{"id":40,"date":"2026-05-24T18:17:11","date_gmt":"2026-05-24T18:17:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/?p=40"},"modified":"2026-05-24T18:17:11","modified_gmt":"2026-05-24T18:17:11","slug":"a-little-boy-waited-three-days-for-a-ride-home-then-500-hells-angels-sh00k-the-town-awake","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/?p=40","title":{"rendered":"A Little Boy Waited Three Days for a Ride Home\u2014Then 500 Hell\u2019s Angels Sh00k the Town Awake."},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The Arizona sun didn\u2019t care about excuses. It hammered the cracked asphalt of Juniper Ridge Elementary\u2019s parking lot with the same relentless heat it gave the playground swings and the faded crosswalk stripes, and it turned the air above the pavement into a shimmer that made distance look like a mirage. Near the flagpole, where the curb cast a thin line of shade that moved inch by inch across the ground, a seven-year-old boy sat with his knees pulled up and his backpack hugged to his chest like it was the only thing in the world that belonged to him. His name was Miles Hart, and he had been sitting in that same place long enough for his shadow to feel like a companion and for hope to start wearing thin at the edges.<\/p>\n<p>Miles\u2019s backpack was a superhero one, once bright, now sun-bleached into a tired version of its original colors. The zipper was stubborn and the straps were frayed where small hands had tugged too hard too many times. His hair stuck to his forehead in damp curls, his cheeks were flushed from heat and dehydration, and his eyes tracked every car that came into the lot with a concentration that didn\u2019t match his age. It was Friday afternoon, the bell had rung at 3:15, and children burst through the double doors in a rush of laughter and weekend plans, scattering to minivans and SUVs where parents leaned out to wave, where fathers lifted kids like they weighed nothing, where siblings shoved each other and argued about snacks, where the world felt safe and predictable and owned by people who believed it would always meet them halfway.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-8\">\n<div id=\"thelifevista.net_responsive_2\" data-google-query-id=\"\">\n<div id=\"google_ads_iframe_\/23293390090\/thelifevista.net\/thelifevista.net_responsive_2_0__container__\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Miles watched all of that like a hungry person watches food behind glass. He had watched it on Wednesday. He had watched it on Thursday. Now he watched it again on Friday, because watching was what he had left, and because the pattern was all he could cling to: bell, rush, hugs, engines starting, tires crunching over gravel, the lot emptying, the sun lowering, the wind finally showing up, and the same truth landing in his stomach like a stone. Nobody was coming.<\/p>\n<p>The first day he told himself it was an accident. His mother had gotten the time wrong. She did that sometimes, especially lately, especially since the new boyfriend had started showing up like a shadow in their kitchen and leaning over her shoulder when she looked at her phone. On Wednesday, Miles had waited with the stubborn faith only children can produce, the kind of faith that refuses to accept that adults can choose not to show up. On Thursday, something shifted inside him, a cold knot that made breathing feel harder, and he stopped crying because crying felt like spending energy on something the air wasn\u2019t going to repay. By Friday, he sat with a quiet stillness that looked like good behavior from a distance and looked like abandonment up close.<\/p>\n<p>A woman in oversized sunglasses and a neat blouse crossed the lot, heels clicking, car keys already out. She taught third grade, two classrooms down from Miles\u2019s second-grade room. Her name was Janelle Hartman, and she had walked past him for the third day in a row without stopping, without bending down, without asking a question that might demand a real answer. Miles saw her eyes flick toward him the way people glance at a dent in a wall they didn\u2019t cause, and then she kept moving. Her car chirped when it unlocked, and she slid into it and drove away like leaving was simply what adults did when their day ended.<\/p>\n<p>At four o\u2019clock, the principal locked the front doors. His name was Gordon Wexler, and he wore pressed shirts and a pleasant smile that had never once reached the part of him responsible for responsibility. He walked past Miles with his briefcase in one hand, looking straight ahead as if looking at a child who hadn\u2019t been picked up for three straight days might make the problem real. His sedan pulled out of the reserved spot, the tires made the same crunch they made every day, and then he was gone, swallowed by the street like he\u2019d been erased.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-9\">\n<div id=\"thelifevista.net_responsive_3\" data-google-query-id=\"\">\n<div id=\"google_ads_iframe_\/23293390090\/thelifevista.net\/thelifevista.net_responsive_3_0__container__\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Miles\u2019s stomach cramped. He\u2019d finished his last lunch on Wednesday, a flattened sandwich and an apple bruised deep enough to turn brown when he opened his bag. Since then, he\u2019d stolen small sips from the outdoor drinking fountain when nobody was looking, cupping his hands like the water might run away from him, and he\u2019d tried not to think about hunger as an emergency. Hunger became background noise fast when you were trapped in a place that wanted to pretend you were temporary.