China deliveryman saves woman trapped for 30 hours after spotting bloodied pillow marked ‘110’ | Trending

A university student working as a food delivery driver in China has been hailed a hero after spotting a blood-stained pillow with an emergency number scrawled on it, leading to the rescue of a woman trapped in her bedroom for 30 hours without food or water. A Chinese woman trapped for 30 hours was rescued after a deliveryman noticed her blood-marked pillow bearing the emergency number 110.(Representational image/Unsplash) (Also read: Chinese company praises employees working 160 hours overtime in a month, sparks backlash) A shocking discovery on the roadsideThe incident occurred on August 12 in Leshan, Sichuan province, southwestern China, according to a report South China Morning Post(SCMP). The delivery driver, surnamed Zhang, noticed a white pillow on the roadside near a residential compound. It was stained with dark red liquid and marked with the numbers “110 625.” Alarmed the sight, Zhang immediately phoned the police. With help from a near hotel worker who recognised the pillow’s design, authorities traced it to a homestay on the 25th floor of Building 6. The number “625” corresponded to the unit’s floor and apartment number. Police intervention and rescuePolice officers, initially suspecting a violent crime or kidnapping, rushed to the location. After knocking repeatedly and eventually forcing entry, they discovered the truth. The homestay’s owner, a woman surnamed Zhou, had been locked inside her bedroom for more than 30 hours. While cleaning, a sudden gust of wind had slammed the door shut, jamming a broken latch and trapping her inside without access to her phone, which was left in the living room, SCMP reported. Desperate attempts to signal for helpZhou tried everything to alert neighbours. She stamped her feet, banged on the door, and even jumped around to make noise. She hung a red suit out of the window and dropped foam boards from her bed to the ground below, but none of these attempts drew attention. As time dragged on, she faced extreme mental dress, with no access to food, water, or a toilet. In a final act of desperation, she bit her finger and used her blood to write “110 625” on a pillow, which she hurled out of the window. “When the police broke down the door, I was as excited as if I were seeing family,” Zhou told Red Star News as cited SCMP. Gratitude and recognitionZhou offered Zhang 1,000 yuan (£110) as a token of gratitude, but he declined. “He is still a student, yet he refused to accept it. I was deeply touched. It made me feel the warmth of society,” she said. Zhang modestly remarked: “It was just a small act of kindness; anyone would have called the police.” His actions did not go unnoticed. Meituan, the company he was working for, awarded him the honorary title of “Pioneer Rider” along with a 2,000 yuan reward.




