
In the summer of 2022, 4 college roommates disappeared during a weekend camping trip in the Pine Hollow Mountains. There were no distress calls, no trail markers, no sign of what had happened. Their families were told the girls had wandered off and never survived the wilderness. Then, 2 years later, hikers found their white SUV parked behind an abandoned house, the engine cold, but fresh clothes hanging on a makeshift line as if someone had just done laundry.
What they found inside that house overturned 2 years of dead-end investigation and sent 4 families into shock.
Marcus Cross had not slept right in 2 years. He had been home from deployment for 8 months now, but the nightmares were not from Afghanistan. They came from a campsite in Pine Hollow, from the sight of his sister Sarah’s tent sitting empty, the sleeping bags still warm, as if she had only stepped out behind a tree for a moment.
The call came on a Tuesday morning while he was fixing the leaky sink his mother had been asking about for weeks. Water dripped steadily into a bucket below, each drop like a second counted since Sarah vanished.
“Marcus, this is Tommy Brennan. Used to work Pine Hollow PD.”
Marcus set down the wrench and wiped grease from his hands with an old rag. He knew the name from the missing-person file he had memorized, every detective, every witness, every lead that had gone nowhere.
“What do you want?”
“Hikers found something yesterday. Your sister’s car behind an old house up on Birch Creek Road.”
The bucket overflowed. Water splashed across the kitchen linoleum his mother had not replaced since the 1980s.
Marcus gripped the phone harder. “That’s impossible. Search teams covered every inch of those mountains.”
“Not every inch, son. Not where Sheriff Mitchell told them not to look.”
The bitterness in Brennan’s voice cut through the static. Marcus had heard that tone before from soldiers left bleeding while the brass protected themselves.
“What did they find?”
“White SUV. License plate matches. Sarah’s camping gear still in the back. Sleeping bags. Her favorite coffee mug, the one with the chip on the handle.”
Marcus closed his eyes. He could see Sarah behind the wheel, singing along to whatever terrible pop song was lodged in her head, her friends laughing in the back seat. Jessica with her infectious grin. Claire taking photographs of everything. Megan studying trail maps like she was planning a military operation. The windows down. Mountain air in their hair. 4 college girls who thought the world was beautiful and safe.
“Where’s the house?”
“That’s the thing, Marcus. The house ain’t been abandoned. Someone’s been living there. Fresh clothes on a line. Food in the fridge. Like they just stepped out.”
Something cold crawled up his spine and settled in his stomach. 2 years. 2 years of believing his sister was bones in some ravine. 2 years of his mother crying herself to sleep while holding Sarah’s old sweatshirt. 2 years of guilt eating through him. He should have been there. He should have gone on that camping trip instead of deploying to Kandahar. He should have protected her.
“You think—”
“I think your sister didn’t wander off like they said. I think someone’s been lying to your family for 2 years.”
Marcus stared at the water spreading across the kitchen floor. In the living room, his mother watched morning TV with the volume low. She had aged 10 years since Sarah disappeared. Gray hair. Hollow cheeks. Hands that trembled when she thought nobody could see.
“Where’s this house?”
“Birch Creek Road. Old logging route, past the main trail markers. I can give you directions.”
“Why are you calling me? Why not the family?”
Brennan was quiet for a long moment.
“Because I know what it’s like to lose someone to these mountains, and I know Sheriff Mitchell won’t do a damn thing about it.”
“You sound like you got history with the sheriff.”
“You could say that.”
Marcus grabbed a pen and began writing as Brennan gave him directions. Turn left at the broken gate. Follow the ruts for 3 mi. Look for the house with the green roof.
“Brennan.”
“Yeah.”
“Thank you.”
“Don’t thank me yet, son. What you find up there, it might not be what you want to hear.”
The line went dead.
Marcus stared at the directions written on the back of an electric bill. His mother’s careful handwriting still showed on the envelope. The same neat script that had filled out missing-person reports, written letters to politicians, organized search parties. She had never given up hope, not when the police said Sarah was probably dead, not when the media moved on.
Marcus folded the paper and slipped it into his pocket.
In the living room, his mother looked up from her coffee. “Who was that, honey?”
“Work stuff, Ma. I gotta run out for a while.”
She nodded and went back to her show, some talk program where cheerful people discussed cheerful problems.
Marcus grabbed his jacket and checked that his Glock sat secure in its holster. Old habits from war. Never leave the house unarmed.
Outside, his truck waited in the driveway like a faithful dog, a beat-up Ford with 200,000 mi and an engine that ran on stubbornness. He climbed in and started it. The radio came on automatically, an old classic rock station Sarah had always hated.
“Turn that old-man music off,” she used to say, reaching for the dial.
Marcus left it on.
Somewhere in the Pine Hollow Mountains, his sister’s car was parked behind a house that was not supposed to be occupied, and someone had been living there for 2 years.
The drive to Pine Hollow would take 90 minutes on mountain roads twisted like broken promises. Marcus had time to think, time to prepare for whatever he might find, time to remember the last thing Sarah had said to him.
Try not to get shot over there, okay. I need my big brother to come home safe.
He had promised he would.
Now it was time to return the favor.
He drove to Pine Hollow with his Glock in the glove box and Sarah’s missing-person file on the passenger seat. The manila folder was thick as a phone book, crammed with witness statements, search-grid maps, and photographs that tightened his chest. Sarah laughing around a campfire. Sarah hugging her roommates at graduation. Sarah’s tent sitting empty, the flap moving in mountain wind like a ghost breathed inside it.
The town looked the same as it had 2 years earlier, when he had spent 3 weeks searching every trail, creek bed, and boulder big enough to hide a body. The same weathered buildings with peeling paint and hand-carved signs. The same pickup trucks with gun racks and fishing poles. The same locals who shook their heads and muttered about city kids who did not respect the wilderness. The same Sheriff Mitchell who had patted his shoulder and promised they would keep looking while his eyes said the case was already closed.
Marcus parked outside Maggie’s Diner, the kind of place where everyone knew everyone else’s business and the coffee was strong enough to wake the dead. Red vinyl booths. Checkered floor. The smell of bacon grease worked permanently into the walls.
