My legs moved before my brain gave the order. I wasn't thinking about bravery; I was thinking about the person I could see slumped over the steering wheel.
The rear door groaned but popped open. The figure inside the car was pulled to safety just as a small flame appeared under the hood. On the sidewalk, as sirens grew louder in the distance, the reality of the situation began to set in.
The response was a simple shrug and a stammered, "Anyone would have done the same." I Am a Hero
As paramedics took over and the scene became crowded with emergency responders, the individual who had intervened stood on the edge of the chaos, shivering in the cold rain. When a bystander asked how it felt to be a hero, the answer was simple: "Just someone who happened to be there."
The rain didn’t feel like a movie. It was cold, sharp, and smelled like wet asphalt and exhaust. I wasn't standing on a skyscraper in spandex; I was standing outside a 24-hour diner, clutching a lukewarm coffee, wondering if I could afford the bus fare home. My legs moved before my brain gave the order
Then I heard it—the screech of tires and the sickening crunch of metal.
In the movies, time slows down. In reality, it gets loud and messy. A sedan had clipped a delivery truck, spinning into a concrete barrier. Smoke began to hiss from the crumpled hood. The figure inside the car was pulled to
The woman who had been rescued gripped the hand of the person who had pulled her out. "Thank you," she whispered. "That was incredibly brave."