Grandfather Raced His Dying Grandson to the ER—Then Police Drew Guns on Him-congtien

Rain hammered Samuel Porter’s windshield so hard that the wipers barely kept up.

The streets of Columbus looked abandoned that Tuesday night.

Traffic lights reflected across flooded intersections like blurry smears of red and yellow paint.

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Water rushed down the gutters.

Branches bent in the wind.

Every house Samuel passed seemed dark except for the occasional blue flicker of a television behind closed curtains.

He tightened both hands around the steering wheel of his old pickup and glanced at the dashboard clock.

9:02 PM.

He should’ve stayed home.

That was what his aching back kept telling him.

After twenty-six years operating heavy equipment in construction yards, storms usually meant one thing to Samuel Porter.

Stay off the roads.

Stay inside.

Drink coffee.

Wait it out.

But he hadn’t been able to shake the uneasy feeling sitting in his chest since earlier that afternoon when Noah never answered his call.

Eight-year-old Noah always answered.

Or at least he tried.

Sometimes Samuel would hear muffled giggling before the boy whispered, “Mom says I gotta make it quick.”

Sometimes Noah would ramble for ten straight minutes about school, superheroes, or airplanes.

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