She Canceled Her Mother’s Money From A Hospital Bed After The Crash-hihehu

Rain was the first thing I heard after the crash.

Not sirens.

Not voices.

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Rain.

It beat against the windshield like gravel thrown by the handful, hard and mean, while the smell of burned rubber and airbag dust filled my mouth.

For a few seconds, I could not understand why the world was sideways.

Then Eli cried from the back seat.

My son was six weeks old, and his cry cut through the ringing in my ears so sharply that my whole body tried to turn before my brain remembered pain existed.

“Eli,” I gasped.

The seat belt locked across my chest.

My ribs flared with heat.

My left leg felt wrong in a way I did not have words for.

“Baby, I’m here,” I said, though my voice sounded like it belonged to somebody else.

Outside, the SUV that had run the red light sat crooked in the intersection, its front end folded in and smoke lifting into the rain.

A traffic signal blinked red over all of us, useless now.

I tried to reach back again.

Pain stopped me.

A firefighter appeared in the window, face blurred behind rain and glass.

“Ma’am, don’t move.”

“My baby,” I said.

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