<\/p>\n<p>As the lot emptied and the day stretched toward evening, the heat began to bleed off the asphalt and the wind arrived with that desert habit of turning temperature into a cruel joke. Miles pulled his knees tighter and wrapped his arms around them. He had discovered the shallow recess near the back entrance on Tuesday night, a doorway that blocked wind from one direction and hid him from the street if anyone decided to notice. He curled there after dark, using his backpack as a pillow, listening to the building settle and creak like it was alive, counting the headlights that passed the campus and never slowed down.<\/p>\n<p>A patrol car rolled by on the main road just after five-thirty, the sun still glaring, the world still bright enough to shame you for being scared. The officer\u2019s name, if Miles had known it, was Officer Taryn Skye, and she drove that route like it was a habit, like the town required the appearance of watching. Miles had waved once on Wednesday when he still believed in signals and responses. She had waved back, the briefest lift of her fingers, and kept driving, because waving was easy and stopping would have required a decision.<\/p>\n<p>Saturday arrived with brutal clarity, the kind only desert mornings bring, when the light is too honest and the air is too dry and your lips crack just from existing. Miles woke with a tongue that felt thick and swollen in his mouth, with skin peeling where the sun had burned it, and with a thirst that made him swallow again and again as if saliva might magically return. The fountain was behind locked doors now. The school was shut. The parking lot was empty except for him, and the emptiness felt louder than yesterday because it had no school-day noise to camouflage it.<\/p>\n<p>Cars passed on the road. People drove to errands and brunches and weekend plans. A red pickup slowed near the entrance and Miles\u2019s heart jumped so hard it hurt, but the truck accelerated again, the driver\u2019s head tipped down toward a phone, and it vanished around the corner without the driver ever turning his eyes toward the curb.<\/p>\n<p>Across the street, a church sat with its neat sign and its clean landscaping and its big promise of community. On Sunday, Miles had watched people fill that lot, watched them glance at him and then look away faster, as if eye contact might become a contract. He remembered floral dresses, pressed slacks, shiny shoes, and voices that sounded kind when they were inside the building and sounded busy when they were outside it. After the service, they had streamed out in groups talking about lunch and golf and plans, and not one person crossed the street.<\/p>\n<p>By Saturday afternoon, Miles had started talking to himself, not because he wanted to, but because silence can become its own kind of pressure. He whispered small stories about what he\u2019d do when his mom came, about the dinner he\u2019d ask for, about cartoons and bedtime and the normal life he kept trying to pull back into place with imagination. His voice sounded strange in the open lot, thin and swallowed by air, as if the parking lot had decided it didn\u2019t want to carry his words anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>Then, around three, he saw the first motorcycle.<\/p>\n<p>It rolled past on the main road, black and loud, and then another, and then another, and Prescott had its share of weekend riders, so at first it didn\u2019t register as anything more than noise. But these bikes didn\u2019t just pass through. They circled. They came back. They slowed. They turned into the church lot across the street as if they\u2019d been invited.<\/p>\n<p>Ten became twenty. Twenty became fifty. The sound thickened into a living rumble that pressed against windows and vibrated in the ribs. The heat shimmer above the asphalt seemed to pulse with the engines. More bikes poured in from side streets, from the highway, from directions Miles couldn\u2019t even name, and the church lot filled until it looked like a gathering of metal animals packed shoulder to shoulder. Riders dismounted in a wave: men and women in worn leather, boots heavy on gravel, faces weathered by miles and choices and time. On their backs, patches caught sunlight\u2014winged skulls, bold lettering, a symbol most people only knew through fear.<\/p>\n<p>Miles sat very still. A child learns quickly when stillness is safer than movement.<\/p>\n<p>From the crowd, an older man swung off his bike with the careful ease of someone who had done it a thousand times. He was broad and solid, gray hair pulled back, beard thick, and his eyes were sharp in a way that didn\u2019t feel cruel so much as awake. His name was Reed \u201cStonewolf\u201d Kellan, and he didn\u2019t scan the parking lot like he was hunting trouble; he scanned it like he was looking for what everyone else had refused to see. He spoke to two other riders, and they moved with purpose, counting, organizing, coordinating arrivals like this wasn\u2019t chaos at all but something practiced.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cChapters from Phoenix, Flagstaff, Tucson,\u201d one of the men muttered, voice low, shaken by the scale of it even while helping it happen. \u201cWe\u2019re over five hundred.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf\u2019s jaw tightened as he watched the school across the street. \u201cAll for one kid,\u201d he said. \u201cOne kid they treated like a stain.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The story of how they heard wasn\u2019t complicated, just ugly in its simplicity. A younger rider passing through days earlier had stopped for gas, seen a small boy alone in the school lot, hesitated the way people do when they\u2019re afraid of being wrong, and then driven on. Six hours later, he passed again, and the boy was still there. That time, the rider made a call. That call became another call. And by the time the right person heard the words \u201cseven-year-old\u201d and \u201cthree days,\u201d a chain reaction had started that the town would never be able to pretend it didn\u2019t notice.