Dad Told His Injured Daughter To Call An Uber — Then Police Arrived-heuh

After my car was crushed on the motorway, I texted my dad from A&E. He replied, “I’m having lunch with Charlotte. I can’t just leave. Call an Uber.”

Forty minutes later, a police officer walked up to his restaurant table.

And that moment cost him £15 million, his company, and the daughter he thought would always protect him.

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The crash itself should have been the worst thing that happened to me that day.

For a while, I thought it was.

I remembered rain on the windscreen, thin and silver, sliding sideways in the wind.

I remembered the lorry drifting too close, the sudden horn, the violent jolt that tore my car out of its lane as if it weighed nothing.

Then came the spin.

Three lanes blurred into one long streak of headlights, wet tarmac and white lines.

Someone screamed.

It may have been me.

By the time the car stopped, I could smell petrol, hot rubber and the metallic tang of blood.

My chest would not open properly.

Every breath felt as if it had to be dragged through broken glass.

A man in a high-vis jacket appeared beside the window, shouting that help was coming.

I wanted to answer him, but my mouth would not form the words.

The world faded at the edges.

Then there were paramedics, scissors cutting through my coat, gloved hands bracing my neck, someone saying my pulse was thready.

Another voice said something about a punctured lung.

A third mentioned internal bleeding in that low, careful tone people use when they are trying not to frighten you.

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