The same waitress from 2 years ago looked up when he walked in. Sandy, maybe 50, tired eyes and a kind smile. She had served him coffee every morning during the search and never charged him full price.
“Marcus Cross. I remember you.”
She poured coffee without asking and set down cream he would not use. “How you holding up, honey?”
“Getting by.”
He wrapped his hands around the mug and felt the warmth through the ceramic.
“Sandy, you hear anything about activity up on Birch Creek Road?”
Her smile faltered. “Birch Creek. That’s pretty remote up there.”
“Old house with a green roof. Someone said they saw signs of recent activity.”
Sandy glanced toward the kitchen, then back. “Oh, that old place been empty for years. Hikers use it sometimes when weather turns bad.”
“Anyone seen activity up there recently? Cars, smoke from the chimney, anything like that?”
She shrugged, but her hands kept wiping the same spot on the counter. “Not my business what folks do on private property.”
Marcus left 5 dollars on the table and walked outside. The mountain air was sharp with pine and old snow, thin enough to remind you how high up you were.
A gruff voice stopped him beside his truck.
“You’re asking the wrong question, son.”
Marcus turned. An older man leaned against a rusted pickup with his arms crossed, gray stubble on his jaw, a worn flannel shirt hanging from a big frame gone soft with age, though not so soft that it looked harmless.
“And you are?”
“Tommy Brennan. The one who called you.”
Marcus studied him. Brennan looked like every retired cop Marcus had ever met: shoulders bent from carrying too much, eyes that had seen too much, hands that stayed ready even when they were relaxed.
“Sheriff’s got this town believing a lot of lies,” Brennan said.
“What kind of lies?”
“The kind that keep families from getting answers.”
His voice cracked just enough to prove he meant it.
“Lost my own daughter to these mountains 5 years ago.”
The pain in those words hit Marcus like a blow. He recognized it. The same hollow ache. The same weight that never lifted.
“She didn’t wander off. Someone took her.”
Marcus felt his chest tighten. “You have proof?”
“Not the kind that holds up in court, but enough to know the truth.”
Brennan pulled a business card from his shirt pocket and handed it over. The card stock was worn soft, as if he had been carrying it for years.
“Check the old logging roads. Sheriff never searches there. Ask yourself why he always finds the campsite but never the people.”
Brennan climbed into his truck, the diesel engine coughing to life.
“When you’re ready for the truth,” he said through the open window, “call me.”
He drove off, leaving Marcus in the parking lot with more questions than answers.
The business card read Thomas Brennan, Private Investigator, a local number written in faded ink. Marcus put it in his pocket without deciding anything. Grief made people see conspiracies where there were only accidents. It made them need someone to blame when the world turned cruel and random. But there had been nothing wild in Brennan’s eyes. Nothing broken. Just exhaustion, the look of a man who had been carrying something heavy for too long.
The mountain air tasted of pine needles and old snow. Somewhere up there, Sarah’s car sat behind a house that should have been abandoned, behind a house where someone had hung fresh laundry like they lived there.
Marcus got into his truck and pulled out the directions Brennan had given him.
Turn left at the broken gate. Follow the ruts for 3 mi. Look for the house with the green roof.
The engine turned over rough and settled into the familiar rumble that had carried him through 2 deployments and a thousand miles of highway after he came home. He had driven these roads before during the search, but always on the main trails, always where Sheriff Mitchell’s teams had told him to look. Never on the old logging roads. Never where the sheriff said there was nothing to find.
Marcus pulled onto Highway 9 and headed toward the mountains that had swallowed his sister.
The radio played the same classic rock station Sarah used to complain about.
“Turn that old-man music off,” she would say, reaching for the dial with paint-stained fingers from whatever art project she had been working on.
Marcus left it on. Let her voice echo in his head. Let the memory keep him company on the long drive into country that held secrets in its shadows.
Behind him, Pine Hollow shrank in the rearview mirror, a town full of people who had shaken their heads, offered sympathy, and gone back to their lives. A town where the sheriff always found the campsite, but never the people.
Marcus pressed the accelerator and headed for the truth.
The logging road to Birch Creek twisted through pine forest so dense the afternoon sun barely touched the ground. Marcus drove slowly, his truck bouncing over ruts and fallen branches no one had cleared in years. His GPS lost signal after the first mile. The screen flickered between searching and blank gray nothing.
No wonder search teams never made it up there. Sheriff Mitchell had probably told them the road was impassable, washed out, not worth the risk.
The trees pressed close on both sides, pine boughs scraping his windows like skeletal fingers. This did not feel like wilderness. It felt older than that, darker. The kind of place where something terrible could happen and no one would hear.
Every quarter mile he stopped, rolled down his windows, and listened. Birds in the canopy. Wind through branches. Water somewhere running over stone. No human voices. No chainsaws. No ATVs. No sign that people came here.
A perfect place to hide something you did not want found.
The road climbed in switchbacks. Through breaks in the trees, Marcus could see the valley below. Pine Hollow lay spread out like a postcard, peaceful and innocent, a town where nothing bad ever happened.
The house appeared around a bend like something from a nightmare. A 2-story cabin. Roof sagging under years of snow load. Windows dark as dead eyes.
But the yard was clean.
No fallen branches on the porch. No weeds choking the stone walkway from driveway to front door. Someone had been taking care of it.
Marcus parked 50 yards back and cut the engine. He pulled the Glock from the glove box and checked the magazine. 15 rounds. It would have to be enough.
Sarah’s white SUV sat behind the house, almost hidden by overgrown bushes. The license plate was caked in mud, but Marcus recognized the dent in the rear bumper from when Sarah backed into a fire hydrant during freshman year.
She had climbed out of the car then and looked at the damage, horrified. “Shit, shit, shit. Mom’s going to kill me.”
But their mother had just hugged her, relieved Sarah was not hurt.
Cars can be fixed, baby. You can’t.
Now that same dented bumper sat behind a house that should not have been here in a place search teams had never touched.
A clothesline stretched between 2 pine trees. Women’s clothes hung from it. Jeans. T-shirts. Underwear. Clean. Dry. Fresh.
Marcus felt his blood go cold. The clothes looked like they had been hung that morning, maybe the day before.
