Chapter 3
As she drove through the quiet streets, Elena’s mind churned. Why had Aaron been targeted? Was it a random shooting, a cruel twist of fate in the wrong place at the wrong time? Or had something deeper, darker driven them to him? The thought unsettled her, gnawing at the edges of her fear.
Elena pulled into the first town she came to just as dawn was breaking, sleepy storefronts bathed in soft morning light. Her eyes scanned the streets until she spotted the familiar green and white sign of her bank—an unexpected thread tying her back to the life she’d left behind.
Inside, she moved swiftly but cautiously, the fear still lingering beneath her skin. At the ATM window, she withdrew eight hundred sixty dollars, the total sum she had painstakingly skimped and saved over the last four years.
She lived in the car, taking back roads and hiding for brief periods in small towns.
Despite everything, she managed to hold onto a small bag of toiletries and a few changes of clothes.
Whenever she found a public restroom or a quiet spot at a bus station, she washed her clothes by hand, scrubbing out the grime to make them last a little longer.
Elena rationed her food carefully, eating whatever she could scavenge and learning to suppress her hunger. The beauty she once found in flowers had been replaced by the gnawing reality of basic survival.
Though days had passed without a proper shower, the small acts of washing her face and clothes helped her hold on to a fragment of dignity. Still, she barely recognized the bright, vibrant girl from the flower shop, now a shadow, hardened and wary.
The greatest challenge was the constant fear. Shadows seemed to lurk in every alleyway, and the faces of gang members haunted every stranger she passed. She learned to trust her instincts, to recognize subtle signs of danger, and to disappear before trouble could find her.
After days on the road, the weight of dwindling cash pressed down on Elena like a stone in her stomach.
When her car rolled into Spencer, Indiana—a small town with cracked sidewalks, faded storefronts displaying weathered signs, and the scent of fresh baked bread drifting from a corner bakery—she saw an opportunity.
The streets were quiet, with the occasional figure strolling lazily under the shade of towering oak trees lining the main thoroughfare.
The hum of daily life moved at a slower, gentler pace here.
Maybe here, she could catch her breath. Maybe here, for a little while, she’d be invisible.
Elena wandered through the quiet streets of Spencer, her eyes and ears alert despite the town’s sleepy pace.
She slipped into the small diner, settling into a booth near the window where she could listen without drawing attention.
Fragments of conversations drifted to her—talk of missing pets, a recent town council meeting, a stranger passing through.
She said nothing, quietly gathering pieces of this small-town puzzle.
After finishing her coffee, she left the diner and moved toward the nearby park.
She found a weathered bench beneath the shade of towering oak trees and sank down, pulling her jacket tighter around her.
Her gaze softened as she watched a few locals pass by.
She unfolded a newspaper she’d grabbed from the diner, eyes scanning headlines with a focus that bordered on obsession.
Time passed, and as the light began to fade, Elena rose from the bench and started walking back toward her car.
As she passed the diner again, her attention was drawn to the small television flickering inside.
The local news played quietly—stories about Spencer’s slow-moving life filling the screen—until an urgent bulletin broke through the calm, causing her breath to catch and her senses to sharpen once more.
The anchor’s voice was steady but grave: “Police in Detroit are searching for a key witness in Monday’s drive-by shooting on the Lower East Side.
Twenty-two-year-old Elena Robertson was present during the incident and is considered crucial to the investigation.
Police assume she is driving the victim’s car, a green Honda Civic.
Authorities urge anyone with information to come forward. ”
Elena’s breath hitched. The screen showed a grainy still photo of her, now broadcast for the world to see. Her heart pounded violently against her ribs as fear spiraled through her. The quiet town around her felt suddenly suffocating, the shadows closing in.
Elena knew she couldn’t keep the green Honda any longer. The car had become a beacon, a flashing warning she could no longer afford to carry. She needed a way out, somewhere farther and faster than she could manage on her own.
At the edge of the next town, she spotted a dusty truck stop.
She pulled in and watched big rigs rumble by, their drivers stretching tired legs before the long haul ahead.
Among the towering machines, a woman climbed down from her cab, a sturdy figure clothed in worn jeans and a faded jacket, her hair pulled back into a no-nonsense braid.
There was something steady and calm about her, a grounded strength that caught Elena’s eye.
Summoning courage, Elena approached, her voice hesitant. “Excuse me, are you headed east? Or maybe south? I… I need to get out of here.”
The woman turned, taking in Elena with sharp, hawk-like eyes. She was large, with broad shoulders and hands worn from years behind the wheel. The faint lines around her mouth spoke of hard-earned experience, and her raspy country drawl cut through the hum of idling engines.
“You runnin’ from a man?” she asked quietly. “He abusin’ ya or somethin’?”
Elena swallowed hard. The question hit close to a truth she hadn’t dared speak aloud. She nodded faintly, unable to meet the woman’s steady gaze.
