The Barefoot Twins On I-40 Were Not Running From Their Mother-Quieen - Chainityai

The Barefoot Twins On I-40 Were Not Running From Their Mother-Quieen

The phone was already connected before I ever touched it.

That was the detail I kept coming back to later, after the trooper took my statement and the boys were wrapped in clean blankets under the ambulance shade.

Not the bare feet.

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Not the winter coats in August.

Not even the way one child stepped in front of the other with the discipline of someone twice his age.

It was the timer on that cracked screen, climbing second by second, proving that someone had been listening to me from the moment I got out of my car.

I had been driving west on Interstate 40 after a double shift, windows down because the air-conditioning in my old Honda only worked when it felt generous.

The highway looked empty in the blinding way highways do in summer, all white line, heat shimmer, and trucks leaning hard against the wind.

Then I saw two small figures on the shoulder.

At first my mind tried to make them into trash bags, fence posts, anything ordinary enough to keep driving.

Then one of them turned his face toward me.

They were children.

They were twins.

They were barefoot.

My foot hit the brake before I decided to stop.

Thirty years in emergency rooms had trained that part of me better than language could.

You do not debate a child on a highway shoulder.

You make the road safer first.

I threw on my hazards, angled the Honda between the boys and the traffic, and stepped out with both palms open.

The smaller one stared at the car.

The bigger one stared at me.

He was only bigger by posture, not by body.

Same narrow shoulders.

Same dark hair damp against the forehead.

Same pale, clean feet pressed against gravel that should have hurt.

The older twin had a cracked phone in one hand, and when it rang he smothered the sound against his coat before the ringtone could bloom.

That coat bothered me at once.

It was a heavy winter jacket, the kind children wear to school when frost is on the windshield, not when August asphalt is hot enough to blur the horizon.

His brother wore one too.

I asked where their shoes were.

The older boy said they had to leave them.

He did not say lost.

He did not say forgot.

He said had to, and that was the first little alarm bell in a line of many.

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