always watch each other's backs. Always.

Guilt mixed with the fear. Maybe if he'd been more careful. Maybe if he'd seen them coming. Maybe if he'd fought harder—

The door creaked open.

Billy's whole body tensed. He heard boots on the wooden floor—two sets. The kidnappers were back.

Oh God. Oh God, what are they going to do now?

"Still alive, cowboy?" The bearded man's voice was slurred. Drunk. "Good. Can't collect on a dead hostage."

Billy heard the other man laugh. "Boss said we can have some fun with him. As long as he can still talk for the next video."

Next video? No. No no no—

Hands grabbed Billy and rolled him onto his back. He groaned into the gag as his branded shoulder hit the floor. Fresh pain exploded through him.

"Let's see how he looks," the tall man said. "Need to make sure the brand's nice and visible."

Rough fingers pushed up Billy's sleeve again, exposing the burned flesh. Billy flinched, expecting more pain, but they were just looking.

"Beautiful," the bearded man said. "Gonna make his family real motivated to pay up."

"You think they got the money yet?"

"Who cares? We ain't asking for the drop until tomorrow. Let 'em sweat a little. Let 'em think about what we might do to their precious boy."

The tall man kicked Billy in the ribs—not as hard as before, but hard enough to make Billy gasp into the gag.

"Boss wants another video," the bearded man said. "Something to really get their attention. Show 'em we mean business."

No. Please no.

"What'd you have in mind?"

"Same as before. But this time, we let him talk. Beg a little. Makes it more personal, you know?"

Billy's heart was hammering so hard he thought it might burst. They were going to take the gag off. Which meant he could scream. Could try to reason with them. Could—

Could beg them not to hurt you again.

The shame of that thought was almost as bad as the fear.

Hands grabbed the duct tape around his head. Billy braced himself, but nothing could prepare for the pain as they ripped the tape off—taking hair, skin, everything with it. He screamed as the tape came away from his eyes, from his mouth, the adhesive tearing at his skin.

Then the rag was yanked from his mouth.

Billy gasped, sucking in air, coughing, gagging. Light flooded his vision—blinding after so long in darkness. He squeezed his eyes shut, tears streaming down his face.

"Look at the camera, boy," the bearded man ordered.

Billy forced his eyes open, squinting against the light. The abandoned farmhouse came into focus—dusty, empty, old furniture covered in sheets. And the camera, pointed right at him. The red recording light blinking.

They're watching this. Mama. Jake. Everyone. They're going to see this.

"Tell 'em your name," the tall man said.

Billy's throat was so dry he could barely speak. "B-Billy. Billy Benson."

"Good. Now tell 'em what's gonna happen if they don't pay up."

Billy's mind raced. What do I say? What do they want me to say?

"I—I don't—"

The bearded man backhanded him across the face. Billy's head snapped to the side, blood filling his mouth.

"Try again."

"Please," Billy choked out. "Please, they'll pay. Whatever you want, they'll pay. Just—just don't hurt me again. Please."

I sound pathetic. I sound like a coward.

But the pain in his shoulder, the fear, the exhaustion—it was all too much. Pride didn't matter anymore. Survival mattered.

"Don't hurt you?" The bearded man laughed. "Son, we're just getting started. Show him, Carl."

The tall man—Carl—walked out of frame and came back holding something.

The branding iron. Still glowing red-hot.

"No," Billy whispered. "No, please. Please, I'm begging you—"

"Hear that?" The bearded man leaned close to the camera. "He's begging. And you know what? We don't give a shit. You want your boy back? Two million dollars. Tomorrow. Or we send him back in pieces."

"PLEASE!" Billy screamed, thrashing against the ropes. "DON'T! THEY'LL PAY! I SWEAR THEY'LL PAY! JUST DON'T—"

Carl grabbed Billy's right shoulder, pinning him down. The bearded man held the branding iron up to the camera, letting them see it clearly.

"This is what happens when people don't take us seriously," he said calmly.

Then he pressed the iron against Billy's right shoulder.

The scream that tore from Billy's throat wasn't human. It was the sound of a wounded animal, raw and primal and filled with agony beyond comprehension. His body convulsed, fighting the ropes with every ounce of strength he had left.

Make it stop make it stop make it stop please God make it stop—

One second. Two seconds. Three seconds. Four.

When they finally pulled the iron away, Billy was sobbing uncontrollably, his body shaking so violently he thought he might break apart.

