“Nobody believed in me. That was their first mistake,” Zach told his wife Michelle, retelling the story about setting up a command bunker in Baghdad Iraq during the war.
She smiled patiently. “You are an American hero. Now, can we please watch some TV?”
He leaned back on their living room couch, and with her familiar warmth at his side, he felt deeply at peace. And that evening, for once, the three secure lines downstairs remained blessedly silent. From somewhere, the giggles of his daughter Isabella, drifted in, busy with whatever it was teens did with their mobile phones on a Thursday night.
Ominous background music swelled from the television. The true-crime host leaned intently toward the camera. “What would a father do to save his daughter?”
Zach grabbed the remote and switched the channel. “Do we really need to watch this?”
Michelle raised an eyebrow. “It’s just a show.”
“Well, I live one every day.” He tried to suppress the stress headache that seemed to reside in him permanently these days. “We live in one of the safest suburbs of DC. I deal with enough problems at work. And tomorrow morning is our big DNI meeting. I need some time to relax.”
“No problem, Zach.”
From the kitchen, Isabella grunted, her standard commentary on her parents’ conversations lately. She used to go to amazing lengths to get her parents’ attention, now she was always on her phone and didn’t want anything to do with them.
The next morning, the espresso machine hissed and gurgled as it prepared his cup for the one-hour drive to JBAB. He felt movement behind him and then a hand on his shoulder. He jolted instinctively. He had spent four years in Baghdad with a rifle always within reach.
“Easy tiger,” Michelle said gently, her fingers massaging the tight muscles of his back. “Just wanted to say good morning to my husband. Isabella is hoping you can come to her equestrian event today. It’s at 5 pm so dads can attend.”
Equestrian. Code for horses, the hobby that devoured a big chunk of his monthly paycheck, which he paid because it kept Michelle happy. “Can’t today. I need to stick around in case the director needs anything after the briefing. Next time, I promise.”
“I’m going back to bed,” Michelle said and withdrew, leaving him alone in the kitchen in silence.
At JBAB, the briefing room hummed with tension. At the office the stakes were high, but the politics felt easier to navigate. Zach stood before the DNI Director and joint chiefs’ liaisons, projector remote in hand. He clicked it, and the display showed a world map with a green marker tracking The Red Star loading at Dalian, then snaking through Asian waters before swinging around the tip of India toward the Strait of Hormuz.
“The vessel is headed toward the Strait of Hormuz and shows every sign of being an arms shipment.”
The Director frowned. “The President is going to ask tough questions. How can we be certain?”
He laid out the data, explaining how the NSA’s intercepts flagged different terms than those used for normal trade shipments. His Mandarin Chinese training at Annapolis and the years he put in at East Asian Naval Intelligence gave him insight. “I recommend we interdict and detain the vessel.”
The leaders in the room nodded while muttering about the need to “run it past” their people. Zach was a military man; political implications weren’t his forte.
The rest of the day, he spent in the mundane grind of deputy director: signing endless requisition forms, shaking hands with new staff, and sitting through weekly status meetings with his microphone muted while he refreshed sports scores on his desktop.
Then his personal phone vibrated: an unknown number. Unusual. Maybe an old informant from Asia. He would keep it quick.
“This is Zach Browder.”
“Zach, Isabella is missing!” It was Michelle, her voice panicky.
His stomach dropped. “What…Isabella?”
“Your daughter, Zach.”
“Ok, slow down. Tell me exactly what happened.”
She walked him through how Isabella didn’t turn up at school, not unusual for a high school student, but then she didn’t turn up at Blue Gate Stable either. In the back of his mind, Zach wondered why Michelle didn’t call from her own number, then remembered how many times he had put her calls on voicemail.
“Have you called the police?”
“The police in Leesburg are basically two dropouts parked in front of the Dunkin’ Donuts at Kelly Ford Plaza. And I thought you…with your position…might be able to pull some strings.”
The plea in her voice bothered him. “Honey, I can’t.” The line went quiet. In that second, he realized it was one of those moments in life that could change everything.
“I’m leaving and coming home as fast as I can.”
He told his office it was a family emergency and slipped out. Explaining more would only tie his hands with red tape or even jeopardize his clearance.
From the car, he handed off operational responsibility for Red Star to his deputy Samantha. In the military, redundancy is built in. Everyone has a backup, and the backups have backup. Halfway to Leesburg, not having received any updates from JBAB, he felt he was missing out on his own operation. A call from Michelle snapped him out of his worry.
“I logged into her computer. What should I look for?”
“Don’t touch anything, I’ll be there soon.”
Soon home, in front of his daughter’s laptop, her teen apps felt disorienting. He navigated her Discord, Telegram, and Instagram looking for any clues where she might have gone or who she might have communicated with.
Despite his own fears, he reassured his wife, “She’s probably just playing hooky with her friends.”
“If you knew our daughter, you’d know she’d never miss her horse show.”
A test from Greg, a friend at work, came in. “Heard about your emergency, let me know if I can do anything to help?”
“Np all good here,” he replied.
They went back to Baghdad, and probably would do anything to help each other.