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf had tried the polite routes first. He had called the school. Voicemail. He had called child services. A bored voice that said someone would \u201clook into it.\u201d He had called the police department. A desk sergeant who said they were \u201caware\u201d and \u201chandling it.\u201d Three days later, the kid was still there. That was when the decision changed from calls to engines.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf stepped off the curb and crossed the street with two riders flanking him, not rushing, not threatening, just moving with the deliberate calm of people who understood that presence could be louder than shouting. Behind them, riders spread out, forming a loose perimeter on public ground, not trespassing, not breaking anything, simply existing in a way that made it impossible to keep pretending nothing was happening.<\/p>\n<p>Miles watched them approach with the same exhausted caution he\u2019d worn all week, his backpack clutched tight like a shield. Stonewolf stopped several paces away and crouched, making his big body smaller so the child wouldn\u2019t have to stare up. Up close, Miles looked worse than Stonewolf expected: lips split and bleeding, skin peeling across cheeks and nose, eyes too old for a face that still had baby softness in its shape.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHey, kiddo,\u201d Stonewolf said, voice rough but gentle. \u201cWhat\u2019s your name?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles\u2019s voice came out as a whisper that nearly vanished into the wind. \u201cMiles.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf nodded like the answer mattered. \u201cMiles. That\u2019s a strong name.\u201d He kept his hands visible, palms open, like he was showing the kid that he wasn\u2019t going to grab him or yank him or demand anything. \u201cHow long you been out here?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles stared at him, throat working, and then the words slipped out with the blunt honesty children use when they haven\u2019t learned to soften truth for adults. \u201cSince Tuesday. After school. My mom was supposed to pick me up.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One of the riders behind Stonewolf sucked in a breath through his teeth, a sound like pain. Stonewolf stayed crouched, his face hardening in a way that wasn\u2019t anger at the boy, but at everyone who had managed to walk past this sentence for three straight days. \u201cYou hungry?\u201d he asked.<\/p>\n<p>Miles\u2019s face crumpled, and he nodded, and it wasn\u2019t dramatic, it was simply the body giving up on pretending.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf stood and turned his head. \u201cFood and water,\u201d he said, sharp and immediate. \u201cStuff a kid will eat. Not complicated. Now.\u201d Then he looked back at Miles. \u201cWe\u2019re going to sit with you while we figure this out, okay? You\u2019re not alone anymore.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A police cruiser arrived within minutes, lights flashing without siren, like the town was trying to keep the situation quiet even while it burned in public. The officer stepped out with her hand near her holster, eyes wide at the wall of motorcycles across the street. It was the same officer who had waved and kept driving. Now her voice carried authority, but her face carried something else too: the awareness that she was late.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cSir,\u201d she called, \u201cI need you to step away from the child.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf didn\u2019t move. He turned his head slowly and looked at her. \u201cYou know his name?\u201d he asked.<\/p>\n<p>She blinked. \u201cWhat?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe kid,\u201d Stonewolf said, and his voice wasn\u2019t loud, but it cut. \u201cYou\u2019ve driven past him plenty. You know his name?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Color crept up her neck. \u201cThis is a police matter.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf\u2019s gaze stayed on her. \u201cHis name is Miles Hart. He\u2019s seven. He\u2019s been out here since Tuesday. You drove by today. Yesterday. The day before. Did you stop? Did you ask if he was okay? Did you do anything besides wave from behind glass?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The officer\u2019s mouth opened, closed, opened again, and behind Stonewolf, engines revved in a single rolling wave, not as a threat to attack, but as a reminder that the town\u2019s ability to ignore had just ended. The vibration rattled a nearby window and made the officer take a half-step back.<\/p>\n<p>More police arrived. Then news vans. Then people poured out of nearby houses clutching phones, calling someone, demanding something, because fear is easier than guilt and outrage is easier than accountability. The principal showed up with a lawyer. A few teachers came with pale faces and watery eyes. Someone from the city office arrived talking fast about procedures and misunderstandings, about how no one \u201cknew,\u201d about how systems \u201cfailed,\u201d like failure was weather.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-2\"><\/div>\n<p>A rider returned with bags of fast food and bottles of water. Stonewolf took them to Miles and sat close enough to block cameras from the child\u2019s face. Miles ate like his body couldn\u2019t trust that food would remain if he didn\u2019t move fast, and he kept glancing up as if expecting someone to snatch it away for daring to need it. Riders held their positions around him, forming a human wall that wasn\u2019t aggressive, just protective.<\/p>\n<p>A child welfare supervisor arrived, face tight with anger, tablet in hand, and the first honest thing she said was the quietest. \u201cThere isn\u2019t a case file,\u201d she admitted. \u201cThere should be, but there isn\u2019t.