A Tired Nurse Followed A Kidnapper Into The Woods And Found A Son-Quieen - Chainityai

A Tired Nurse Followed A Kidnapper Into The Woods And Found A Son-Quieen

By the time Ellie Brennan reached the cliff, she had stopped feeling the cold in any normal way.

It was no longer on her skin.

It was inside her bones.

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Her blue scrubs were torn open at the shoulder and ripped across both knees, the fabric stiff with mud and dried blood from briars that had caught her in the dark.

Her shoes were gone.

She had lost one in a creek bed the first night and the other somewhere between a fallen hemlock and a washed-out hunting trail, and by then going back for anything felt like a luxury other people got to have.

Her lips were purple.

Her hands shook so badly she had to press them against her thighs to make them stop.

In front of her, seven-year-old Miles Sterling stood near the edge of a rocky drop with his hands tied behind his back.

He was wearing navy pajamas, one sock, and the expression of a child who had learned too quickly that adults could become monsters.

He held a battered navy teddy bear against his chest like it was not a toy anymore, but a piece of home.

The man beside him had a knife.

Warren Sterling kept one hand close to the boy and one hand around the handle, his face sharp with the kind of fear that made dangerous men more dangerous.

Ellie did not know his name when the night began.

She did not know the boy’s name either.

And she certainly did not know that somewhere behind those trees, Jace Sterling was tearing through the Blue Ridge Mountains with fifty armed men, two helicopters, black SUVs, radios, rifles, and one command that had turned the mountain into a grid.

Find my son.

Bring him back alive.

Ellie Brennan knew none of that when she first saw the child.

All she knew was what she had promised through a crack in the floorboards of an abandoned hunting cabin.

“I won’t leave you.”

That promise started at 11:19 p.m. on a cold October night.

Ellie had been awake too long and working too hard.

Her shift at Dr. Morrison’s private clinic had run fourteen hours because flu season had arrived early, two patients had needed stitches, and one elderly man had fainted in the parking lot while his daughter cried into a paper coffee cup.

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