Late on the night of March 23, a faint cry echoed through the halls of a normally quiet apartment building in Saint-Étienne, waking residents from their sleep. At first, many dismissed it—a stray cat, perhaps, or a trick of the wind. But as the cries grew louder and more urgent, several tenants stepped into the corridor, exchanging anxious glances.
Their concern turned to alarm when they noticed reddish stains smeared across the linoleum floor, leading toward the building’s trash room at the far end of the basement hallway.
Hearts pounding, the group followed the trail—and found the unthinkable.
There, curled on a discarded blanket in the cold concrete room, lay a newborn infant, still attached to her umbilical cord, crying softly. Panic turned to action as one neighbor called emergency services, her voice shaking as she described the scene. Within minutes, the Départemental Fire and Rescue Service of Loire and a team from the Loire Samu medical unit arrived.
Paramedics found the baby cold but breathing. One physician quickly wrapped her in a thermal blanket and began gentle medical checks right on the floor of the trash room. Neighbors watched from a distance, some wiping tears, others gripping one another’s hands in shared relief. As the ambulance doors closed, the cries softened—less frantic now, more like the coos of a child no longer alone.
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