She was 9 years old, dragging firewood through a brutal blizzard when she found him—an American soldier buried in the snow, barely breathing. She pulled him to safety with hands too small for such a weight. What Lily didn’t know was that this soldier had been searching for her for 5 years, carrying a promise made to her dead mother. And the wicked men who tried to stop him were still relentlessly hunting them both.
The wind screamed like something dying tragically. Lily tucked her chin deeper into the frayed collar of her donated coat, three sizes too big, the sleeves rolled up so many times they looked like fabric donuts at her wrists. Her fingers, wrapped in mismatched socks she’d converted into gloves, ached as she dragged another fallen branch toward her makeshift sled.
At 9 years old, she had learned the harsh lesson of survival: prepare for the worst before it arrives. The radio at the group home had warned about the blizzard two days ago. Lily had listened stealthily from the hallway, hidden behind the laundry room door, while Mrs. Patterson reassured the state inspector that all 12 beds were occupied and well-maintained.
It was a blatant lie. There were 15 kids crammed into that house, and Lily had been sleeping in the unheated sunroom for 3 weeks. So, when Mrs. Patterson loaded up her fancy Mercedes yesterday and drove off to wait out the storm at her sister’s in Denver, Lily had made her own plan. She had slipped out before the older kids could notice, before they could devour all the food she’d been secretly stashing.
The abandoned bus station on Route 17 had been her safe haven before. It would work as a refuge again. The sky had turned the color of old bruises—purple, gray, and menacing. Snow was now falling in thick, aggressive sheets, not the gentle flakes from this morning. Lily squinted through the white chaos, trying to spot the red roof of the bus station. It should be close. It had to be close.
That’s when she saw it. A patch of olive green partially visible beneath a growing mound of snow. Lily stopped, her breath forming white clouds in the freezing air. Probably just trash, old blown-off clothes. But something compelled her to wade through the knee-deep snow toward it. As she got closer, her heart began to pound. It wasn’t trash. It was a person, a man in a US Army uniform, lying motionless on the ground.
And next to him, partially buried, was a rifle. “Hey!” Lily’s voice cracked. She stumbled forward, dropping her sled. “Hey, Mister!” No response. The soldier was face down, his military helmet crusted with snow. One arm was stretched out as if he had been crawling before the bitter cold took him.
Snow had drifted thick over his legs and his back, turning him into just another small hill in the white landscape. Lily’s first instinct was to run. Dead bodies meant police. Police meant questions. Questions meant going back to the group home, or worse, being sent somewhere new where she’d have to learn all the new hiding spots and figure out which kids stole and which ones were willing to share.