A low chuckle escaped the woman. “Child, you done picked the right rig to flag down. I’m headed south, all the way to Tennessee. And believe me, I don’t let no man tell me what to do. I’m grabbing some grub. Wanta join me?”
Elena quickly checked her pockets, counting the few bills remaining. She had just enough for a burger and a bottle of water. Nodding, she met the truck driver’s gaze. “Yeah, I’m hungry,” she said softly, relief washing over her.
The driver stuck out her hand with a wry grin. “Name’s Bambi. Well, at least that’s what I’m called.”
Elena sat across from Bambi at a scuffed diner table, the smell of frying grease and strong coffee filling the air. She took a bite of her burger, the warmth and flavor grounding her amidst the whirlwind of uncertainty. Bambi sipped her water, eyes steady and observant.
“So, why ‘Bambi’?” Elena asked finally, breaking the silence.
Bambi let out a low chuckle, wiping her mouth with the back of her hand.
“Name’s been stickin’ with me since forever,” she said, voice rough but steady.
“Back when I was a kid, I wasn’t exactly graceful.
Legs all gangly, eyes wide as saucers—looked like a newborn deer tryin’ to find its footing every time I took a step.
Town folks, they started callin’ me Bambi.
At first, I hated it. Felt like a joke.”
She shrugged, a faint smile tugging at her lips.
“But I learned something about that name. See, Bambi’s got a reputation for bein’ gentle, sure.
But also for survivin’—dodgin’ predators, staying on her feet when the world tries to knock her down.
That’s kinda me. Not the soft part, maybe, but the part where you keep on goin’ no matter what. ”
Elena nodded, feeling a quiet strength in the story. “I like that,” she said softly.
Bambi’s eyes met hers, firm and unwavering. “Yeah, well, don’t get soft on me now. You’re tougher than you think, kid.”
Elena swallowed hard, blinking back the sting threatening to break free. She shook her head, but this time her voice came quieter, edged with a steel she wasn’t sure she had. “I’m not tough at all,” she whispered, but there was a hard line to her words, a silent challenge to whoever doubted her.
The next two days slipped by under the steady drone of Bambi’s rig, the miles stretching long and unyielding.
The ache in Elena’s muscles was a dull reminder that this was no easy journey.
But beneath the exhaustion, something else stirred, a numbness that hardened into resolve.
The cold mornings, cramped seats, and relentless sun didn’t just wear her down; they sharpened her edge.
The routine was grueling, the silence between them thick with unspoken fears. Elena kept to herself mostly, watching, listening, absorbing the rhythm of the road. When the conversation finally broke through, it was tentative but real.
“You ever wonder why some kids don’t get picked?” she asked quietly.
Bambi looked at her, patient.
“I was a foster kid. Aaron too.” Elena let it out like a wound torn open but not yet healed.
“We weren’t adoptable. Not ‘cause we were bad or stupid. I finished high school. Took college classes even. But there was something about us, something people didn’t like.
Maybe it was how we looked at the world.
Or maybe it was the scars we carried. Maybe they thought we were too broken. ”
Her eyes blazed, not with tears but with something sharper. Anger fought alongside sadness. “Maybe they didn’t want to see us for who we really were.”
Elena’s breath hitched, but she didn’t let it break her. “I’m scared, Bambi. Scared of what’s coming, scared of being alone. But I’m not giving up. I won’t disappear.” Her voice cracked, but there was steel underneath, a refusal to be a victim.
Bambi slid onto the bed beside her, steady as a rock. “You told me about that drive-by, Aaron getting taken out. That’s no accident. It’s savage. Leaves wounds you don’t always see. But you survived. That says a hell of a lot.”
She smiled, a little grim but encouraging. “I’ve met plenty who’ve been knocked flat. What keeps them going isn’t luck, it’s heart. You’ve got heart. Don’t let what people think define you. They don’t see the real you.”
Her voice softened but stayed unyielding. “Focus on what you can control. One step, one mile at a time. Trust those small wins that keep you moving forward. You’re not alone anymore.”
The night’s rest hadn’t erased the weight on Elena’s shoulders, but it had given her a moment to breathe before the road called again.
In the early morning, Bambi packed up, moving with the smooth efficiency of someone who’d lived many miles and seen much harder times. Turning to Elena, she softened for just a moment, a rare glimpse beneath the tough exterior.
“This town, Banner, it’s small. Quiet. Maybe slow down for a bit. Catch your breath. No need to rush headlong into danger.”
She pressed a worn phone into Elena’s hand. “This is my number. You call if you need anything. Don’t be shy.” Without waiting, she slipped a crisp hundred-dollar bill into Elena’s backpack. “Use this for whatever you need.”
Elena met her steady gaze, her own strength flickering beneath the uncertainty. The offer was a lifeline in the storm, a fragile hope threading through the fear.
No, she wasn’t soft. Not anymore. Not if she could help it.