He nodded, jaw clenched. “Help me up.”
Together, with trembling limbs, we staggered to our feet. The incline above looked impossible — loose dirt, sharp rocks, and a cruel thirty-foot climb. But survival doesn’t wait for mercy.
Step by step, we clawed upward. I tore fabric from my blouse to wrap Robert’s leg, where blood seeped steadily. He gritted his teeth, never crying out, though I knew the pain must have been unbearable.
Halfway up, my strength faltered. My palms slipped, and I nearly tumbled backward. Robert grabbed me, his own footing unstable, but his voice was steel. “Margaret, you have to fight. Think of what they’ve taken already. Don’t let them take your life too.”
The thought of Daniel — my son who had just tried to murder me — burned hot in my chest. Rage steadied my grip. With a guttural cry, I forced myself upward, clawing at roots and jagged stone until, at last, we dragged ourselves over the lip of the ravine.
We collapsed on the gravel shoulder of the road. The SUV was gone. The silence was deafening.
Robert’s breathing was shallow. “We need a plan,” he rasped.
I scanned the road. “The cabin. They’ll go there. They’ll assume we’re dead, but we can’t let them destroy everything.”
