At Black Mesa Travel Plaza, girls come in tired, hungry, and trying not to be noticed. Some get a meal. Some get a room. Some disappear into the motel annex behind the diner and never make it back out. In 2009, nineteen-year-old Leah Wren and runaway teenager Mara see enough to understand what Black Mesa really is: a roadside trap run by motel manager Harland Pike and protected by county deputy Nolan Creed. By dawn, Leah is gone, Mara is running for her life, and the desert behind the annex has already started keeping the bodies.
Seventeen years later, state investigator Mara Vance is sent to Black Mesa after road crews uncover human remains in the drainage field behind the property. The diner is dead. The motel is rotting. But the system underneath it is still there in ledgers, hidden rooms, false books, buried evidence, and men who learned long ago how to turn missing girls into paperwork. As the excavation widens, Mara is forced to walk back into the place that nearly erased her and confront the voice she never forgot.
What begins as a body recovery turns into something larger and uglier: a corridor crime network built on cash rooms, unnamed girls, buried records, and official protection. Exit Wounds is psychological roadside horror about survival, witness, and the terror of learning that some places were never hiding violence. They were organized around it.