He unpurged Isabella’s deleted files, bringing back her website cookies, and was able to log in to her apps.
Her DMs revealed conversations with people strangers to him: Hazel, Kai, Asher. He cross-checked usernames against school records and the yearbook. He didn’t have time to wait for them to reply to his texts. With Michelle beside him, they went old-school detective, driving house to house and knocking on doors.
At Asher’s door, Zach glowered through the screen. “How do you know my daughter?”
“We hang out sometimes,” the boy mumbled.
“Hang out? Do you know where she is right now?”
He shook his head. As Zach could feel his face heat up, Asher’s mother intervened, pushing in front of her son. “I hope you find her. Let us know if we can help.” Michelle had to physically guide Zach back to the car, her hand tight on his arm.
As they drove around the neighborhood looking for Isabella, Zach received a text from an unknown number.
As they circled the neighborhood, another text arrived from an unknown number: If you want to see your daughter Isabella again, leave $100,000 behind the Leesburg Monument at midnight tonight.
Zach slammed the brakes. The car shuddered to a halt. “You’ve got to be kidding me!” Fear and rage overwhelmed him. “I need to call Greg.”
He called Greg immediately and filled him in.
“Not a good development,” Greg said.
“Why’s that?”
“Most kidnappers don’t leave their victims alive. You need to call in your authority…”
“Let me think about it. Do me a solid, and track her mobile phone?” He read out Isabella’s number.
“Sure thing.”
Greg’s callback came fast. “Motel 6 off I-495 outside Bethesda.”
Zach’s desperation overrode every protocol. He contacted DNI legal, spun the situation into an “Iran-linked hacking operation,” and secured a warrant. For thirty agonizing minutes, he stayed on the line as SWAT assembled, evacuated the block, and prepared the breach.
“Operation is go. Breach!” An explosive boom echoed through the phone. “Suspect one secure, two secure… Bathroom clear. Closets clear.” A long pause. “We have one elderly male and one elderly female. No children.”
After an hour, it was clear the elderly couple were in transit to visit a relative, and they had no idea how a cheap mobile phone containing Isabella’s SIM card had fallen into their bag.
The kidnappers had deceived him and sent them on a wild goose chase.
The DIA Director’s call came soon after. “You allocated resources without approval, Zach.” The silence on the line carried the weight of career-ending consequences. “Clearances revoked pending full investigation.”
Zach hung up and kicked the wall hard enough to dent it. Michelle stared at him, eyes blazing with exhaustion and fury. “This is all your fault!” she screamed. “If you had paid more attention to your own daughter instead of that damn ship—”
“You think I don’t know that?” he shot back, voice breaking. Guilt clawed at him—every missed dinner, every brushed-off request, every time work came first.
Greg called again. “Sorry about the director. One last thing for you: facial recognition showed Isabella alone and unharmed at a Waffle House in Bluemont two hours ago. I think she’s staging this, Zach.”
“Thanks for the update. I guess that’s good news.”
“And unrelated, we stopped The Red Star, and it held nothing but soybeans.”
Bluemont—on their Sunday route to the stables. “I think I know where she is,” he told Michelle.
“Then go find her.”
He realized that as he was trying to save the Middle East from a soybean shipment, he completely lost his own daughter.
At Blue Gate Stables, the owner said he hadn’t seen Isabella, but confirmed her favorite horse was missing. “All the trails head into the woods. Good luck. I hope you find her,” she paused. “Do you need a horse?”
Zach looked at the large beasts in the stable shuddering nervously in the dark. “I don’t know how to ride. I’ll go on foot.”
Venturing into the deep woods of Virginia, he realized he didn’t know a thing about his own backyard. He followed the trail, finding his way with his iPhone light, and called out “Isabella!” at regular intervals while he looked for signs of life in the woods. Outside of the skittering of birds and squirrels, there was none.
An hour in, cold rain began to fall, soaking through his clothes and chilling him to the bone in a way he had never experienced. Cut off, alone, in the deep woods of Virginia, he leaned against a tree and began to sob with regret at everything that led to this movement.
“Isbaella!” he called out again.
A rustle in the bushes. A dark shape on horseback emerged from the trees like something from a nightmare.
“Please don’t hurt me. I have a daughter.”
The rider dismounted. “I’ve been following you for hours, Dad.” Isabella’s voice was tired but amused. “I didn’t even know you cared.”
“How did you track me?”
“Easy.”
In the pouring rain, Zach stood speechless. His teenage daughter had outsmarted a senior intelligence officer using spy tradecraft, outdoor survival knowledge, and pure teenage spite. He felt equal parts humiliated and ridiculously proud. She possessed skills he didn’t even know she had. Admiration mixed with shame flooded him.
They walked the horse back together through the downpour,
A year later, back home in Appleton, Wisconsin, he and Michelle had settled in, having found new jobs. Best of all, he and Isabella rode every weekend at Dofford Stables. The air smelled cleaner, the trails quieter here. He was still learning, still a little nervous around horses, but the fresh air and the pleasure of his daughter riding beside him became the center of his week. He had long since realized he should have hung up his spurs in Washington years ago.
What would a father do for his daughter? Anything.