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Creative Writing The Search Essay Research Paper (стр. 2 из 2)

tell the person left in a hurry.

I had been heading up the slope almost an hour when my legs began to scream

for a break. I stopped, hunched over in pain. Breathing came heavily, each

attempt a hot knife in my chest. My head was spinning and I felt my side again,

found fresh blood still pumping. My tie slipped over my head and into my front

pocket. I removed the tee from my back pocket, tore it in two, and wrapped my

body with it. Tears filled my eyes as I staggered. The soft earth caught me

forgivingly. I remained there for a while, I’m not sure how long because it

felt so good. I lifted myself, knowing I had to go on. I knew the footprints

would lead me to safety or to Dean Brown. Either way, my path lay along theirs.

I struggled against the terrain and my body to go on for hours. The shirt

had stopped my bleeding and the fog in my mind cleared. Clear headed, the pain

intensified. My vision was blurred by tears and I had a hard time finding my

way through the dark. I stumbled over countless rocks, fallen trees, and other

impediments along the way. I never lost the prints, though. I’m not sure when

it was, probably early morning, I fell over a rock into a clearing.

It was about twenty feet across, lit by the light of the now visible half

moon. At the other end stood a pile of dirt and rocks. I noticed a specific

dark spot. It was not a shadow, but a hole. I followed the trail across the

clearing and it led me to the hole. I knelt, trying to see inside. It was

about three feet across, probably an old fox’s burrow. I circled the mound

slowly searching for continuation of the trail, thinking the person might have

walked over the burrow to throw off followers. I returned to the mouth of the

opening and dropped to my knees.

I started in head first. The passage was tight and painful, jagged

stone scraping my already abused body. I paused, my heart racing and dizzy from

straining to see in the pitch black. My body grew warmer as I went deeper into

the hole. About ten feet in, my fingers felt thin, dry stalks of straw on the

floor. I crawled further in, until my knees felt the same. I lifted myself

into a kneeling position and pushed the button on the flashlight.

A man was curled up in the corner. The light woke him and he shot up,

eyes blinking. The absence of his shirt revealed his pale white skin, criss-

crossed with crimson lines. His hair was no longer slicked back and his face

now showed the emotion of fear, but I could still see it was Dean Brown.

I backed myself up to the mouth of the hole, held the flashlight at him

like a sword. ?I’ve been looking for you, Dean.? I set the flashlight down

beside me and pulled out the flare gun with caution. ?Just stay calm, I am not

going to try anything, look at me.? I kept it pointed at him, but relaxed a

little. ?Why did you run, Dean, why are you here??

His brown eyes were wide, unblinking in an intense stare. “Who are you?”

“I am John Caulsworth, a federal agent. I was assigned to find you and

bring you in. What happened?”

“The bastards deserved to die!” Tears came to his eyes, his face red as a

stoplight. He sniffled and the words tumbled out in a rush. ?They ran us over,

I barely got him out of the way. It was the mayor’s security. As his

accountant, I discovered he was corrupt and refused to bury it. He fired me on

the spot.? He shuddered and took a breath. ?They could have just taken me, but

left me instead. I couldn’t let him live after that. He stole my life! And I

can’t let you stop me.? Brown let go of his tension, and sat down. ?I’ve got to

get my son and you’re not going to get in my way, nothing will.? I looked again

into his eyes, swollen and wet as a boxer’s. ?I broke out for my son, I need to

save him.?

“Save him? What do you mean?”

“I know he is in my parents’ custody. They’re beating him, just like me.

I almost died, I can’t let that happen to Davey. He’s all I’ve got left.? Brown

held out a picture from his pocket. ?He’s what I live for and this is all I

have of him. I can’t let him hurt again.”

I set the flare gun aside and accepted the photo.

A man lay in a hospital bed, bandaged and casted. Beside him stood a young

boy, on crutches. They were holding hands and each managed a smile. The photo

was torn on the top corners, a crease down the middle. The back read ‘My only

son’.

He grabbed it back from me. “I’m barely hanging on here, and without Davey

I’m not alive. My family was the only thing that mattered to me, and he’s all

that’s left.”

I reached into my pocket and withdrew the tie. Mud concealed the red

fabric. I tried to think of John. My mind strained to see his face, hear his

voice. A tear rolled down my cheek and fell off my chin onto the tie. I

loosened the knot and slipped it back over my head. With my sleeve, I wiped my

face.

I lifted the flashlight, switched it off and tossed it to him. “Take it.”

I turned away and started back into the world.

Hendricks’ team found me a few miles west of the hole. They airlifted me

to the Olympia hospital. I was treated for a broken clavicle and shoulder blade,

along with my ribs. The tissue damage to my back and side was extensive and I

have little use of either. After two days they released me.

The next day, I received a call from Franklin, in Boise. I was commended

by him for putting myself on the line. He granted me early retirement, and a

bonus for being injured. He asked if I might know anything about the

disappearance of David Brown from his grandparents’ house in the middle of the

night. I told him I did not. I bid him farewell, hung up, and dialed John’s

number at school.