Someone had been living here recently.
He approached with the pistol drawn, boots silent on the pine needles. Military training took over. Check corners. Watch windows. Assume contact.
The front door was unlocked.
Inside, the house felt lived in. Canned goods stacked neatly on kitchen shelves. Sleeping bags rolled tight in a corner. A propane camp stove with a pot still warm to the touch. Someone had been here within the last few hours.
Marcus moved through the rooms methodically, clearing corners the way he had in Kandahar.
The place was empty.
But the smell lingered. Sweat. Fear. Something metallic under the mildew and old wood. The scent of blood that had soaked into floorboards and never fully washed out.
In the main room, cots lined the walls. Military surplus, the kind meant to fold up and store away. But these were bolted to the floor. Chains attached to the frames.
Marcus’s stomach turned.
These were not beds.
They were restraints.
In the back bedroom he found a note tucked under a loose floorboard, written in shaky handwriting.
They made us read their messages. They said it’s for viewers. We smiled. We lied.
He read it twice. Then a third time.
Viewers. Messages. They made us read.
This was not a case of college girls getting lost in the wilderness. This was not an accident.
Someone had taken his sister. Someone had taken all 4 girls. And they had forced them to perform for an audience.
Marcus pocketed the note and kept searching, his heart hammering against his ribs, military discipline fighting raw panic. Sarah had been here in this house. God knew how long.
In the main room he saw fresh gouges in the floorboards, scratches as though heavy furniture had recently been dragged across them. He followed the marks to a section of wall that looked slightly wrong. Newer wood. Painted to match, but not well enough.
A hidden door.
Marcus ran his fingers over the edges and found the latch concealed behind a loose board. The panel opened without sound.
Behind it was a cramped space built into the wall cavity, a hiding spot large enough to force people inside.
On the floor lay strands of long brown hair, Sarah’s color, Sarah’s length.
And a silver bracelet with a broken clasp.
Their grandmother’s gift for Sarah’s 16th birthday.
Marcus’s vision blurred.
His sister had been inside this box, chained like an animal.
Outside, gravel crunched.
A vehicle approached slowly.
Marcus killed his phone flashlight and eased the hidden door shut.
Through the front window he saw a Pine Hollow sheriff’s cruiser roll into the driveway.
Sheriff Frank Mitchell stepped out, one hand resting on his service weapon. He moved like he knew exactly where he was. No hesitation. No surprise.
This was not a patrol.
This was not random.
Mitchell had been here before.
Marcus crouched behind the kitchen counter, Glock ready, and watched through the dirty glass as the sheriff checked the clothesline and examined Sarah’s SUV with the familiarity of a man inspecting something he already knew.
Then Mitchell headed for the front door.
No hesitation.
No call for backup.
No surprise at finding fresh evidence of the missing girls.
Because he already knew they had been here.
Mitchell knew everything.
The door creaked open.
He stepped inside, hand still on his weapon, eyes scanning the room with practiced efficiency.
“Well, well. Should have stayed away, son.”
Marcus froze.
Mitchell was looking right at him.
“Come on out, Cross. We need to talk.”
Marcus rose slowly, Glock aimed at the sheriff’s chest.
“Sheriff.”
Mitchell smiled. It was the same sympathetic expression he had worn at Sarah’s vigil 2 years earlier, the face of a man who had spent his career delivering bad news to grieving families. But his eyes were cold.
“You found the note, didn’t you? Smart girls. Too smart for their own good.”
“Where is she?”
“Your sister? Safe. Fed. Clean clothes. Warm bed. More than she deserves after the trouble she’s caused.”
Marcus’s finger tightened on the trigger. Every instinct in him screamed to fire. To put a bullet through Mitchell and end it. But he needed answers first.
“This is bigger than you think, boy. Bigger than this town. Bigger than your family.”
Mitchell took another step, confident, like a man who had been in control so long he no longer remembered fear.
“You got family back home? Mother still in that little house on Maple Street? Be a shame if something happened to her while you’re up here playing detective.”
The threat hung between them casually, as if they were discussing weather.
Marcus felt rage climb his throat. 2 years of nightmares. 2 years of his mother crying herself to sleep with Sarah’s sweatshirt pressed to her face. 2 years of believing his sister was dead, while this bastard had known exactly where she was.
“Your sister’s alive,” Mitchell continued, his voice smooth as honey over broken glass. “Her friends too. For now.”
For now.
“But that can change real quick. Depends how smart you are. Depends how much you love your family.”
Mitchell reached for his radio.
“Unit 7, this is—”
Marcus lunged.
Military training took over before conscious thought. He grabbed Mitchell’s wrist and twisted until bone ground under tendon. The radio flew across the room and smashed against the wall.
Mitchell swung with his left hand. Marcus ducked and drove an elbow into his ribs. Cartilage popped. Mitchell gasped and went for his sidearm. Marcus slammed a knee into his gut and drove him backward into the wall hard enough to shake dust from the beams overhead.
The sheriff hit the floor wheezing.
Marcus stood over him with the Glock aimed at his head.
“Where are they?”
Mitchell spat blood. “You have no idea what you just started.”
“I asked you a question.”
“Mountain facility. Pine Ridge Road. Compound about 15 miles north.”
His voice was thick with pain, but his eyes still held defiance.
“But you’ll never make it. My boys will cut you down before you get within a mile.”
Marcus ripped Mitchell’s radio from his belt and took the sheriff’s service weapon from its holster, a standard-issue Glock 22, fully loaded.
“How many?”
“Enough.”
Mitchell tried to sit up and winced when his broken ribs shifted.
“Walk away, Cross. Take your family and disappear. Move to another state. Change your names. That’s the only way they stay breathing.”
Marcus looked down at the man who had lied to his face for 2 years, who had shaken his hand at Sarah’s vigil while knowing exactly where she was, who had hugged his mother and promised to never stop looking.
He wanted to pull the trigger.
He wanted Mitchell’s blood soaking the same floor where Sarah had been held.
But Sarah needed him alive to find her. Her friends needed him functional, not drowning in rage.
Military discipline over personal vendetta.
“Tell me about the viewers,” Marcus said.