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf watched Miles drink water in careful sips. \u201cWhere\u2019s his mother?\u201d he asked.<\/p>\n<p>The supervisor\u2019s eyes flicked down to her screen. \u201cName is Corinne Hart. Last known address is a motel off Highway 89. Officers are headed there.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf didn\u2019t ask if she was coming back. The supervisor didn\u2019t pretend she was. Instead, she said what adults say when they\u2019ve seen too much of the same pattern. \u201cA parent who leaves a seven-year-old at a school for three days\u2026 doesn\u2019t come back in a way that repairs what\u2019s been done.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles looked up at Stonewolf with a tremor in his lower lip. \u201cAm I in trouble?\u201d he asked, because children always assume adults\u2019 failures are their fault.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf crouched again, close enough for Miles to see his face clearly. \u201cNo,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re not in trouble. You were left. That\u2019s not the same thing, and it\u2019s not your fault.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The supervisor explained what came next in the language of policy: emergency placement, temporary foster, court steps, searches for relatives. Her words were careful, but the truth underneath them was sharp: the system could swallow a kid whole and call it a process. Stonewolf listened and then made a decision that didn\u2019t sound dramatic when he said it, but it cracked the air open anyway.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI want to be considered as a placement,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>The supervisor stared. \u201cSir, you\u2019re\u2014\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI\u2019m someone who showed up,\u201d Stonewolf cut in, and his voice turned into steel. \u201cYour system had three days. We found him in hours. You want to talk to me about qualifications? Start by explaining why the people with badges and titles and salaries walked past a child for seventy-two hours.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The supervisor didn\u2019t argue on principle, because principle had already been burned to ash in that parking lot. She spoke about background checks and home studies and court timelines, and Stonewolf nodded like he\u2019d already accepted the wait if it meant the child didn\u2019t have to. Then he looked at Miles and asked the question that mattered more than paperwork.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHey, Miles,\u201d he said gently, \u201cdo you see all these bikes?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles nodded, eyes wide.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cEvery one of those riders came because we heard you needed help,\u201d Stonewolf said. \u201cWe don\u2019t leave people behind. Not kids. Not anyone.\u201d He paused, watching Miles\u2019s face struggle to trust it. \u201cYou understand?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles swallowed. His voice was tiny, the way it gets when you\u2019re asking something that can break you if the answer goes wrong. \u201cAm I\u2026 one of your people?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf felt something shift in his chest, a crack in whatever armor he\u2019d built out of years and roads and hard decisions. \u201cIf you want to be,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>Miles thought, serious as a judge in a small body. Then he nodded once, slow and final.<\/p>\n<p>That night, when the supervisor walked Miles to a county vehicle, Miles looked back at Stonewolf with terror in his eyes, the kind of fear that comes from being moved like luggage. Stonewolf lifted a hand and kept his voice steady. \u201cI\u2019ll see you tomorrow,\u201d he promised. \u201cYou\u2019re not alone anymore. I swear it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The vehicle pulled away, taillights shrinking, and five hundred riders stood in silence as it disappeared, because sometimes silence is the only respectful way to hold a moment that should never have existed.<\/p>\n<p>The next morning, the story was everywhere. The footage wasn\u2019t flattering to the town: a small boy alone by a flagpole while adults walked past, and then a sea of motorcycles arriving like a storm with a spine. The pressure did what morality hadn\u2019t. Calls got returned. Paperwork moved. Background checks were expedited. A home visit happened with the speed people always swear is impossible until embarrassment forces it to become possible.<\/p>\n<p>Two days later, Stonewolf walked into a foster living room while Miles sat on a couch clutching his backpack like it might vanish if he set it down. When Miles saw him, the child\u2019s whole face changed, fear loosening into something fragile and bright, like a candle catching. Stonewolf held out his hand, slow and patient. \u201cReady to go?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles didn\u2019t hesitate. He grabbed the backpack, then took the hand like he\u2019d been waiting his whole life for someone to offer it and mean it.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf\u2019s house on the edge of town wasn\u2019t grand. It was quiet, a little worn, clean, and honest. There was a spare bedroom that had sat unused for years, and when Stonewolf opened the door and showed it to Miles, the boy stood in the doorway as if the room might dissolve if he stepped inside.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-3\"><\/div>\n<p>\u201cThis is yours,\u201d Stonewolf said. \u201cWe\u2019ll get you a bed that doesn\u2019t squeak and a dresser that isn\u2019t older than me, but this space? It\u2019s yours.