PART 2: I realized something was wrong the momen

I didn’t know what I was expecting when I walked toward the shape in the distance.

Help, maybe.

A gas station.

A broken-down vehicle with someone inside who could point me in the right direction.

Anything that confirmed I wasn’t completely alone in a place that suddenly felt erased from the map.

But as I got closer, the shape resolved into something more unsettling than helpful.

It wasn’t a building.

It wasn’t a car.

It was a small roadside marker structure, half-hidden behind dry brush and dust-covered rocks, like it had been forgotten by time rather than actively maintained.

A faded sign stood beside it.

The paint was worn so badly that most of the letters were unreadable at first glance.

But when I tilted my head and let my eyes adjust, I could make out part of it.

A warning sign.

Not about distance.

Not about directions.

About the road itself.

I stood there for a moment, trying to process why a highway would have a warning posted so far from anything resembling civilization.

That’s when I noticed something else.

The ground near the marker wasn’t just dirt and gravel.

There were tire marks.

Fresh ones.

Multiple sets.

Overlapping.

Not random traffic.

Intentional stops.

Long pauses.

Like people had been coming here regularly.

I crouched down and touched the ground.

The heat still lingered in the dust, but the tracks were recent enough to hold shape.

My stomach tightened slightly.

Because if those marks were recent, then I hadn’t been abandoned in the middle of nowhere by accident.

This stretch of road was used.

Just not in a way I had been told about.

I pulled my phone out again.

Still no signal.

But the battery was still decent.

I turned on the offline map I had downloaded months ago and zoomed out as far as it would go.

The highway I was on looked longer than I remembered.

But something else stood out now.

There was a parallel service route shown faintly on the map—smaller roads branching off and reconnecting farther ahead.

One of them wasn’t far from my position.

Maybe a twenty-minute walk, if I stayed on foot.

That should have made me feel better.

It didn’t.

Because if there were alternative routes nearby, then my family hadn’t just “dropped me off somewhere.”

They had chosen a very specific place to do it.

A place where I wouldn’t immediately find help.

I started walking again.

This time with more awareness of every sound.

Every shift in the wind.

Every distant movement along the road.

The sun was beginning to lower now, casting longer shadows across the pavement.

And with each step, the silence around me started to feel less empty and more structured.

Like the absence of noise wasn’t natural.

Like it was maintained.

After what felt like a long stretch of walking, I reached the point where the service road split off from the main highway.

It was narrow.

Barely more than a worn path for maintenance vehicles.

No signage.

No obvious indication it led anywhere useful.

But it was my only option.

As I turned onto it, I noticed something that made me pause.

Another set of tire tracks.

Fresh.

Heading in the same direction I was going.

That meant I wasn’t the only recent presence on this road.

Someone else had passed through here not long ago.

The question was whether that was good or bad.

I followed the tracks for a while.

The landscape slowly changed.

Less open highway.

More enclosed terrain.

Small clusters of trees appeared, then disappeared again.

The air felt slightly cooler here, but also heavier, like the land itself was holding onto something it didn’t want to release.

Eventually, I saw movement ahead.

Not a vehicle this time.

A structure.

Old.

Partially abandoned.

A service checkpoint or maintenance hut, judging by the shape.

It sat slightly off the road, half-hidden behind overgrown brush.

The tire tracks led directly toward it.

I stopped walking.

Because suddenly, the idea of “help” didn’t feel guaranteed anymore.

It felt conditional.

I waited for a moment, watching for any signs of movement.

Nothing.

No sound.

No indication anyone was inside.

But the tracks didn’t lie.

Someone had been here recently.

 

I took a slow breath and continued forward.

Each step felt more deliberate now.

Less accidental.

More chosen.

As I got closer, I noticed something on the ground near the entrance.

A small object.

Something that didn’t belong in a place like this.

A personal item.

Dropped, not discarded.

That detail mattered.

Because things don’t usually get dropped in abandoned places unless something interrupts the person holding them.

I looked toward the door again.

Still closed.

Still quiet.

But now the silence felt different.

Not empty.

Occupied.

And that was when I realized something I hadn’t allowed myself to fully consider until now.

Whatever my family had done when they drove away laughing wasn’t just about leaving me behind on a road trip.

It might have been about bringing me somewhere I was never supposed to question on my own.

And as I reached for the door handle of the abandoned structure, I understood that whatever had been planned on that summer trip… didn’t end when the car disappeared over the hill.

It might have only been the beginning of what they expected me to find once I started walking alone.