"That's both shoulders now," the bearded man said conversationally, as if he'd just done some routine task. "Matched set. Real pretty."

Billy couldn't speak. Couldn't think. Could only sob and shake and pray this was a nightmare he'd wake up from.

The bearded man leaned over him, grabbing his hair and yanking his head up to face the camera.

"Forty-seven hours," he said. "Clock's ticking."

Then he shoved the rag back into Billy's mouth. Billy tried to fight it, tried to turn his head away, but he was too weak. The duct tape came next, wrapping around his head, sealing him in darkness again.

"Leave him," the bearded man said. "We'll check on him later. Maybe have some more fun."

Billy heard their boots retreating, heard the door slam shut. Then silence.

He lay on the floor, both shoulders burning with identical brands, his body broken and shaking. Tears soaked into the fresh duct tape. His muffled sobs were the only sound in the empty farmhouse.

Jake. Mama. Pops. Please. Please find me. I can't do this anymore. I can't—

But there was no answer. Only darkness, and pain, and the terrible certainty that it wasn't over yet.

Not even close.

Chapter 7: Watching Hell

The alert came at 2:37 PM.

Jr. saw it first—another incoming file from the unknown sender. His hands were already shaking as he opened it.

"They sent another one," he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

The command center went silent. Everyone turned toward the main screen.

Jake moved closer, his fists already clenched. Sarah grabbed Tom's arm. Pops stood like a statue, his face unreadable. Edna covered her mouth with both hands.

Jr. hit play.

The video started with Billy on the floor, still bound and hogtied, duct tape covering his eyes and mouth. Then rough hands grabbed him, rolled him over. He groaned—a muffled, broken sound.

Sarah whimpered.

They watched as the kidnappers ripped the tape off Billy's head. Even through the video, they could hear him scream as it tore away skin and hair. The gag came out and Billy gasped for air, coughing, his face contorted in pain.

"Look at the camera, boy."

Billy's eyes opened—squinting, red, filled with terror. He looked directly into the lens.

Directly at them.

"B-Billy. Billy Benson."

"Oh God," Sarah sobbed. "Oh God, my baby—"

"Tell 'em what's gonna happen if they don't pay up."

Billy's face crumpled with confusion and fear. "I—I don't—"

The slap came hard. Billy's head snapped sideways, blood spraying from his mouth.

Jake made a sound like a wounded animal. Celeb grabbed his arm, holding him back.

"Please," Billy's voice came through the speakers, broken and desperate. "Please, they'll pay. Whatever you want, they'll pay. Just—just don't hurt me again. Please."

Tears were streaming down Sarah's face. Tom held her against his chest, his own eyes wet. Ray had turned away from the screen, his hand over his mouth. Josh stood frozen, watching his younger brother beg for mercy.

Rebecca's professional nurse instincts were already cataloging injuries—dehydration, shock, burns, possible broken ribs. But her hands were shaking as she held Edna, who was crying silently.

Then the branding iron came into frame.

"No," Edna whispered. "No, please—"

"NO!" Jake roared at the screen.

Billy saw it too. His eyes went wide with horror.

"No, please. Please, I'm begging you—"

"He's begging," Jr. said, tears running down his face. "Uncle Billy's begging and they don't care—"

"Two million dollars. Tomorrow. Or we send him back in pieces."

"PLEASE! DON'T! THEY'LL PAY! I SWEAR THEY'LL PAY! JUST DON'T—"

The iron pressed against Billy's right shoulder.

The scream that followed made Sarah collapse. Tom caught her as her knees gave out, both of them sinking to the floor. The sound coming from the speakers wasn't human—it was pure agony, raw and primal.

Jake punched the wall again. And again. And again. Celeb and Colt tried to pull him back but he kept hitting until his knuckles bled.

"STOP IT!" Jake was screaming. "STOP HURTING HIM! STOP!"

Billy's body convulsed on screen, thrashing against the ropes. One second. Two. Three. Four. The iron stayed pressed against his shoulder.

Edna turned away and vomited into a trash can. Rebecca held her hair back, her own face pale and drawn.

Ray was crying now too, not even trying to hide it. Josh had one hand over his mouth, the other pressed against the wall to keep himself upright.

The wiz kids—Billy Renzo, Ryan Mattern, Daniel Rodriguez—all sat frozen at their stations, tears streaming down their young faces as they watched their friend being tortured.

