Injured Wife Locked In Garage Finds Proof Her Husband Forgot-heuh

I had just got home from the hospital with a shattered femur when my mother-in-law kicked my crutches out from under me.

The sound came first.

Not the scream.

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Not the gasp from the back of my throat.

The first thing I remember clearly was the sharp metallic crack of a crutch hitting the wooden floor and skidding along the narrow hallway like something thrown out with the bins.

The front door was still open behind me.

Rain-cold air pushed into the house and curled around my ankles, lifting the edge of the discharge papers tucked under my arm.

My sweatshirt still smelt of hospital corridors, antiseptic wipes and the plastic chair where I had sat waiting for Daniel to bring the car round.

The paper bracelet on my wrist scratched against the handle of my remaining crutch.

I had been home for eleven minutes.

Eleven minutes since the nurse had helped me into the passenger seat, careful with my braced leg, careful with the folder of instructions, careful with the bag of pain medication she placed in my lap.

Eleven minutes since Daniel had smiled at her with that soft, reliable face he used for strangers.

“I’ll take good care of her,” he had said.

The nurse had believed him.

So had I.

That was the humiliating part.

Pain makes you small in ways no one warns you about.

It makes you grateful for a hand on your elbow, grateful for a door held open, grateful for the person who remembers which tablets you need and when.

It makes you confuse performance with tenderness.

Daniel parked badly across our small drive, helped me out with a patience that vanished the moment the neighbour’s curtains stopped twitching, and guided me through the front door without once meeting my eyes.

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