He Stopped For Two Sisters On I-75 And Found A Warehouse Secret-Tep

Daniel Whitmore almost kept driving.

That was the part he would never clean up for anyone later.

He could have said he stopped the instant he saw the child.

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He could have said instinct took over.

He could have made himself sound better in the statement, in the board meeting, in the newspaper paragraph that eventually used his name with words like donor and hero.

But the truth was colder than that.

He saw her in the headlights.

He passed her.

For several seconds, Daniel Whitmore was just another pair of taillights moving down I-75 while a little girl stood barefoot on the shoulder with one broken arm and a baby in a pink blanket.

It was 9:07 p.m. on a Tuesday in November, north of Dayton, around mile marker 53.

The rain had stopped, but the pavement still held the shine of it.

Diesel rolled off the semis in gray waves.

His coffee had gone bitter in the cup holder.

On the passenger seat lay the program from a charity dinner he had just left, the cover printed with silver lettering and a smiling photograph of children holding donated blankets.

Daniel had spoken for less than three minutes at that dinner.

He had said the words expected of him.

Need.

Impact.

Community.

Sarah would have hated the way he sounded.

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