Only Pops hadn't moved. He stood absolutely still, watching every second of the video. His face was carved from stone, but his hands—his hands were clenched so tight his knuckles were white, the veins standing out.

When the iron finally lifted, Billy collapsed, sobbing. Both shoulders now bore identical brands—raw, angry, permanent.

"That's both shoulders now. Matched set. Real pretty."

The bearded man grabbed Billy's hair, yanked his head up to face the camera one more time.

Billy's face was a mask of agony and tears and broken desperation. His eyes—those eyes that were always so full of life and mischief—looked hollow. Destroyed.

"Forty-seven hours. Clock's ticking."

They shoved the gag back in. Billy tried to fight it but he had nothing left. The tape went back over his eyes, his mouth. Darkness again.

The video ended.

For a long moment, no one spoke. The only sounds were Sarah's sobbing and Jake's ragged breathing.

Then Jake exploded.

"I'M GONNA KILL THEM!" He grabbed a chair and threw it across the room. It shattered against the wall. "I'M GONNA FIND THEM AND I'M GONNA RIP THEM APART WITH MY BARE HANDS!"

"Jake—" Tom started.

"DON'T!" Jake spun around, his face twisted with rage and grief. "Don't tell me to calm down! Don't tell me it's gonna be okay! They're TORTURING him! They're burning him like a goddamn animal and we're just STANDING HERE!"

"We're not just standing here," Pops said quietly.

His voice cut through Jake's rage like a knife. Everyone turned to look at the old man.

Pops' face was still expressionless, but his eyes—his eyes were the coldest thing any of them had ever seen. Vietnam cold. Kill-or-be-killed cold.

"We're gathering intel," Pops continued, his voice deadly calm. "We're tracking their location. We're preparing for extraction. And when we find them—and we will find them—we're going to get my grandson back."

"And then?" Jake's voice shook.

"And then those bastards are going to learn what it means to hurt a Benson."

Wade Nelson cleared his throat. He'd watched the video in silence, his sheriff's training warring with his family loyalty. Now he looked at Pops with an expression that was half warning, half understanding.

"Pops, I know you're angry—we all are. But we have to do this right. Legal. By the book."

"Legal?" Jake laughed bitterly. "You want to talk about LEGAL? They're torturing Billy and you want to fill out paperwork?"

"Jake's right," Wilson Nelson said quietly. His brother Ryan nodded agreement. Both deputies looked ready to commit murder.

Wade shot his sons a warning glance. "We're law enforcement—"

"Right now, we're family," Pops interrupted. "And family protects family. However we have to."

Rebecca was checking Edna's vital signs—pulse racing, hyperventilating, shock. Now she looked up at the room, her nurse training taking over.

"When we get him back," she said, her voice steady despite her tears, "he's going to need serious medical attention. Second-degree burns on both shoulders. Dehydration. Possible broken ribs. Shock. Trauma." She paused. "And that's just the physical. The psychological damage..."

She didn't finish. She didn't have to.

Sarah had pulled herself together enough to stand, though Tom still held her. "I don't care about the money," she said, her voice raw. "Give them whatever they want. Ten million. Twenty. I don't care. Just get my baby back."

"We will," Tom said firmly. "We will."

Jr. had been staring at his screens, tears still running down his face, but now he sat up straighter. "The drones are over the Hoskins property. Getting thermal imaging now."

Everyone crowded around his station. The screen showed aerial footage of an abandoned farmhouse, old barn, overgrown land.

"Three heat signatures," Billy Renzo reported. "Two close together, one separate and smaller. That could be—"

"That's Billy," Jake said immediately. "That's him. I know it."

"We can't be sure—" Wade started.

"THAT'S HIM," Jake repeated.

Jr. enhanced the image. "The single signature is stationary. Not moving at all. The other two are... looks like they're in a different room."

"He's alone," Edna whispered. "They left him alone."

Pops leaned over Jr.'s shoulder, studying the screen. "How far?"

"Ninety-three miles. Hour and a half drive."

"We go now," Jake said immediately.

"No," Wade said. "We need a plan. We need coordination. We can't just charge in there—"

"The hell we can't!"

"JAKE." Pops' voice cracked like a whip. "Stand down. Wade's right. We go in hot without a plan, Billy could get killed in the crossfire."

Jake's jaw worked, but he nodded stiffly.

