“Hey,” you say, and your own voice sounds wrong. Too polished. Too adult. Too much like conference rooms and negotiated victories. “It’s okay. I’m not going to touch you. Are you hurt?”
She says nothing.
The cry comes again from the backpack, weaker this time.
Your legs go loose for one awful second. “Is there a baby in there?”
She tightens her grip so hard her knuckles whiten under the dust.
You have built three companies. You have stood across the table from investors who wanted to bury you. You have survived a father who loved money better than people and a marriage that died by inches in a house with floor-to-ceiling windows and no warmth in any room. Yet nothing in your carefully armored life has prepared you for the sight of a child standing in the desert, guarding another smaller child like the last soldier left after the war.
“My name is Ethan,” you say quietly. “I just want to help.”
Her lips crack when she speaks. “You can’t call them.”
“Who?”
“The police. Child Services. Anybody.” The words are ragged, rushed, as if they have been trapped inside her too long. “If you call them, they’ll find us.”
Us.
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