Mitchell laughed, a wet sound that made Marcus’s skin crawl.
“You think this is just about your sister, kid? We got clients in every major city. Politicians, CEOs, judges. Rich men who pay premium for exclusive entertainment.”
“Entertainment.”
“Live streams. Interactive experiences. They can type instructions, watch the girls follow commands. Some prefer the hunting packages. Turn them loose in the woods. Track them down like deer.”
Marcus felt bile rise in his throat.
“How long?”
“Your sister? 2 years active. She’s been good for business. Clients love the ones who still fight back.”
The casual way Mitchell said it, like Sarah was inventory, like her terror was a commodity, snapped something inside Marcus. He shoved the muzzle against the sheriff’s forehead.
“Give me one reason not to paint this wall with your brains.”
“Because you need me alive.” Mitchell’s voice was steady despite the gun against his skull. “Network’s bigger than Pine Hollow. Kill me, they scatter like roaches. Your sister disappears forever.”
Marcus backed toward the door with both weapons trained on Mitchell.
The sheriff was not wrong. This felt organized, professional, too large for one corrupt lawman.
“Tell your boys I’m coming,” Marcus said. “And I’m bringing hell with me.”
He slammed the door behind him and ran for his truck. Behind him, Mitchell’s voice echoed through the cabin.
“You don’t know what you’re dealing with, Cross. This goes all the way to the top.”
Marcus fired the engine and floored it down the mountain road, gravel spraying behind his tires. Mitchell’s radio crackled to life on the passenger seat.
Time to find out exactly what he was dealing with.
And how many men he would have to kill to get his sister back.
Part 2
Marcus pulled off the main road 2 mi down, killed the engine behind a cluster of boulders that hid his truck from passing traffic, and grabbed Mitchell’s radio with shaking hands. For 2 years he had wondered, dreamed, and imagined the worst. Now he knew Sarah was alive, and somehow that truth felt worse than death.
Static hissed through the speaker.
Then voices.
“Unit 7, come in. Mitchell, you copy.”
Another voice answered. “Base, this is Unit 3. Sheriff’s not responding.”
Marcus held his breath and listened to the coordination of people who had been doing this for years.
“Dispatch to all units. We have a security breach at the Birch Creek site.”
Security breach.
They knew he had been there. They had always known something like this might happen.
“Kevin, you copy?”
A new voice answered, rougher, local, mountain-born.
“I’m here. What’s the situation?”
“Cross found the house. Mitchell’s down.”
“Son of a bitch. How much does he know?”
“Enough. Boss wants full shutdown protocol.”
Marcus gripped the radio tighter.
Shutdown protocol.
Military language.
These were not local men improvising crimes in the dark.
“All packages need immediate transport,” the dispatcher continued. “Move Sarah and her friends to the disposal site.”
Marcus’s vision blurred.
Disposal site.
They were going to kill her.
“Copy that. How long do I have?”
“2 hours. Clean sweep. No survivors.”
“What about the clients?”
“Already notified. They’re pulling out. Some want refunds. Some want to watch the finale remotely.”
The radio went quiet except for static.
Marcus sat in his truck with both hands trembling. 2 hours. Sarah and her friends had 2 hours to live. Somewhere, rich men were arguing over refunds because they would not be able to watch his sister die in person.
He pulled Tommy Brennan’s business card from his pocket and dialed the number with numb fingers.
3 rings.
“Brennan.”
“It’s Cross. You were right about everything.”
Silence.
Then, “What did you find?”
“Note from the girls. Hidden room where they kept them. Sheriff Mitchell’s part of it. Running some kind of network for rich clients.”
“Jesus Christ.” Brennan’s voice dropped, as if he had expected this but still hoped he was wrong. “Where are you?”
“Mountain road off Birch Creek. I need help. They’re moving my sister in 2 hours.”
“Moving her where?”
“Disposal site. Pine Ridge Road.”
Brennan cursed, long and hard. “I know that area. Remote as hell. Perfect for—”
He stopped.
“Perfect for what?”
“Hiding bodies.” Brennan’s tone went flat. “How many are we dealing with?”
“I don’t know. But they’ve got radios, coordination, military terminology. This isn’t some backwoods kidnapping.”
“No, it’s not.”
Brennan paused. “Meet me at the old logging station on Route 9. You know it?”
“I’ll find it.”
“Marcus, how many weapons you got?”
Marcus looked at Mitchell’s service pistol on the seat beside him and his own Glock in the holster.
“Not enough.”
“I’ll bring extras. This is going to get ugly.”
“Brennan.”
“Yeah.”
“Why are you helping me? Really?”
A long pause. Traffic sounded faintly in the background, Brennan already moving.
“Because my daughter Bethany was on that disposal list 5 years ago, and I never got the chance to save her.”
The line went dead.
Marcus started the truck and pulled back onto the highway. Pine needles cracked beneath the tires.
Mitchell’s radio came alive again.
“Kevin, status report.”
“Loading packages now. Three secured. Looking for the fourth.”
Marcus felt his blood freeze.
Three secured. One missing.
“Find her. Boss wants them all gone before midnight.”
“Copy. Subject four was always the runner. She’s probably holed up somewhere in the compound.”
Subject four.
Sarah.
Still fighting after 2 years in hell.
Marcus pressed the accelerator harder. The engine roared as he threw the truck through mountain curves faster than safety allowed. Somewhere up there, his sister was running for her life, and he was the only one coming for her.
The radio crackled again.
“All units be advised, Cross is armed and dangerous. Former military. Approach with extreme caution.”
“How dangerous we talking?”
“Afghanistan veteran. Two tours. Specialist in close-quarters combat.”
“Fuck.”
“Yeah. So don’t fuck around. You see him, you put him down. No warnings, no arrests. Kill him.”
Marcus smiled grimly.
Let them come.
He had spent 2 years killing Taliban in caves. A few corrupt cops and their hired men would not be anything new.
The old logging station appeared ahead, a weathered structure beside the highway, windows broken out, roof sagging with age. Tommy Brennan’s pickup was already there.
Time to go to war.
The old logging station squatted beside Route 9 like a monument to dead industry. Marcus pulled up beside Brennan’s rusted truck. The older man climbed out carrying a duffel bag that clinked with metal when he dropped it.
