Thatâs how long the trail was.
Steep hills. Loose rocks. Narrow paths that even adults struggled with.
And my 12-year-old son had carried Sam on his back the entire way.
Step after step.
âIâve got you,â he kept saying.
When he got tired, he didnât stop.
When it got harder, he adjusted his grip.
When others told him to wait, to slow down, to let the teachers handle itâhe didnât listen.
Because in his mind, leaving Sam behind was never an option.
I didnât know what to feel.
Shock. Fear. Confusion.
And something else I didnât expectâsomething stronger than all the rest.
Pride.
Later that evening, I received messages from the school. The tone was serious.
âThey broke protocol.â
âIt was dangerous.â
âThis could have ended badly.â
I understood their concern. I truly did. My hands were still shaking when I thought about what could have happened.
But there was another truth no one wanted to say out loud.
My son saw a friend being left behindâand chose not to accept it.
I thought that would be the end of it. Maybe a warning. Maybe a lecture.
I was wrong.
The next morning, my phone rang.
It was the principal.
Her voice wasnât normal.
âYou need to come to the school. Now.â
My stomach dropped instantly.
âIs Leo okay?â I asked, already grabbing my keys.
There was a pause.
âThere are men here asking for him.â
Everything inside me went cold.
âWhat kind of men?â I asked.
âThey⊠theyâre in uniform.â
The drive to the school felt endless. My mind raced through every possible scenarioânone of them good. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly they hurt.
When I finally arrived, I rushed inside.
And then I stopped.
Five men stood in a line inside the office. Tall. Serious. Dressed in military uniforms. Their presence filled the room with a kind of quiet intensity I canât fully describe.
The principal leaned closer to me and whispered, âTheyâve been here for twenty minutes. They say itâs about what Leo did yesterday.â