Paramedic Finds Two Toddlers Dragging A Box On Route 9 At 3 AM-Quieen - Chainityai

Paramedic Finds Two Toddlers Dragging A Box On Route 9 At 3 AM-Quieen

The first thing I remember after seeing those five words was the sound of my own breathing inside my jacket collar.

It came in short white bursts, too loud in my ears, while the fog swallowed the rest of the highway.

Can only afford one.

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For a second, my mind tried to make it mean something else.

A joke.

A prank.

A cruel message on a box that had nothing to do with the two little girls shivering beside it.

Then the cardboard thudded from the inside, and both toddlers screamed for their mother.

My training took over before my fear could.

I told my partner, Marcus, to get the girls into the ambulance and call for police, a second medic unit, and child services on priority.

He moved fast, but even then he had to pry the girls away from the box one finger at a time.

They kicked and sobbed and reached over his shoulder, both of them crying the same word until it stopped sounding like a word at all.

Mama.

I pulled my trauma shears from my cargo pocket and slid the blunt edge under the first strip of duct tape.

The tape was wet, but whoever wrapped it had used half a roll and pressed it hard against the cardboard.

I cut through one band, then another.

The box shifted again.

“Ma’am,” I called, keeping my voice steady because panic spreads faster than fire at a scene like that. “My name is not important right now. I’m a paramedic. You’re safe with me. Can you hear me?”

A breath scraped out from inside.

Then a woman’s voice, so thin I almost missed it under the engine of our idling rig, whispered, “My girls.”

I cut faster.

The top flap lifted, and my flashlight caught her face.

She was curled on her side inside a soaked appliance box, knees pulled tight because there was no room to stretch, hair plastered to her forehead, lips pale from cold.

Silver tape bound her wrists in front of her.

More tape was wrapped around her ankles.

There was a strip stuck to the sleeve of her sweatshirt where she had clearly worked her mouth free before we arrived.

I have seen people in fear before.

This was different.

This was a woman who had held herself together only because two children still needed her to.

“Where are they?” she whispered.

“In the ambulance,” I said. “They’re cold, but they’re breathing. They’re with my partner.”

Her eyes closed.

One tear slid sideways into her hair.

Then she opened them again and looked past me into the fog.

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