Report a delivery driver who saw an emergency signal written in blood on a pillow...Woman's rescue in 30 hours

Aug 25, 2025

Report a delivery driver who saw an emergency signal written in blood on a pillow...Woman's rescue in 30 hours
photo source=weibo



A woman trapped in a room was rescued in 30 hours thanks to a delivery driver who found a rescue signal used on a pillow.

According to Hong Kong media South China Morning Post, Zhang, who was delivering food in Lushan, Sichuan Province, China on the 12th, found a white pillow stained with red liquid on a road near a residential area. The number of emergency declaration numbers '110' and '625' were written on the pillow.

Jang, who was working part-time as a college student, immediately called the police after realizing that it was an emergency.




After looking into the design of the pillow with the help of a nearby hotel employee, the police assumed that it was a homestay on the 25th floor of Building 6. It was determined that the number '625' means the number of floors and lakes in the building.

At first, the police, suspected of a crime or kidnapping, went to the scene and knocked on the door, but when there was no response, they were forced to open the door.

It was Zhou, a homestay operator, who was found there. She explained that the door was suddenly closed by a sudden wind during the cleaning, and that a broken door hook caused her to be trapped in the room.




Zhou was also unable to contact the outside because he had his cell phone in the living room, and he tried to notify his neighbors by knocking on the door or stomping on his feet, but no one noticed.

She sent several signals, such as hanging red clothes out the window, dropping Styrofoam off the bed, but it didn't work.

After 30 hours without water, food or a bathroom, Zhou suffered extreme mental pain and fear, biting his finger as a last resort, writing '110 625' in blood on his pillow and throwing it out the window.




After the rescue, she tried to hand 1,000 yuan (about 190,000 won) to Jang as a thank you when the police broke the door and came in.

However, Chang politely declined, saying "It was just a small good deed" and "Anyone would have called the police."

Later, he received a reward of 2,000 yuan (about 380,000 won) from the working delivery platform 'Meituan' along with the honorary title of 'Pioneer Rider'.



This article was translated by Naver AI translator.