A delivery agent rescued a woman who was trapped in a hotel room for 30 hours after finding a pillow with the emergency number 110 written in blood on it!

By: 600011 On: Aug 25, 2025, 5:10 PM

 

 

A delivery agent in China rescued a woman who had been trapped in her homestay bedroom for 30 hours after finding it on a pillow with the emergency number 110 written in blood on it while she was working. The incident took place in the southwestern Chinese city of Sichuan province, the South China Morning Post reports. Zhang, a university student and part-time delivery agent, became a star on Chinese social media following the incident. Zhang, who became suspicious after seeing a pillow with the number 110 625 written in blood on the road while he was working part-time, reports say that it was Zhang who saved the woman's life after investigating.

Zhang immediately reported the unusual pillow to the police and asked nearby shops if they knew anything about the pillow. He then clarified that the pillow belonged to a nearby hotel. With the help of a hotel employee, they reached room number 625 on the 6th floor of the building. The door of this room was locked from the inside. Then, with the help of the police, they broke the door and entered, but could not find anyone. During the investigation, a mobile phone was found. Then, when they broke the door of the locked bedroom, which was locked, they found the woman who had been trapped inside for 30 hours without water or food.

They were taken to the hospital and given emergency treatment. The woman is an employee of the same hotel. When she went into the bedroom to clean the room, the door of the bedroom, which was already broken, was slammed shut in a strong wind and the woman was trapped inside. Since the hotel was not crowded, no one knew about the incident. Since the woman's mobile phone was outside, she could not call anyone. The woman then cut her hand, wrote the emergency number 110 and the room number 625 on a pillow with the blood, and threw it out the window, the South China Morning Post reported. The report also states that after Zhang's immediate intervention saved the woman's life, the woman offered him 1,000 yuan (approximately Rs. 12,000), but Zhang politely declined.