"Jr., keep those drones on station," Pops ordered. "I want continuous surveillance. If those bastards move Billy, I want to know immediately. Wade, get your deputies ready. Josh, Tom, Ray—full tactical gear. We're going in tonight."

"Tonight?" Sarah gasped.

"Can't wait," Pops said grimly. "You saw that video. Billy's not gonna last another day like that."

The wiz kids were already working. Billy Renzo pulled up satellite imagery of the property. Daniel Rodriguez mapped entry points. Ryan Mattern monitored communications.

"There's a back approach through the treeline," Jr. said, highlighting the map. "We could get within fifty yards without being seen."

"Good," Pops said. "Wade, you and your boys take point. Josh, Jake, Celeb—you're with me. Tom, you're backup with Ray and Robert. Jr., you and the wiz kids stay here and run comms. I want live feeds on everything—drones, body cams, thermal. Everyone stays connected."

"We'll set up a mobile command station," Jr. said, already pulling equipment. "I can patch live video to iPads. Mama, Rebecca, Edna—you'll be able to see everything as it happens."

Sarah looked torn between wanting to see and being terrified of what she might witness. "You'll bring him home?"

"I promise," Pops said.

Edna wiped her eyes, her voice shaking but determined. "I want to see it. When you find him, I want to see."

"You will," Jr. confirmed. "All of you will. We're going to bring Billy home."

Rebecca moved to Sarah's side. "We'll watch together. And I'll have the medical supplies ready. The moment they bring him through that door, I'll be ready."

Caroline Beaumont stepped forward with Mary Nelson and the mothers of the wiz kids. "We'll all be here. Whatever you need."

Jake stared at the thermal image of Billy on the screen—alone, unmoving, waiting.

"Hold on, brother," he whispered. "Just hold on a little longer. We're coming for you."

Pops turned to the room, his voice carrying the weight of command. "Gear up. We leave in thirty minutes. And gentlemen—" his eyes swept across every man preparing to go, "—when we get there, no mercy. They hurt one of ours. They're gonna pay."

The command center erupted into organized chaos. Men checking weapons, pulling tactical gear, reviewing maps. Jr. and the wiz kids setting up communication systems and live feeds.

And ninety-three miles away, Billy lay in darkness, branded and broken.

But help was coming.

The whole damn family was coming.

Chapter 8: The Rescue

Billy had stopped counting time.

He lay on the dusty floor in complete darkness, hogtied, blind, gagged. Both shoulders burned with identical brands. His body had gone numb in places—his hands, his feet, entire limbs that had lost circulation. In other places, the pain was so sharp it took his breath away.

They're not coming. No one's coming. I'm going to die here.

The thought crept in despite his efforts to fight it. Hours—or was it days?—of darkness and pain had worn him down to nothing. His mind drifted, disconnected from his body.

Jake. I'm sorry. I should've been more careful. Should've seen them coming.

Mama. I'm so sorry. You're probably crying right now and I can't—I can't fix it.

Edna. God, Edna. I'm sorry.

He could hear the kidnappers in the other room. Drunk, from the sound of it. Laughing. Celebrating. They'd gotten cocky, confident the family would pay, confident no one could find this place.

Maybe they're right. Maybe no one will find me in time.

Billy's thoughts grew hazier. The dehydration, the pain, the shock—it was all too much. His body was shutting down, bit by bit.

Just let go. It would be easier to just let go.

But something in him—some stubborn Benson pride, some echo of Pops' voice, some memory of Jake's laugh—wouldn't let him quit.

Hold on. Just a little longer. Hold on.


The sound of breaking glass shattered the silence.

Billy's body jerked, every muscle tensing despite the ropes. What was—

"POLICE! DOWN ON THE GROUND!"

Gunfire erupted. The sharp crack of rifles, the boom of shotguns, the pop-pop-pop of handguns. Shouting. Boots pounding. More glass breaking.

What's happening? What's—

"CLEAR LEFT!"

"CLEAR RIGHT!"

"TWO TARGETS DOWN!"

More gunfire. A scream—one of the kidnappers. Then silence.

Billy's heart was hammering so hard he thought it would burst. He tried to move, tried to make noise, but the gag muffled everything.

Please. Please find me. I'm here. I'm here.

Footsteps. Close. Getting closer.

"BACK ROOM! GO GO GO!"

The door crashed open.

"JESUS CHRIST—Billy! BILLY!"