“You look like hell,” Brennan said.
“Feel worse.”
Marcus showed him Mitchell’s radio. “They’re moving fast. Something about packages and a boss who wants everyone dead by midnight.”
Brennan unzipped the duffel. Inside were 2 rifles, boxes of ammunition, tactical vests that looked military surplus, and night-vision goggles still in their cases.
“You came prepared.”
“Been ready for this fight for 5 years.”
He handed Marcus a rifle, a Remington 700 with a high-powered scope.
“Good to 800 yards if you know what you’re doing.”
Marcus checked the action and adjusted the scope. The motions returned like muscle memory. Weight. Sight picture. Breathing. Like riding a bicycle built for killing.
“How many we looking at?”
“Hard to say. Kevin’s the handyman. Their logistics guy. Maintains the trailheads, helps lost hikers, earns trust.” Brennan’s face darkened. “Probably 3 or 4 others on security. Maybe more if they called in backup.”
“You know this Kevin?”
“Kevin Reed. Helpful son of a bitch. Always first to volunteer for search parties. Always knew exactly where not to look.”
The radio crackled again.
“Package four located. Beginning transport.”
Marcus seized the speaker. “That’s Sarah. They found her.”
“Pine Ridge facility is 15 mi north,” Brennan said. “Old mining operation. Lots of buildings spread through the valley. Perfect place to hide something like this.”
He pulled out a hand-drawn map and spread it across the hood of his truck, lines and X marks penciled in over years of surveillance.
“Two access roads. Main gate here. Service road here. They’ll expect us on the main road. Obvious approach.”
“Service road?”
“Steep as hell. Rocky. Tears up your transmission if you’re not careful. But it comes out behind the main compound. Gives elevation advantage.”
Marcus studied the map. Classic tactics. Hit from 2 directions. Box them in.
“I’ll take the service road.”
“Hell you will. That’s the hard route.”
“I’m military. You’re not.”
Brennan loaded a magazine into his rifle with practiced hands. “My daughter’s buried somewhere on that mountain. I’ve been planning this assault for 5 years. I’m going up the hard way.”
The radio squawked again.
“All packages secured. Initiating final protocol.”
“What’s final protocol?” Marcus asked, though he already knew.
Brennan’s jaw tightened. “It means they’re done playing games. Your sister and her friends are about to disappear forever.”
Marcus shouldered his rifle and checked his watch.
Full dark in 30 minutes.
“How long to get there?”
“Service road? 40 minutes if you push it. Main road is faster, but they’ll see you coming from miles off.”
“Then we move.”
Brennan grabbed his gear and started for his truck, then stopped and turned back.
“Marcus. These aren’t just kidnappers. They’re hunters. Rich clients pay premium money to hunt people through these mountains for sport.”
Marcus felt something settle hard and cold in his stomach.
“What do you mean?”
“Your sister’s been their prize game for 2 years. They keep the pretty ones alive longer. Let clients bid on hunting experiences. Some want quick kills. Some want extended chases. Some want…” He trailed off.
“Want what?”
“Interactive experiences. Live streams where they can give commands. Watch the girls perform on camera.”
Marcus’s vision went red.
2 years.
2 years of his sister being hunted like an animal and forced to perform for rich psychopaths.
“How do you know all this?”
“Because I’ve been investigating them since my daughter disappeared. Bethany was 19. Art student. Sweet kid. Wouldn’t hurt a fly.” Brennan’s voice cracked. “They hunted her for 3 days before she died from exhaustion.”
“You saw proof?”
“Found video files on a laptop I liberated from one of their associates. Bethany running through the woods, terror in her eyes, while some bastard in expensive hunting gear tracked her like a deer.”
Marcus looked down at the map, at the mountain facility where Sarah was counting down her final hours.
“Then let’s go hunting.”
They climbed into their trucks and started up the engines. Brennan’s headlights cut through the gathering dark as he pulled onto the highway. Marcus followed with Mitchell’s radio crackling beside him.
“Transport complete. All subjects secured in building 7. Cleanup crew en route. ETA 20 minutes.”
“Roger. Beginning final preparations.”
Somewhere ahead, Sarah was locked in a building with a number instead of a name, waiting to die for the entertainment of monsters.
But she was not alone anymore.
Her brother was coming.
And he was bringing war.
The service road twisted up the mountain like a broken spine designed by someone who hated vehicles. Marcus drove without headlights, following tire tracks in the moonlight filtered through the pines. The truck bounced over rocks and fallen logs that would have stopped a normal vehicle. The suspension groaned with every impact.
Military training had taught him to drive worse roads under enemy fire.
This was only mountain terrain with violence waiting at the end.
The radio kept up its professional chatter.
“Perimeter secure. No movement on main access road.”
“Package transport complete. All 4 subjects secured in building 7.”
“Clients arriving in 20 minutes. You ready for the finale?”
Clients.
Marcus’s jaw tightened hard enough to ache. Wealthy bastards on their way to watch his sister die.
The road leveled off near the ridge. The trees thinned, opening the view over the valley below. Through the gaps Marcus saw lights scattered across the mining compound like a constellation of evil. Professional. Well funded. This was not some improvised local horror.
He parked behind a cluster of boulders and grabbed his gear.
The rifle felt steady in his hands. Scope zeroed. Magazines loaded. Enough rounds to start a small war.
The facility sprawled across the valley floor like a military base. Main building in the center. Smaller structures around it. Floodlights on tall poles. 2 guards on patrol with the disciplined movements of trained security.
Marcus looked through the scope and counted targets, noted fields of fire, tracked movement.
Building 7 sat on the far side of the compound, separated by maybe 200 yards. One guard stood outside with a rifle slung casual but ready.
That was where Sarah was.
His radio crackled.
“Brennan, you in position?”
Marcus keyed the mic. “Copy. Eyes on target building. Counting 6 hostiles, maybe more inside structures.”
“I’m set up on the main road. Give me 5 minutes to get their attention.”
“What’s the play?”
“I’m going to light up their front gate like the Fourth of July. When they come running, you move on building 7.”
“Roger.”
Marcus checked his rifle again and counted ammunition.