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles set his backpack down like it was a sacred object. Then he looked up and asked the question that always comes from a kid who\u2019s been abandoned, the question that is really a fear in disguise. \u201cWhat if my mom comes back?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf crouched until they were eye level. \u201cYou deserve the truth,\u201d he said. \u201cYour mom has problems that aren\u2019t your fault and aren\u2019t about you. If she ever gets her life together and wants to do right by you, we\u2019ll deal with that then. But right now, today, you need someone to take care of you.\u201d He held the boy\u2019s gaze. \u201cI\u2019m volunteering.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles frowned slightly, as if the word didn\u2019t belong in the same sentence as him. \u201cWhy?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf\u2019s voice stayed even. \u201cBecause somebody should\u2019ve stopped three days ago,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd I\u2019m not the guy who drives past a kid who needs help.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Life didn\u2019t become perfect. Miles had nightmares. He woke shaking, convinced he was back on that curb with the flagpole watching shadows stretch and cars leave. Some nights Stonewolf sat with him until dawn, talking about nothing and everything, promising with the kind of steadiness that turns promises into medicine. The difference was that the promises were kept. Breakfast came. Rides to school came. Someone waited at pick-up time like it mattered, because it did. Someone showed up and stayed.<\/p>\n<p>The adoption took time, court hearings, supervised visits, signatures, and the slow grind of a system that pretends slowness equals safety even when slowness is what nearly killed a child\u2019s spirit. Miles\u2019s mother eventually signed away her rights from a rehab facility, her choice guided more by legal pressure than maternal clarity, and on the day the judge made it official, the courtroom was packed with leather vests and quiet faces. The judge acknowledged what everyone had already learned in the most public way possible: a town full of \u201crespectable\u201d adults had failed, and an \u201cunacceptable\u201d man had refused to.<\/p>\n<p>When the gavel came down, Miles didn\u2019t understand the legal language, but he understood the only part that mattered. He launched himself into Stonewolf\u2019s arms and held on like letting go might undo the world.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe\u2019re family now,\u201d Miles whispered.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf\u2019s voice was rough when he answered. \u201cWe were family the day I stopped,\u201d he said. \u201cNow the paperwork caught up.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Years passed, and Miles grew into a boy who laughed easily, who learned to fix engines in the garage with hands that no longer sh00k when adults spoke loudly, who made friends who didn\u2019t care about rumors because loyalty is a language kids recognize when they see it. The town changed its policies, not because it found conscience, but because it found consequences. Teachers watched the lot more carefully. The school installed procedures. The police created welfare-check protocols. The city called it reform. The riders called it what it really was: a reminder written in rules because empathy had failed.<\/p>\n<p>One evening, long after the cameras had moved on, Stonewolf pulled his bike to the side of the highway and turned to look at Miles in the sidecar he\u2019d rigged himself. The desert sun was melting into copper and gold, and the light made everything look softer than it felt.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDo you love me?\u201d Miles asked suddenly, voice careful, as if he was testing whether love could be revoked.<\/p>\n<p>Stonewolf didn\u2019t joke. He didn\u2019t deflect. He answered like a man who understood exactly how dangerous that question was to a child who\u2019d been left. \u201cI love you more than anything in this world,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re my son. Not because of biology. Not because of paperwork. Because I chose you, and you chose me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Miles nodded, and a real smile broke across his face, the kind that pushed the last shadowy version of the boy in the parking lot further into the past.<\/p>\n<p>They rode home with the engine rumbling under them and a house waiting with lights on and people inside who had decided a child mattered. And somewhere behind them, in the place where that parking lot still existed, the town carried a scar it could no longer hide: the knowledge that the most dangerous thing that had happened wasn\u2019t five hundred motorcycles arriving, but five hundred ordinary adults choosing, over and over, to look away until the noise became too loud to ignore.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Arizona sun didn\u2019t care about excuses. It hammered the cracked asphalt of Juniper Ridge Elementary\u2019s parking lot with the same relentless heat it gave the playground swings and the &hellip; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":44,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-40","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=40"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":52,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40\/revisions\/52"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/44"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=40"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=40"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hnnews24h.store\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=40"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}