Jake's voice.

Jake. Oh God, Jake.

"I got him! He's here!" Jake was shouting, his voice breaking. "He's alive! Get the medics in here NOW!"

Hands on Billy—gentle hands, shaking hands. The duct tape being carefully peeled away from his eyes. Light flooded in and Billy squeezed his eyes shut, tears streaming.

"I got you, brother," Jake's voice was right next to his ear, thick with emotion. "I got you. You're safe now. You're safe."

More hands—cutting the ropes. The pressure released and Billy gasped as blood rushed back into his limbs. The pain was excruciating.

"Easy, easy," another voice—Josh. "Don't move him too fast. Rebecca, we need you!"

The gag came out and Billy tried to speak, but nothing came out except a croak. His throat was too dry, too raw.

"Don't talk," Jake said, his hand on Billy's face. "Just breathe. Just breathe, okay? We got you."

Billy forced his eyes open. Jake's face swam into focus—dirt-streaked, tear-streaked, the most beautiful thing Billy had ever seen.

"Jake," Billy whispered.

"Yeah, brother. I'm here. We're all here."

More faces appeared above him. Pops, his weathered face grim but relieved. Josh, pale and shaking. Wade Nelson. Wilson and Ryan. Celeb and Colt.

"Ambulance is two minutes out," someone called.

Rebecca pushed through, her nurse's bag already open. "Let me see him. Billy, can you hear me?"

Billy nodded slightly.

"Good. I'm checking your vitals. Just stay still." Her hands were professional, efficient, but Billy could see tears on her cheeks. "Pulse is weak but steady. Respirations shallow. Severe dehydration. Second-degree burns on both shoulders—"

"The bastards branded him," Jake said, his voice turning savage. "They branded him like—"

"Are they dead?" Billy croaked.

The room went quiet.

Pops leaned down, his face close to Billy's. "Yeah, son. They're dead. Both of 'em. They can't hurt you anymore."

Billy closed his eyes. "Good."

"Ambulance pulling up now!" someone shouted from outside.

Paramedics rushed in with a stretcher, equipment, IV bags. Billy barely registered it all as they loaded him up, stuck needles in his arms, wrapped his shoulders.

"I'm riding with him," Jake said immediately.

"So am I," Josh added.

"Family only in the ambulance," one paramedic started.

"We ARE family," Jake growled.

The paramedic took one look at Jake's face and nodded. "Get in."

As they carried Billy out, he caught a glimpse of the farmhouse—old, abandoned, empty. And in the main room, two bodies covered with sheets, blood pooling beneath them.

The kidnappers.

Dead.

Billy closed his eyes and let the darkness take him.


Kings County Hospital - 11:47 PM

Billy woke to beeping machines and fluorescent lights. His mouth felt like sandpaper. His shoulders throbbed with a deep, burning ache. But the ropes were gone. The tape was gone. The gag was gone.

He was free.

"Billy?" A soft voice. Sarah. His mama.

Billy turned his head—slowly, everything hurt—and saw her sitting beside his bed. Tom stood behind her, his hand on her shoulder. Both of them looked exhausted, tear-stained, but alive with relief.

"Mama," Billy whispered.

Sarah grabbed his hand, squeezing tight. "Oh baby. My baby boy."

"Is he—" Tom's voice was rough. "How you feeling, son?"

"Hurts," Billy managed. "Water?"

Sarah immediately grabbed a cup with a straw, helping him drink. The cool liquid was heaven.

"The doctor says you're gonna be okay," Sarah said, stroking his hair. "Dehydrated. Bruised ribs. The burns—they'll scar, but they'll heal. You're gonna be okay."

Billy nodded slowly, then looked around. "Jake?"

"Right here." Jake appeared on the other side of the bed, looking like he hadn't slept in days. "Not going anywhere, brother."

The door opened and a doctor came in, followed by Rebecca in her scrubs—she'd been called in from her shift to help.

"Mr. Benson," the doctor said with a kind smile. "Welcome back. I'm Dr. Martinez. You've had quite an ordeal."

"The kidnappers?" Billy asked.

"Dead," Jake said flatly. "Both of them. They didn't suffer near as much as they should've."

"Jake," Sarah warned.

The doctor continued his examination while explaining Billy's injuries. "Second-degree burns on both shoulders—we've treated and dressed them. They'll need daily care for the next few weeks. You've got two cracked ribs, severe dehydration which we're treating with IV fluids, multiple contusions and abrasions. No internal bleeding, no permanent damage. You're very lucky."