4 magazines.
120 rounds total.
Better be enough.
Through the scope he watched vehicles arriving at the main gate. Expensive cars. Black SUVs with tinted windows that screamed money and power. The clients coming to watch 4 college girls get murdered.
His finger settled near the trigger. He imagined putting rounds through the windshields. But doing that now would ruin surprise and get Sarah killed.
Military discipline over personal vendetta.
“Brennan, we’ve got company arriving. Looks like the audience is here.”
“I see them. Rich pricks in fancy cars coming to watch the show.”
“How long until—”
An explosion lit up the main gate like a second sun.
Brennan’s truck had rammed straight through, guns blazing, muzzle flashes strobing in the dark.
Sirens erupted across the compound. Floodlights swept the road searching for threats. Guards ran toward the attack, shouting into radios and abandoning their posts.
Marcus moved.
He sprinted down the slope, using the spaces between buildings for cover, rifle ready.
The guard outside building 7 was looking toward the gate, weapon angled the wrong way, attention fixed on the chaos.
Marcus came up behind him without a sound and drove his combat knife between the man’s ribs, angling up toward the heart. They went down together. Blood spread warm through the pine needles.
Marcus took the guard’s keys and radio and dragged the body behind the building.
“Building 7 secure,” he whispered into the mic.
“Copy. I’m pinned down but keeping them busy. Move fast.”
Marcus unlocked the door and stepped inside.
Concrete walls.
Fluorescent lights humming overhead.
The smell of fear and old blood.
And 4 metal cages lined against the far wall.
Sarah sat in the last cage. Alive. Hollow-eyed. Thin as a scarecrow. Her hair was longer than he remembered, tangled and dirty, but her eyes still held defiance after 2 years of hell.
“Marcus.”
Her voice was almost no more than breath.
Like she was afraid speaking too loudly would make him disappear.
“I’m here, Sarah. I’m getting you out.”
He fumbled with the keys, hands shaking with rage and relief.
The cage opened.
Sarah collapsed into his arms, all bones and tremor and exhaustion.
“The others,” she whispered against his shoulder. “Jessica. Claire. Megan. Save them too.”
Marcus looked at the other cages.
3 more girls. Sarah’s college roommates. Equally hollow-eyed.
But alive.
Survivors of 2 years in hell.
“Can you run?”
Sarah nodded, though her legs trembled when she stood.
“We’ve been waiting 2 years to run.”
Marcus opened the other cages and got the girls on their feet. They moved like broken dolls, but their eyes held the same refusal to surrender.
“Back exit,” Marcus said, checking his rifle. “Stay low. Follow me. Don’t stop.”
They made it maybe 50 yards across the open ground before a floodlight found them.
“There!” someone shouted from the main building. “They’re escaping!”
Gunfire ripped across the compound.
Marcus shoved the girls behind a concrete barrier and returned fire. His shots were precise and controlled. 2 guards dropped. 3 more dived behind vehicles.
His radio crackled.
“Marcus. I’m hit. Can’t hold them much longer.”
4 girls who could barely walk. One rifle. Half a mile to extraction through hostile ground.
The numbers were bad.
But Marcus had made worse work in Afghanistan.
“Stay close,” he told Sarah, checking ammunition. “We’re going home.”
The compound erupted as more guards converged on the escape. But Sarah Cross was no longer just a victim. She was a survivor, and her brother had come to take her home.
Marcus laid down covering fire while the girls ran for the tree line. Controlled bursts. Guards diving for cover. Bullets sparking off concrete and cutting the air like hornets.
He counted flashes from multiple positions.
6 shooters spread through the compound.
Maybe more inside the buildings.
Too many for a frontal fight.
Time for asymmetric warfare.
“Move!” he shouted, emptying half a magazine into one position.
Sarah stumbled and caught herself against a barrier. Jessica helped Megan when her legs buckled. Claire grabbed Sarah’s arm when she faltered. All 4 girls holding one another up like they had learned to do over 2 years.
Survivors taking care of survivors.
The radio in Marcus’s pocket erupted with panic.
“All units converge on building 7. Subjects are escaping.”
More headlights tore through the compound as vehicles raced in. Engines. Boots on gravel. Men shouting.
A spotlight caught them halfway to the trees.
Sarah screamed as the beam pinned them in place.
Marcus dove and tackled her to the ground as bullets shredded the dirt where she had been standing.
“You hit?”
“No.”
They crawled the last 20 yards on their bellies. Bullets cracked through the dark overhead. Bark exploded from trunks as guards fired blindly into the forest.
Marcus’s radio crackled again.
“Brennan, status report.”
Static, then Brennan’s voice strained and thin. “Took one in the leg. Still mobile, but bleeding bad.”
“Where are you?”
“Got the girls?”
“Yeah. Moving to extraction point.”
“I’ll meet you there. Can’t hold this position much longer.”
In the cover of the trees Marcus hauled Sarah to her feet. The 4 girls looked at him with eyes that had seen too much. But under the trauma was something harder. They had survived 2 years of hell. They were not going to break now.
“How far?” Sarah asked, voice stronger than her legs.
“Quarter mile through the forest. Can you make it?”
“We made it 2 years. We can make another quarter mile.”
They moved through the trees like ghosts. Marcus in front with the rifle ready. The girls behind him helping one another over fallen logs and through heavy brush, careful where they placed each foot. No talking. No complaints. Only breath and the soft thud of boots on pine needles.
These were not victims anymore.
They were soldiers in their own war.
A twig snapped to their left, maybe 50 yards out.
Marcus raised a fist.
Everyone froze.
Through the trees, a figure moved parallel to their line, hunting them. Professional movement. Disciplined spacing. Someone who knew how to track people through wilderness.
Marcus gestured for the girls to stay put and slipped into the shadows.
The hunter carried an expensive rifle with a thermal scope and wore night-vision goggles that cost more than most people made in a month.
A rich client, probably. Paid extra to participate in the finale.
Marcus came up behind him like death.
The client never heard him. Never felt the knife slide between his ribs and angle upward into the heart. He dropped without a sound.
Expensive gear scattered across the forest floor.
Marcus dragged the body into brush and took the thermal scope and night vision. Now he could see in the dark better than the men chasing them.
