Page 84 of Five Brothers

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Page 84 of Five Brothers

What the hell?I force my feet to keep going, slipping through the back door and looking around the pool, not seeing anyone. It’s coming from the woods. I walk across the deck, into the brush, and see a light.

“Please, Macon,” a man begs.

Macon comes into view, standing in the doorway of a container. Like the ones they put on the backs of semitrucks, with no windows and a lock on the outside. Has that always been sitting back here? I’ve never noticed.

He grips a man by the collar, the muscles in Macon’s back taut and the veins in his neck visible from here. I step, but foliage crunches under my shoe, and I dart to the left, hiding myself behind a tree.

My pulse races, and I close my mouth, because I’m breathing too hard.

After a moment, I hear Macon growl, “Where’s the food we bought your family?”

“F-Fisher had friends over, and um …” the guy gasps. “No, Macon, please!”

I peek around the tree, seeing him shove the man’s head into an oil drum I hope is filled with just water.

The man struggles, gripping the sides and pushing against Macon’s force.

But Macon doesn’t let him up until he wants to. Pulling his face out of the water, I study the guy, trying to figure out if I know him.There are a lot of people living deeper in the swamp who I haven’t met yet.

“Look at me,” Macon bites out, pulling him up again by the shirt. “Look at me!”

The man breathes hard, his legs limp underneath him.

“You’ve had your chances,” Macon tells him. “I’ve been nice, then I was firm, but this is it. You have another drink, or spend money on anything that takes food off your kids’ table, I’m going to kill you. I’m going to fucking kill you.”

The man sobs. “It’s not just the alcohol, man. I’m … I mean … I’ve got a problem with drugs, too.”

“Shut up.” Macon pushes him back down into the water.

The man is one of them. Not an enemy. Macon’s trying to get him straight. Would he really kill him?

He yanks the man out by the back of his collar, shoves him in the container, and I rush to the next tree and then the next, trying to get a view inside, but all I catch sight of is a futon and some light that must be coming from a lamp or something. Macon slams the door shut and locks it, the guy inside pounding against the other side.

“Please!” he begs. “Please, let me out!”

“Three days,” Macon says. “When that shit is out of your system.”

“I can’t stop.” He sobs hard. “Macon, I wasn’t always like this. You know me. Please, man. I’m scared.”

Macon’s hand rests on the metal door, his head slowly falling. His chest rises and falls in heavy breaths.

“Macon …” the guy goes on. “It hurts!”

My stomach twists in knots, and I watch Macon Jaeger stand there. His shoulders shake a couple of times, his exterior slowly crumbling as his guard comes down.

Because right now, he doesn’t know anyone is watching him.

“Please …” the guy pleads.

I blink, a tear spilling over. I quickly wipe it away.

He has to know a detox not done right can kill someone. Do the others know he’s keeping this guy back here?

The guy hollers and pounds, and Macon turns, starting to walk away. His eyebrows press together, and his mouth hangs open just slightly, like he can’t breathe.

The guy carries on, and Macon closes his eyes again like the only way he’s going to see something good is by not seeing anything at all.

Gripping the side of the barrel, he plunges a hand into the water and splashes it across his face and the back of his neck. He walks toward the house, and I slip around the tree, staying out of sight.




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