"Lucky," Billy repeated. The word felt wrong.

"You're alive," Pops' voice came from the doorway. The old man walked in, still wearing his tactical gear, dried blood on his hands. "That makes you lucky."

Billy met his great-grandfather's eyes. "Thank you."

Pops just nodded, emotion flickering across his weathered face for just a moment before his mask returned.

Dr. Martinez closed his chart. "We're going to keep you overnight for observation. Tomorrow, if everything looks good, we'll release you to home care. Your sister-in-law—" he nodded to Rebecca, "—has already volunteered to oversee your recovery."

"I'm taking care of you," Rebecca confirmed. "Doctor's orders. You'll stay at the ranch where I can monitor you."

"The whole family's waiting downstairs," Tom said. "Wade and his family, the Beaumonts, the wiz kids and their families. Soon as the doctor gives the word, they'll be up."

Billy felt overwhelmed suddenly. "They all came?"

"Everyone," Sarah said softly. "The whole consortium. You're family, Billy. And family shows up."

The door opened again and Jr. burst in, followed by the three other wiz kids, all of them ignoring the "two visitors only" rule.

"Uncle Billy!" Jr. practically ran to the bed. "Man, we—we thought—"

"I know," Billy said quietly. "But I'm okay. Thanks to you guys. The GPS tracking, the drones—you found me."

"Damn right we did," Billy Renzo said, wiping his eyes.

Ryan Mattern and Daniel Rodriguez crowded around the bed too, all four boys looking like they'd aged years in the last day.

"We're never letting you work solo again," Jr. said firmly. "New rule. Nobody works alone. Ever."

Billy managed a weak smile. "Deal."

Edna appeared in the doorway, escorted by Rebecca. She looked pale, fragile, like she might shatter. When she saw Billy awake, her face crumpled.

"Billy," she whispered.

"Come here," Billy said softly.

She moved to his bedside, taking his hand carefully, avoiding the IV. "I watched—we all watched on the iPads. We saw everything. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry I couldn't—"

"Not your fault," Billy said. "None of this is your fault."

She leaned down carefully, pressing her forehead to his. "I thought I lost you."

"I'm here. I'm okay. I'm here."

Dr. Martinez cleared his throat. "Alright, everyone out. My patient needs rest. You can see him tomorrow when we release him."

There were protests, but Rebecca herded everyone toward the door. "Doctor's orders. Billy needs to sleep. You'll all see him at home tomorrow."

One by one, they filed out. Sarah kissed Billy's forehead. Tom squeezed his shoulder—carefully avoiding the burns. Jr. and the wiz kids promised to have the frat house ready for him.

Jake was the last to leave. He stood by the door, looking at Billy.

"Thank you," Billy said quietly.

"Always," Jake replied. "That's what brothers do."

When the room finally emptied and the lights dimmed, Billy lay in the hospital bed, listening to the beeping monitors, feeling the clean sheets, the soft pillow, the absence of ropes and tape and darkness.

He was safe.

He was home.

And tomorrow, he'd start healing.

Chapter 9: Home

The ranch looked the same as it always had—rolling pastures, cattle grazing, the big house sitting solid against the Texas sky. But to Billy, sitting in the backseat of Tom's truck with Jake pressed against his side, it looked like the most beautiful thing he'd ever seen.

"Almost there, son," Tom said from the driver's seat, his eyes meeting Billy's in the rearview mirror.

Sarah sat in the passenger seat, turned halfway around to keep looking at Billy, as if she was afraid he might disappear if she looked away. "Rebecca's got everything set up. Your room, your medications, clean bandages—"

"Mama," Billy said gently. "I'm okay."

"You're not okay," she said, her voice breaking slightly. "But you will be."

The truck pulled up to the house and Billy saw them—everyone. The whole consortium gathered on the porch and in the yard. Pops stood front and center, cigar unlit in his mouth. Josh and Rebecca with Jr. The Nelsons—Wade, Mary, Edna, Wilson, Ryan. The Beaumonts—Robert, Caroline, Colt. The wiz kids and their families—Renzos, Matterns, Rodriguezes. All of them waiting.

"Oh boy," Billy muttered.

"You're a hero, brother," Jake said with a grin. "Deal with it."

