Font Size:

But what this man did—what he knows about my brother’s fate—makes the blood roar through my temples.

I’ve chased warlords through remote parts of Afghanistan with steadier hands than this. Anticipation thrums through me. So does fear—the kind that could paralyze me if I let it.

What happens if what I find out… isn’t bearable?

I’ve worked too many investigations to expect otherwise. Things rarely fall apart the way people say they do. Stories change depending on who survives them.

And the closer I get to Hollow Peak, the more I wonder whether I’ve spent years mourning a version of my brother that never truly existed.

In interviews with the surviving members of my brother’s team, I’ve heard things. Questionable things. Maybe even concerning. It’s exactly those things that have brought me here.

To the staff sergeant tied to the events of that day and the sanitized reports that followed.

I pack the Jeep like I’m heading into hostile territory. Food. Warm layers. Sunscreen. Bug repellant. Sleeping bag.

The full drill.

The way I’ve always packed on assignments. I leave nothing to chance, especially when this interview could tilt my entire world off its axis.

Rugged peaks rise around Hollow Peak like ancient teeth, their slopes crowded with wind-bent pines and aspens. Birds call endlessly from the trees where a cold wind threads through the valley mixing with the summer air.

I program the coordinates, then make a call to the Sheriff’s Department to let them know what I’m doing. They redirect me to local rangers, underpaid and understaffed.

It doesn’t make me feel warm and fuzzy. But I’m not here for safety. I’m here for the truth.

Places like this aren’t so different from war zones. The danger’s just dressed up prettier.

And I’ve walked into too many war zones to turn back now. Just never one where the conflict feels so personal.

I remind myself I’m ready for anything… as much as that’s possible.

Self-defense classes, martial arts, a CCW license, shooting instruction. I learned a long time ago that confidence gets people killed. Preparation keeps them alive.

That said, I’ve been wrong before. Just not about something that mattered this much. There are gaps in the story surrounding my brother’s death, and I haven’t decided what they mean.

I don’t go looking for stories that make people feel better. I go for the ones that explain why they don’t. Pull at threads people would rather leave alone.

It won’t be different this time. And I know enough about Rhys Ward, his psych profile, his diagnoses and issues, to approach this without getting it wrong.

But that’s not what unsettles the locals.

To them, Rhys Ward is something half-buried and better left alone.

But ghosts don’t leave tracks.

He does.

Chapter

Two

SLOANE

By the time I realize I’m in too deep, it’s also too late. Somewhere around seventy-six hundred feet on a road that’s seen better decades, I give the Jeep more gas.

Steve at the gas station warned me about this trail. So did every expression in Hollow Peak that tightened at its mention.

I get it now.