“Clear,” he whispered when he returned.
They reached the extraction point just as Brennan’s truck came crawling up the service road. One headlight was gone. Steam rose from the radiator. The windshield was spiderwebbed with bullet strikes.
Brennan climbed out, blood soaking his left leg below the knee, rifle still in his hands.
“Jesus,” he said when he saw the girls. “You found them. You actually found them.”
“All 4,” Marcus said, helping Sarah into the truck bed. “But we’re not clear yet.”
Vehicle engines roared below. Headlights swept the mountainside like searchlights. Radios crackled. Dogs barked.
Full-scale manhunt.
“They’re coming,” Brennan said, grimacing as he put weight on the leg.
Marcus looked at his sister and her friends. 2 years of captivity had left them thin, hollow-eyed, traumatized. But they were alive. They were free.
“Get them to safety,” Marcus said, checking his rifle. “There’s something I need to do.”
Sarah grabbed his arm with fingers like bird bones. “Marcus, no. Don’t leave us. Please.”
“I’m not leaving. I’m making sure nobody follows.”
He kissed her forehead. Salt and pine needles and 2 years of fear ending at once.
“Get them home, Brennan. Call the FBI. State police. Anybody who’ll listen. Tell them about the network, the clients, all of it.”
“What about you?”
Marcus looked down toward the compound, at the lights and vehicles and armed men who had turned his sister into entertainment.
“I’m going hunting.”
He disappeared into the forest as the first vehicles reached the service road, rifle ready, night vision painting the world in green and black.
Time to show them what a real predator looked like.
The mountain air tasted of pine and gunpowder and justice long overdue.
Marcus Cross was done playing defense.
Now it was time to attack.
Part 3
Marcus watched through stolen night vision as 3 vehicles climbed the service road in single file. 2 black SUVs packed with security contractors. 1 armored sedan carrying the clients who had paid premium money to watch his sister die. Rich men who believed wealth could buy them the right to hunt people for sport.
Time to teach them what it meant to be prey.
He chose a position above a hairpin turn where the road curved hard along a steep drop. It was a perfect ambush point. No room to maneuver. No room to run.
The lead SUV rounded the turn with its engine straining. Marcus put 2 controlled rounds through the windshield. The driver’s head snapped back. The vehicle swerved, tires shrieking over gravel, and rolled down the embankment in a storm of glass and twisted metal.
The crash echoed through the valley like thunder.
The second SUV braked hard. 4 men jumped out in practiced formation, rifles ready, spreading into tactical positions.
“Contact, contact. Shooter on the ridge.”
Professional voices. Professional movement.
These were not local deputies or hired amateurs. Somebody had brought in real security for the night’s entertainment.
Marcus shifted left through the trees. Through his scope he could see the passengers in the sedan: middle-aged men in expensive outdoor clothing, faces gone pale with the first real fear they had probably felt in years.
Not so entertaining now.
The security team spread out, trying to fix his position with hand signals, covering fire, and bounding overwatch. They had training.
Marcus had the high ground and the righteous fury of a brother who had found his sister in a cage.
He dropped the first contractor with a headshot at 200 yards.
A clean kill.
More mercy than they had shown Sarah.
The second man got behind the SUV and shouted into his radio. “Sniper on the ridge. We need backup. Where is he? Ridgeline, 11 o’clock. Professional shooter. Military training.”
Muzzle flashes sparked across the mountainside as they returned fire. Bullets snapped overhead and chewed bark from the trunks around Marcus, but they were shooting blind into darkness.
He waited and counted their rounds.
When they paused to reload, he moved.
The radio on his belt crackled with panic.
“Base, this is Kevin. We lost contact with the extraction team.”
Kevin Reed.
The handyman.
The one who had fed victims to the network while earning trust in town.
Marcus keyed the mic, his voice calm and flat.
“Kevin, this is Marcus Cross.”
Silence.
“You know that name, don’t you? Sarah Cross. The girl you’ve been selling to your clients for 2 years.”
“Cross? How did you—”
“She’s free. Her friends are free. And I’m coming for every last one of you bastards.”
Marcus put another round through the SUV’s engine block. Steam hissed into the night as coolant sprayed over hot metal.
The remaining contractors broke cover and ran for the armored sedan.
A mistake.
Running made them targets.
Marcus tracked the first one through the scope, led him slightly, and squeezed. The man dropped mid-stride, rifle spinning into the dark. The second contractor made it to the sedan and dove inside shouting orders.
The armored car reversed hard, tires throwing gravel as it backed down the road faster than safety allowed.
Marcus let it go.
He had bigger prey.
“Kevin, you still monitoring this frequency?”
The radio hissed, then Reed’s voice came back, tight now with fear.
“You don’t understand what you’re dealing with, Cross. This network spans 3 states. Clients in every major city. You kill me, someone else takes over.”
“Then I’ll kill them too.”
“This goes all the way to the top. Politicians. Judges. People with real power. They’ll bury you and your family.”
Marcus started down the mountain, stepping over bodies, taking ammunition from the dead.
“Maybe. But you won’t be around to see it.”
“Cross, wait. Your sister. What we did to her. I can make it right. I’ve got information. Client lists. Financial records. Everything you need to burn the whole network down.”
Marcus stopped.
Taking down the whole operation would mean justice for more than Sarah. For Brennan’s daughter. For everyone they had hunted.
“Where?”
“My workshop. Hidden safe behind the tool cabinet. Combination is 7419.”
“Why would you keep records of your own crimes?”
“Insurance. These rich bastards don’t like loose ends. I kept evidence to make sure they couldn’t eliminate me.”
Smart. Criminals who survived kept leverage.
“Kevin.”
“Yeah?”
“Thanks for the confession.”
Marcus switched off the radio and pocketed it.
The workshop was 5 mi away, down winding mountain roads that cut past the main compound.
Time to finish it.
Time to make sure no other family went through what his had.
The mountain air was cold and sharp, full of pine, gunpowder, and justice finally arriving.
Marcus Cross had work left to do.
Kevin Reed was waiting, probably packing files and planning a run.
But there was nowhere to run from the kind of war Marcus was bringing.