Tom helped Billy out of the truck—his ribs still hurt, his shoulders were bandaged, and he moved like an old man. But he was moving. He was home.

The moment his boots hit the gravel, Jr. ran forward, then stopped short, like he was afraid to hurt him. Billy opened his arms and Jr. crashed into him carefully, hugging him tight.

"You're home," Jr. said, his voice muffled against Billy's chest. "You're really home."

"Yeah, kid. I'm home."

One by one, they came forward. Edna, crying and holding his hand. The wiz kids, all talking at once about the tech they'd used to find him. Wade clapping him on the back. Pops just looking at him with fierce pride and saying nothing at all, which somehow said everything.

"Alright, alright," Rebecca finally said, pushing through. "My patient needs to sit down and eat something. All of you, inside. We're having a proper welcome home dinner."

The dining table was crowded, loud, chaotic—exactly how it should be. Sarah had cooked enough food to feed an army. Brisket, ribs, corn, potatoes, biscuits, three different pies. Billy sat at the table with Jake on one side and Jr. on the other, and for the first time in days, he felt like he could breathe.

"So they're really dead?" Colt asked, his Cajun accent thick with satisfaction.

"Dead as dead gets," Jake confirmed. "Pops put two rounds in the bearded one. Wade got the other."

"Good," Celeb said, his jaw tight. "They deserved worse."

"They got what they deserved," Pops said quietly, sipping his spiked coffee. "And that's the end of it. Billy's home. That's what matters."

Billy ate slowly, his appetite not quite back yet, but the food was good and the noise around him was even better. Normal. Safe. Home.

After dinner, Rebecca checked his bandages, gave him his medications, and gave strict instructions. "Rest. Fluids. No heavy lifting. No ranch work for at least two weeks."

"Two weeks?" Billy protested.

"Two weeks," she repeated firmly. "Or I'll sedate you myself."

Jake grinned. "I like her when she's bossy."

"Shut up, Jake," Rebecca said, but she was smiling.

As the sun started to set, the families began to head home. Hugs, promises to check in, offers of help if they needed anything. Finally, it was just the Bensons and the frat house crew.

"Come on," Jake said, offering Billy his arm. "Let's get you upstairs."

The five of them climbed the stairs to the second floor—Billy moving slowly, Jake and Celeb flanking him like bodyguards, Jr. and Colt leading the way. When they reached the frat house room, Billy stopped in the doorway.

The room was exactly the same. Two bunk beds, Colt's mattress wedged between them, their clothes in piles on the floor, the loose floorboard hiding the secret beer stash. Home.

"We cleaned up," Jr. said proudly. "Well, sort of."

"By 'cleaned up,' he means he shoved everything under the beds," Celeb clarified.

Billy laughed, then winced as his ribs protested. "Perfect."

He moved to his bunk—the top one—and looked up at it. Jake caught his hesitation.

"You're taking the bottom tonight," Jake said. "I'll take the top."

"Jake—"

"I'm not arguing with you, Billy. You can barely move. You're taking the bottom bunk and that's final."

Billy wanted to protest, but honestly, climbing to the top bunk sounded impossible right now. "Okay."

He carefully lowered himself onto the bottom bunk, and the simple act of lying down on a real mattress, with a real pillow, in his own room with his brothers around him, almost made him cry.

"You good?" Jake asked, leaning down from the top bunk.

"Yeah. I'm good."

Jr. settled into his bunk across the room. Colt sprawled on his mattress. Celeb kicked off his boots and climbed into his bunk.

"So," Celeb said after a moment. "Are we gonna talk about it?"

"Talk about what?" Billy asked.

"About what happened. About you getting kidnapped and branded and—"

"Celeb," Jake warned.

"No, it's fine," Billy said. He was quiet for a moment, staring at the ceiling. "I thought I was gonna die. For a while there, I really thought that was it. That I'd never see you guys again. Never see Mama or Edna or—" His voice broke slightly. "And then I heard Jake's voice and I knew I was gonna be okay."

The room was quiet.

"You're not working alone again," Jake said firmly. "Ever. I don't care what Josh says. Where you go, I go."

"Damn right," Celeb agreed.

"We all go," Jr. added. "The frat house sticks together."

"The frat house," Colt repeated with a grin. "I like that."

"So what do we do now?" Jr. asked.

"Now?" Billy said. "Now we sleep. Tomorrow we wake up to Pops banging on the door at 5:15, we go downstairs for Mama's biscuits, and we go back to normal."

