And looked directly outside.
At Carter.
For one frozen second, neither man moved.
Then Ryan’s eyes widened in pure terror.
He lunged for the gun.
Carter exploded forward.
Part 4
The motel door shattered beneath Carter’s shoulder.
Cheap wood splintered inward as Ryan fired wildly.
The gunshot deafened the tiny room.
Plaster erupted from the wall beside Carter’s head.
Lily screamed from outside.
Ryan tried firing again, but Carter tackled him before he could aim.
The two men crashed into the dresser, sending beer bottles exploding across the carpet.
Ryan slammed an elbow into Carter’s jaw.
Carter answered with a brutal punch to the ribs that knocked the air from Ryan’s lungs.
The revolver skidded beneath the bed.
Ryan scrambled desperately.
Carter grabbed him by the throat and slammed him against the wall.
“Who paid you?” Carter snarled.
Ryan gasped for air.
“You don’t understand—”
“Who paid you?”
Ryan’s composure collapsed completely.
“Hale!” he shouted. “Victor Hale!”
The name hit the room like a bomb.
Carter loosened his grip slightly.
“Victor Hale is dead.”
Ryan laughed weakly through bloody teeth.
“That’s what they wanted people to think.”
Thunder rattled the motel windows.
Ryan’s eyes twitched toward the door.
“He’s bigger now,” Ryan whispered. “You can’t kill somebody like Hale. Men like him don’t die. They become invisible.”
Carter stared at him.
Ryan continued trembling.
“He owns judges. Police. Politicians. Federal agents. Half the people chasing you work for him without even knowing it.”
Then Lily slowly stepped inside the room.
The second Ryan saw her, his face broke completely.
The fear in his eyes transformed into guilt.
Raw and ugly.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered.
Lily looked at him silently.
Rainwater dripped from her tangled blonde hair.
“You told my mom we’d be safe,” she said.
Ryan lowered his head.
“She trusted you.”
“I know.”
“She died because of you.”
Actual tears.
“I didn’t know they were going to kill her.”
Lily’s voice turned cold.
“That doesn’t matter anymore.”
Outside, engines roared.
Carter’s instincts ignited instantly.
Headlights flooded through the motel blinds.
Black SUVs.
At least four.
Doors opened simultaneously.
Men carrying rifles poured into the parking lot.
Ryan looked out the window and nearly collapsed.
“Oh God,” he whispered. “They found me.”
Carter grabbed the revolver from beneath the bed.
“How many exits?”
Ryan pointed shakily toward the bathroom.
“Window.”
The first bullets tore through the motel walls before he could finish the sentence.
Drywall exploded.
Glass shattered.
Lily dropped to the floor screaming.
Carter grabbed her with one arm while firing blindly toward the doorway with the other.
A man outside shouted.
Another burst of gunfire ripped through the room.
Ryan backed away in panic.
Then the bathroom window exploded inward.
A masked gunman climbed halfway inside.
Carter fired once.
The man fell backward into the rain.
“Move!” Carter yelled.
They ran.
Part 5
The three of them crashed through the back alley behind the motel while gunfire echoed through the storm like fireworks from hell.
Ryan stumbled repeatedly, nearly slipping on wet concrete while Lily clung tightly to Carter’s arm.
Behind them, armed men flooded the parking lot.
One spotlight swept across the alley.
“There!” someone shouted.
Bullets sparked against metal dumpsters.
Carter shoved Lily behind cover.
“Stay down.”
Ryan pointed toward a rusted pickup truck near the street.
“That’s mine!”
They sprinted toward it.
Halfway there, Carter’s phone rang.
Again.
He answered while running.
“This is Special Agent Miller,” the voice said urgently. “Jake, listen carefully. We can still get you out safely.”
“How did you find this phone?”
Then Miller answered too smoothly.
“We’re tracking you for your protection.”
Lily suddenly stopped running.
Her face turned pale.
“No,” she whispered.
Carter looked down.
“He’s lying.”
The voice on the phone changed instantly.
The calm professional tone vanished.
“Smart girl,” Miller said coldly.
Carter’s blood froze.
“Drive north,” Miller continued. “Maybe you’ll survive long enough to understand what’s happening.”
The line disconnected.
Ryan fumbled with the truck keys.
“Hurry!” Carter barked.
The engine finally roared alive.
They tore through the alley seconds before another SUV blocked the exit.
Gunfire chased them into the sleeping city.
Rain hammered the windshield while the old pickup rattled violently at ninety miles per hour.
Lily sat between Carter and Ryan, hugging her knees.
Nobody spoke for nearly five minutes.
Finally Carter broke the silence.
“What did your mother record?”
Lily stared out the window.
“Everything.”
“What does that mean?”
“She worked for Victor Hale.”
Ryan inhaled sharply.
Lily continued quietly.
