Running from the Organization: My Escape to Madison

miércoles, mayo 06, 2026

 Running from the Organization: My Escape to Madison VIDEO

The fields stretch out on both sides, flat and green beneath the gray sky. I drive at a steady speed, not pushing it. I don’t want to draw any police attention. The map is open on the passenger seat. I trace the route with one finger while steering with the other. Back roads, small towns, avoid the main highways. Valeria said the organization has people on all the direct routes to Madison.


Twenty minutes later I pass through a town called Elgin. The streets are empty. A gas station with a flickering neon sign. An older man sits on a bench, reading a newspaper.


I need gas. The gauge shows less than a quarter tank.


I pull into the station. Turn off the engine and step out. The air smells of gasoline and wet earth. The man with the newspaper looks at me for a moment, then goes back to reading.


I fill the tank. Go inside to pay. The store is small, with shelves of chips and drinks. The clerk is a young guy, about twenty, wearing a blue baseball cap.


“Anything else?” he asks as he rings up the fuel.


“A coffee. And a sandwich, if you have one.”


“We’ve got ham and cheese. That work?”


“Yeah.”


He pulls a plastic-wrapped sandwich from a small fridge and sets it on the counter. He pours coffee from a machine into a paper cup.


“That’ll be twelve fifty.”


I pay with cash from my wallet. He hands me the change, and I pocket the coins.


“Going far?” he asks.


“Madison. To see my family.”


“Nice city. I’ve got a cousin there. Says it’s quiet.”


“I hope so.”


I leave the store with coffee in one hand and the sandwich in the other. The man on the bench is gone. The street is still empty.


I sit in the car and eat quickly. The sandwich tastes like plastic and the coffee is watered down, but I don’t complain. I need the energy.


I finish, start the engine, and continue along the secondary road. The fields give way to low जंगल—bare trees scratching at the gray sky.


The phone Valeria gave me is in my pocket. I take it out and look at it. One missed call from a number I don’t recognize.


I think about calling back, but something tells me to wait.


I keep driving.


An hour later I pass another town. Rockford. Bigger than Elgin. More cars, more people. A woman pushing a stroller. A man carrying grocery bags.


Normal life feels strange. They live their lives, unaware of everything. I’m driving toward a meeting that could end in death.


I stop at a red light. Look left and see a café. People sitting at tables, laughing, talking. A young couple sharing a slice of cake.


The light turns green. I accelerate.


I leave Rockford on a road that winds through gentle hills. The sky darkens. Looks like rain again.


I turn on the headlights. Drops start to fall, light at first, then heavier. I switch on the wipers.


The rain makes it hard to see. I slow down. I can’t afford an accident.


I drive like that for half an hour. The rain doesn’t stop. The road is wet, shining under the clouds.


I see a sign: Madison, forty kilometers.


My heart starts beating faster. I’m close.


But then I see something that makes me brake.


A roadblock. About two hundred meters ahead. Two police cars with lights on. Several officers. And among them, two men in black suits.


The organization.


I grip the steering wheel.


I can’t go through that. They’ll stop me, question me, identify me.


I yank the wheel and turn onto a dirt path to my right. The Ford bounces over bumps. Branches scrape the sides.


I drive along the path for a few minutes. I don’t know where it leads. I just know I need to get away from the checkpoint.


The path ends at an abandoned farm. A barn with a collapsed roof. A house with broken windows. Overgrown weeds everywhere.


I turn off the engine.


Silence. Just the rain hitting the car roof.


I take a deep breath.


I need another route. One that avoids checkpoints.


I take out the map and spread it over the steering wheel. I search with my finger. There’s a local road that loops around Madison from the east. It branches off before the city, crosses a forest, and comes out the other side.


I can try it.


I start the engine and leave the farm. Back onto the dirt path, then rejoin the main road a bit behind the checkpoint. No one saw me.


I take the eastern turn.


The road is narrow, one lane. Trees close in on both sides, forming a green tunnel. Rain filters through the branches, leaving dark patches on the asphalt.


I drive slowly. Visibility is bad. But I can’t stop.


The phone rings.


I glance at the screen. Same number as before.


I hesitate, then answer.


“Hello?”


“Jack.”


Emma’s voice. On the other end.


My breath catches.


“Jack.”


Emma’s voice again, and it hits me the same way.


“Emma,” I say, and my own voice sounds strange, like it isn’t mine. “Are you okay?”


“Yes. But we need to talk. The plan has changed.”


I press the phone tighter to my ear. Rain pounds the windshield, the wipers squeaking back and forth.


“What happened?”


“They came to my house. This morning. Two men. Asking about me.”


My stomach tightens.


“Are you hurt?”


“No. I wasn’t there. A neighbor warned me when she saw them. But they know I live in that area. It won’t take them long to find the motel.”


“Then I’m not going to the Sunrise.”


“No. I thought of another place. Do you know Lake Koshkonong?”


“No.”


“It’s southeast of Madison. There’s a cabin on the north shore. My mother used it when she was young. No one knows it exists.”


“How do I get there?”


“Take Highway 26 south. Then the turn toward Indianford Beach. The cabin is at the end of the road, right by the water. It has a red door.”


