Page 74 of Ride Easy


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The door shuts behind me.

Darkness on darkness.

My own heartbeat is so loud it’s a roar.

One of them moves behind me. I hear the snip of something.

The zip ties loosen.

My hands drop, numb and aching. I rub my wrists instinctively, but a hand slaps mine away.

“Don’t,” he warns.

Then the blindfold is yanked off.

Light stabs my eyes. I blink hard, tears spilling.

The room comes into focus in pieces—bare bulb overhead, peeling paint, a metal chair, a table with nothing on it. The windows are covered.

Two men stand in front of me.

Their faces are still partly hidden—hats, masks, shadows—but I can see enough to know they’re not teenagers playing a game.

They’re grown.

Capable.

And they’ve done this before.

One of them holds the photo of my grandfather again. He sets it on the table like it’s a contract. “We’re gonna ask you some questions,” he prepares me.

My throat tightens. “What questions?” I whisper.

He leans forward slightly. “You answer right,” he says calmly, “your granddad keeps breathing.”

The other man shifts, gun still in his hand, still pointed in my direction like I’m not a person, just a problem. I swallow, forcing myself to meet their eyes even though every instinct is screaming at me to look away.

Think smart.

Stay calm.

Be useful.

Stay alive.

My voice shakes but I make it work. “Okay,” I say. “Okay. I’ll answer.” I commit but I’m confused as to what I could answer to help any of these men.

And in my chest, beneath the terror, something hard begins to form. Not courage. Not yet. Just resolve.

Because I don’t know what they want. But I know what I have to do.

Survive this.

For Grandpa.

For me.

And—though the thought nearly breaks me—for Miles, who doesn’t know yet that something has gone terribly, terribly wrong.