Kevin Reed’s workshop sat in a clearing 5 mi down the mountain, surrounded by forest dense enough to swallow sound. Marcus approached on foot through the trees, night vision laying out the compound like a military target assessment. Main workshop building with bay doors and industrial lights. Storage sheds scattered around the property. A buried shipping container that made his skin crawl when he understood what it likely held.
Reed’s truck sat out front, the engine still ticking from recent use. Exhaust drifted from the tailpipe into the cold air.
Marcus found Reed inside the workshop, under harsh fluorescent lights, frantically packing files into a metal case.
He was in his 50s, with a graying beard, calloused hands, and a weathered face that looked trustworthy, the face of the man who would help lost hikers find exactly the wrong trail.
“Going somewhere, Kevin?”
Reed spun around with his hands visible, the universal posture of a man who knew he had been caught. His eyes stayed sharp, already calculating angles.
“Cross.” His voice was steady despite the rifle aimed at his chest. “I was hoping we could talk like civilized men.”
“About what? How you’ve been feeding college kids to rich psychopaths for entertainment?”
“It’s not that simple.”
“Nothing ever is.”
Marcus kept the rifle trained at center mass.
“Explain it.”
“Started small. One client. One girl who wouldn’t be missed. Runaway from Seattle. No family. No friends asking questions.”
Reed spoke in a conversational tone, as though he were describing weather.
“Money was too good to ignore. 50,000 for one weekend. More than I made in a year doing honest work.”
“So you became a professional kidnapper.”
“Clients wanted more. Different types. Network grew organically. Supply and demand. Basic economics.”
Marcus felt bile climb into his mouth.
“My sister wasn’t a runaway number.”
“Sarah and her friends were premium package. College girls from good families. Clean backgrounds. Photogenic. Clients pay extra for that kind of quality.”
The casual way he discussed Sarah like product, like inventory with a market value, made Marcus want to shoot him where he stood.
“How much?”
“50,000 each for the initial acquisition. Then ongoing fees for maintenance, streaming revenue, special requests. Your sister generated over half a million in her 2 years with us.”
“Streaming revenue.”
Reed nodded toward a computer setup in the corner. Multiple monitors. Professional cameras. Server racks humming with cooling fans.
“Dark web pays per viewer for live content. Popular performers pull 6 figures annually. Interactive features cost extra.”
Marcus felt sick.
“Interactive features.”
“Clients can type commands, watch the subjects follow instructions in real time. Some prefer the hunting packages. Turn them loose in the woods. Track them down like game animals.”
“And you filmed it all.”
“Business model required documentation. Clients want proof of value. Highlights for future marketing. Evidence of premium service delivery.”
The clinical way he explained Sarah’s torture, reduced to business metrics and customer satisfaction, broke something inside Marcus. He slammed the rifle butt into Reed’s face.
Reed crashed into a workbench, tools scattering across the concrete floor.
“The safe. Now.”
Reed wiped blood from his nose and led him to a hidden panel behind a tool cabinet. His hands shook as he worked the dial.
Just like he had said over the radio.
Inside sat external hard drives, printed client lists, financial ledgers, and photographic evidence arranged in neat folders.
“Everything’s there,” Reed said through the blood. “Names, addresses, payment records, video files. Burn it all down.”
Marcus grabbed the drives and documents and stuffed them into his tactical pack.
Enough evidence to destroy the network.
Enough to put dozens of rich predators in federal prison.
“One more question. My friend Brennan’s daughter, Bethany. What happened to her?”
Reed’s eyes darkened, and for a second something close to regret showed there.
“Lasted 3 days in the advanced hunting package. Clients loved her fighting spirit. Paid bonuses for extended chase sequences.”
Marcus shot him in the knee.
Reed screamed and collapsed, blood spreading fast across the floor.
“Where’s her body?”
“Ridge behind the main compound. Unmarked grave with the others. Maybe 20, 30 bodies total.”
Marcus looked around the workshop. At the cameras that had captured his sister’s suffering. At the trophies hanging on the walls, not deer or elk but personal items from victims: jewelry, phones, driver’s licenses. A museum of human misery.
He pulled a thermite grenade from his tactical vest, military-issue incendiary hot enough to melt steel and wipe out machines.
“What are you doing?”
“Cleaning house.”
Marcus activated the grenade and tossed it into the computer bank.
White-hot fire consumed servers, monitors, and the electronic infrastructure of years of systematic horror.
Reed tried to crawl away from the flames.
Marcus grabbed him by the collar and zip-tied his hands behind his back.
“The families deserve to know what happened to their daughters.”
He dragged Reed outside as the workshop burned, flames reaching into the night like fingers of purification.
20 minutes later, state police sirens wailed up the mountain road.
Then FBI tactical vehicles.
Then media vans.
Marcus sat in the back of an ambulance and watched federal agents arrest what was left of the network. Sheriff Mitchell in handcuffs. Reed on a stretcher, headed into federal custody and a life sentence without parole.
Sarah found him there, wrapped in a hospital blanket, looking fragile but alive.
Her friends stayed close: Jessica, Claire, Megan, supporting one another the way they had for 2 years.
“You okay?” Sarah asked as she sat beside him on the ambulance bumper.
Marcus looked at her. Still too thin. Still hollow-eyed from trauma that would take years to unwind. But breathing. Free. No longer somebody’s merchandise.
“I will be.”
She leaned against his shoulder, exhausted but safe.
“I knew you’d come. Even when they said nobody was looking anymore. Even when I wanted to give up.”
Marcus pulled her close and felt how little weight she had left, bird-bone fragile against his chest.
“I made a promise.”
“What promise?”
“To bring you home.”
In the distance smoke rose from Reed’s workshop. Flames consumed the computers, the files, the digital machinery that had turned human suffering into entertainment for rich monsters.
But the evidence drives were safe in Marcus’s pack.
Tomorrow he would hand them over to federal prosecutors who would spend years hunting every client, every enabler, every person who had profited from his sister’s nightmare.
Tonight, he was only a brother who had kept his word.
The mountain air tasted like smoke and freedom and justice finally served.
Sarah Cross was coming home.
And the monsters who had caged her were going to burn.
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