"Normal sounds pretty good right about now," Jake said.

There was a soft knock on the door and it opened. Pops stood there, still in his old Wranglers and pearl-snap shirt, cigar in his mouth.

"Just checking on you boys," he said gruffly.

"We're good, Pops," Jake said.

Pops' eyes lingered on Billy for a long moment. "You did good, son. Stayed alive. Stayed strong. That's all that matters."

"Thanks for coming for me," Billy said quietly.

"Always," Pops said. Then he pointed his cigar at all of them. "Now get some sleep. I'll be banging on this door at 5:15 whether you're ready or not."

"Looking forward to it, Pops," Jr. said with a grin.

Pops left, closing the door behind him.

The five of them lay in the darkness, listening to the familiar sounds of the ranch settling in for the night. The wind through the windows. The distant sound of cattle. The creaking of the old house.

"Hey Billy?" Jr. said after a while.

"Yeah?"

"I'm glad you're home."

"Me too, kid. Me too."

"Alright, enough with the mushy stuff," Celeb said. "Billy, Jake—you two gonna start finishing each other's sentences again now that Billy's back?"

"Shut up, Celeb," they said in perfect unison.

The room erupted in laughter.

"There it is," Colt said. "The twins are back."

"We're not twins," Billy and Jake said together, then both groaned.

"Never gonna live that down," Jake muttered.

"Hey," Jr. said suddenly, sitting up. "We need to celebrate properly. Billy's home. Where's the beer stash?"

"Good idea," Celeb said, swinging out of his bunk. "Billy, you want one?"

"Rebecca said no alcohol with the pain meds," Billy said.

"One won't kill you," Jake said, dropping down from the top bunk.

Jr. moved to the loose floorboard near Celeb's bunk and pried it up. He reached down, then froze.

"Uh, guys?"

"What?" Jake asked.

"There's... something here." Jr. pulled out a full case of cold beer—brand new, still in the packaging. "This wasn't here before."

"What the hell?" Celeb said, moving closer.

Jr. set the case on the floor and saw a note taped to the top. He peeled it off and read aloud: "Welcome home, Grandson!"

The room went silent.

"Grandson?" Jr. said. "That's—"

The door opened and Pops stood there, still in his Wranglers, a slight smile on his weathered face. His eyes twinkled with mischief.

"Found it, did you?"

"Pops!" Jake said, grinning. "You sneaky old—"

"Language," Pops said, but he was smiling. He stepped into the room, cigar between his teeth. "Figured my grandson deserved a proper welcome home. Can't have the frat house running dry."

Billy sat up carefully in his bunk, looking at his great-grandfather with emotion thick in his throat. "Pops, you didn't have to—"

"Yeah, I did." Pops moved to Billy's bunk and put a gnarled hand on his head, rough but gentle. "You're home. That's worth celebrating. Just don't tell your mama I'm the one supplying you little shits with beer."

"Our lips are sealed," Jr. said.

"Good." Pops straightened up. "Now drink one for me. And Billy—just one. Rebecca will have my ass if you get sick on my account."

"Yes sir," Billy said, his voice thick.

Pops nodded once, then headed for the door. He paused in the doorway, looking back at the five of them.

"Glad you're home, son," he said quietly. Then he was gone, his boots heavy on the hallway floor.

Jr. cracked open the case and handed out bottles. Even Billy took one, though he only planned to take a few sips.

"To Pops," Jake said, raising his bottle.

"To Billy," Celeb added.

"To the frat house," Jr. said.

"To family," Colt finished.

They clinked bottles together, the sound echoing in the small room.

Billy took a sip—cold, perfect—and looked around at his brothers. Jake grinning beside him. Jr. and his mischievous smile. Celeb and Colt laughing about something. The room full of noise and life and normalcy.

This. This was what he'd held onto in that darkness. This moment. These people. This home.

"Alright," Jake said, settling back on the top bunk. "Everyone shut up so Billy can sleep. Doctor's orders."

"I'm fine," Billy protested, but he was already lying back down, exhaustion pulling at him.

"Night, brother," Jake said softly.

"Night," Billy replied.

The others settled into their bunks, the beer warming them, the comfort of being together settling over them like a blanket.

And for the first time in days, Billy Benson slept without fear, without pain, without darkness.

He slept like he was home.

Because he was.