You do not stop because you are kind.
That is the first lie you tell yourself later, when strangers ask how everything began and newspapers use words like fate, miracle, divine timing. You stop because the shape at the edge of the Arizona highway does not look right. It is too small to be luggage, too still to be an animal, too heartbreakingly human to ignore once the late desert sun hits it and turns the red of that backpack into something almost violent against the dust.
You slam the brakes harder than you have in years.
The black Mercedes fishtails slightly before settling on the shoulder, tires spitting gravel into the dry air. For a moment you keep both hands on the wheel, your pulse hammering in your throat, and stare through the windshield as if distance might somehow rearrange what you are seeing. But it does not. The girl is still there, walking with the strange, stubborn sway of someone moving on pain alone.
When you step out, the heat hits you like a furnace door thrown open.
She cannot be older than twelve. Blond hair, though so matted with dust and sweat it looks almost gray. Thin shoulders. Bare feet cut open by rock and sand. One calf streaked with dried blood. She clutches the straps of the backpack with both hands, like someone might steal it even now, out here on an empty ribbon of road with only cacti, scrub brush, and miles of shimmering silence.
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