“And you?”


“I’m leaving now. I’ll bring the boy. It’ll take me a couple of hours. The roads are wet.”


“Be careful.”


“You too, Jack. And… thank you.”


“For what?”


“For coming. For not giving up.”


She hangs up.


I sit there for a few seconds, staring at the dark screen. Then I pocket the phone and lay the map on the wheel.


Lake Koshkonong. Highway 26 south. Indianford turnoff.


I trace the route. About thirty kilometers southeast from here. If I drive carefully, I’ll be there in forty minutes.


I start the engine and pull back onto the road.


The rain keeps falling, but lighter now. The sky is still gray, but brighter near the horizon.


I drive in silence. Empty road. Just me and the wet trees.


Ten minutes later I see a sign for Highway 26. I turn right and head south.


The road is straight, lined with cornfields. The plants are dry, bent by the wind. They look like rows of skeletons.


The phone vibrates. A message from Valeria.


“All good?”


I reply while driving.


“Spoke with Emma. Change of plans. Heading to a lake southeast of Madison.”


“Good luck.”


“Thanks.”


I pocket the phone.


I keep driving. The road grows more winding. Fields give way to forest. Trees close in, casting shadows.


I see the turnoff. A wooden sign: Indianford Beach. I turn left.


The road is dirt, full of bumps. The Ford rattles and jolts. Brush scrapes the sides.


The cabin appears at the end of the road.


Small, dark wood, with a pitched roof. The door is red, just like Emma said. One window on each side with checkered curtains. A porch out front with a rocking chair.


I turn off the engine.


Silence fills everything again. Just wind in the branches. Water lapping at the shore.


I get out and walk to the door. The porch boards creak under my feet.


I knock. No answer.


I try the door. Locked.


I check under the rocking chair. Nothing. I look around. There’s a flower pot next to the door. I lift it. A key.


I open the door.


Inside is small. A kitchen with an old fridge and a gas stove. A living room with a worn sofa and a wooden table. A stone fireplace. A bedroom with an iron bed.


It smells like dust and old wood.


I step in and close the door behind me.


I sit on the sofa. The springs sink under my weight.


I wait.


The rain stops completely. Sunlight tries to break through the clouds, sending thin beams through the window.


I don’t know how much time passes. Half an hour. An hour.


Then I hear an engine.


I stand and go to the window. A blue car pulls up next to the Ford. The door opens and Emma steps out.


She’s wearing a denim jacket, her hair tied back in a ponytail. In her arms, a child—about three years old—with the same brown hair as hers.


She opens the cabin door and walks in.


We look at each other.


“Hi, Jack.”


“Hi, Jack,” Emma says, her voice trembling slightly.


I stand still, watching her. Her hair is tied back, loose strands stuck to her temples from the damp. Her eyes are green, just like in the photo, but more alive in person.


The child looks at her, then at me. Small. Three, maybe four. Wearing a blue sweater with a dinosaur on the front. He clings to Emma’s neck, hiding his face in her shoulder.


“He’s shy,” Emma says, smiling. “He doesn’t see many new people.”


“What’s his name?”


“Samuel. But we call him Sam.”


“Sam,” I repeat, and the name feels familiar, like I’ve said it many times before.


Emma steps closer.


“Sit down. You look exhausted.”


I sit on the sofa. She sits beside me, placing Sam on her lap. The boy watches me sideways, curious but cautious.


“Hi, Sam,” I say softly.


He buries his face again. Emma laughs gently.


“He’ll warm up,” she says. “He just needs time.”


“Can I… can I touch him?”


She nods.


I extend my hand slowly, palm open. Sam looks at it, then at me. Finally, he rests his small hand on my fingers. His skin is warm and soft.


My throat tightens.


“He looks just like you,” Emma says. “When he was born, he already had your eyes.”


“I don’t remember.”


“I know.”


Silence settles. Outside, the wind moves the trees. The lake laps softly.


“How did you get here?” I ask.


“Driving. Took Highway 26 south like I told you. Didn’t see any checkpoints.”


“I did. Near Madison. Police and two men in black suits.”


Emma frowns.


“The organization. They’re sweeping the area.”


“How did they know you were in Madison?”


“They didn’t. But they know I’m close. My father has contacts all over the region. Someone must have seen me.”


“Then we can’t stay here long.”


“I know. But we can stay one night. Tomorrow we find another route.”


“Where will we go?”


“There’s a place. In Canada. A house you bought years ago, when you worked for the organization. No one knows it exists. Not even my father.”


“And how do we get there?”


“Cross the border through an unofficial route. There’s a man in Duluth who can help us. A smuggler who owed you a favor.”


“Do you trust him?”


“No. But I trust you. And if you trusted him once, there must have been a reason.”


“I don’t remember.”


“It doesn’t matter. I trust your judgment, even if you don’t.”


I sit up and look at her.


“Why are you doing all this? You could have left, disappeared with Sam. You didn’t have to help me.”


“Because I love you, Jack. Because you’re the father of my child. And because I know that deep down, you’re a good person—even if you’ve done bad things.”


Emma takes my hand and squeezes it.


“Everything’s going to be okay. I promise.”


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