“She cleaned houses for rich people. One night she heard men talking in Hale’s office.”
Her fingers trembled.
“They were talking about girls.”
Carter tightened his grip on the wheel.
“She recorded them with her phone.”
Ryan looked horrified.
“Hale found out?”
Lily nodded.
“He sent people to our apartment.”
Her voice cracked.
“My mom hid the video before they came.”
Carter looked at her.
Lily slowly touched the silver locket hanging around her neck.
“Inside here.”
Ryan stared.
“That tiny thing?”
“It’s not jewelry,” Lily whispered.
Carter’s pulse quickened.
Suddenly headlights appeared behind them.
Closing fast.
Ryan cursed.
“They’re gaining.”
Then another pair of headlights appeared ahead.
An eighteen-wheeler drifted sideways across the highway.
Blocking everything.
Carter’s eyes widened.
“It’s a trap.”
The truck doors opened.
Armed men stepped into the road.
Rifles raised.
Ryan screamed.
Carter slammed the wheel hard.
The pickup launched through the guardrail.
For one terrifying second they were airborne.
Then they crashed down an embankment into darkness.
Part 6
Pain exploded through Carter’s ribs as the truck rolled twice before slamming upside down against muddy ground near a flooded creek.
Glass covered everything.
Steam hissed from the crushed engine.
For several seconds nobody moved.
Then Lily cried out weakly.
Carter forced himself awake.
Blood streamed down his forehead.
“Lily?”
“I’m here.”
Relief hit him instantly.
Ryan groaned nearby.
The windshield had collapsed partially onto his legs.
He looked trapped.
Above them, flashlights moved along the highway.
Voices.
The hunters were searching.
“We have to move,” Carter muttered.
Ryan panicked.
“No, no, don’t leave me here—”
Carter tried lifting the dashboard.
It wouldn’t move.
Ryan’s breathing grew faster.
“You don’t understand,” he whispered desperately. “If they catch me alive, they’ll make me disappear.”
Carter looked at him carefully.
“You helped them traffic children?”
Ryan shut his eyes.
“I handled money transfers. Fake passports. Transportation.”
Lily stared at him in disgust.
Ryan started crying again.
“I never touched the kids.”
Carter’s expression hardened.
“That’s your defense?”
Footsteps approached above the creek.
Flashlights swept the darkness.
Ryan grabbed Carter’s sleeve.
“There’s something else.”
Carter leaned closer.
Ryan whispered shakily.
“Hale chose you specifically.”
“You weren’t random.”
Lightning flashed across the creek.
Ryan swallowed hard.
“Your ex-wife worked for Hale too.”
The words hit Carter like a shotgun blast.
“What did you say?”
“She found evidence. Same as Lily’s mother.”
Carter’s heartbeat became deafening.
“My ex-wife disappeared two years ago.”
Ryan nodded weakly.
“She didn’t disappear.”
Gunmen suddenly appeared above the creek.
“There they are!”
Ryan shoved something into Carter’s hand.
A small brass key.
“Bus depot,” Ryan whispered. “Locker 317.”
Then gunfire erupted.
Carter grabbed Lily and ran into the darkness beneath the bridge while bullets tore through mud and water around them.
Behind him, Ryan’s screams stopped abruptly.
Part 7
By dawn they reached Houston again.
Exhausted.
Bleeding.
Half frozen.
Carter brought Lily to the only place he still trusted.
His garage.
The building sat abandoned beneath gray morning skies, the rusted sign barely hanging above the entrance while floodwater from the storm crept along the gutters.
Carter unlocked the side door cautiously.
Everything smelled like oil and old metal.
For the first time all night, silence surrounded them.
Lily sat on an overturned tire while Carter searched the office for medical supplies.
His hands wouldn’t stop shaking.
His ex-wife.
Emily.
Could Ryan have been telling the truth?
Two years earlier Emily had vanished after weeks of strange behavior.
Late-night phone calls. Nervous glances. Arguments she refused to explain.
Then one morning she was simply gone.
Police assumed she’d left voluntarily.
Even Carter eventually believed it.
Until now.
The garage door suddenly rattled open.
Carter spun around.
Marcus stepped inside holding a pistol.
For one stupid moment relief crossed Carter’s face.
Then he saw Marcus crying.
“I’m sorry,” Marcus whispered.
Carter slowly stood.
“You sold me out.”
Marcus lowered his eyes.
“I owed them money.”
“You put a child in my trunk.”
“I didn’t know she was a kid!” Marcus shouted desperately. “They said it was evidence. Some kind of witness transfer.”
Lily hid behind Carter.
Marcus looked at her and his expression collapsed completely.
Carter stepped forward.
“How long have you worked for Hale?”
Marcus shook his head.
“I never met Hale. Nobody does. Orders just come through middlemen. Deliveries. Pickups. Payments.”