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Citgo station. Route 60, Cabell County, West Virginia. 5:35 PM. Tuesday. October. A biker walks past the air station and sees a girl kneeling on the asphalt pouring water from a plastic bottle. She's not splashing. She's writing. Slowly. Deliberately. One letter at a time. When she's done, she steps back. One word. Four letters. Written in water on the ground. FIND. Not HELP. FIND. Because this wasn't about her. Nora was ten. Her brother Aiden was six. Their father picked him up from school on Friday. He wasn't supposed to. Their mom has custody. He took Aiden, turned off his phone, and disappeared. That was five days ago. The police called it a custody dispute. Nora called it what it was. She'd been writing FIND on every surface she could reach for five days — marker, chalk, car windows. When people cleaned it up, she used water. Because water disappears on its own. Nobody tells you to stop writing in water. Burke "Grade" Hensley — surveyor, Road Captain of the Benchmark MC — read the ground. Two hours later, a blue Ford truck with a cracked windshield was spotted at a campground in Roane County. Aiden was in the passenger seat. Asleep. Five days in the same clothes. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE to Asphalt Angels for more stories where water on the ground saves a life 👍 Hit the LIKE button if you believe a word written in water is still a word 💬 COMMENT: What word would you write? 📢 SHARE this video — because custody disputes move at the speed of paperwork and children move at the speed of a car 📞 RESOURCES: — 📞 RESOURCES: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children: 1-800-843-5678 Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline: 1-800-422-4453 Bikers Against Child Abuse (BACA): bacaworld.org If you see something suspicious: Call 911 immediately — #AsphaltAngels #MotorcycleRescue #BikersSavingLives #ChildRescue #MissingChildren #BenchmarkMC #BikerBrotherhood #GroundWord #ProtectOurChildren #MotorcycleClub #HarleyDavidson #RealHeroes #TrueStory #BikerCommunity #ChildSafety #WestVirginia #BeTheOneWhoReadsTheGround