The vibration of the phone on the nightstand was a whisper, but to me, it sounded like a gunshot.
I was awake instantly. My eyes snapped open, staring at the popcorn ceiling of my small bedroom. The digital clock read 2:00 AM. It was the dead of night, the hour when the world is silent, and only bad news travels.
I reached for the phone. One unread message.
Sender: Sarah (Daughter)
Content: Dad, save me.
Attached was a GPS pin drop.
I didn’t call her back. Calling back takes time. Calling back alerts the enemy. Calling back asks questions when the answer is already screaming in your face.
I rolled out of bed, my feet hitting the cold floorboards. I was fifty-eight years old. My knees clicked when it rained, and my lower back was a constant reminder of twenty years jumping out of perfectly good airplanes. But tonight, the aches vanished. The retired man—the one who spent his days fixing lawnmowers and drinking black coffee at the diner—was gone.
In his place was Sergeant Major Arthur Sterling, retired handler for the 75th Ranger Regiment K-9 unit.
I pulled on my boots. I grabbed my keys. I reached under the driver’s seat of my beat-up Ford truck and felt the cold steel of the tire iron. It was a crude tool, unrefined, but tonight was not a night for refinement.
The GPS coordinates pointed to The Vanderbilt Estate. A fortress of old money and new cruelty located thirty miles north, in a zip code where the police knocked politely and secrets were buried under manicured rose bushes.
I drove fast. The highway was empty, a ribbon of asphalt under the pale moonlight. My mind replayed the last time I had seen Sarah. It was six months ago, at her wedding. She had looked beautiful, but fragile.