Mum Chose A Cruise Over My Baby, Then Grandad Saw The Transfers-Teptep

The first thing I remember after the crash was not the impact.

It was not the snap of metal or the taste of blood or the sharp, ugly smell of petrol on wet tarmac.

It was my baby crying through my phone speaker.

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Lily was six weeks old, still so new that her whole body seemed to fit into the crook of my arm, still at the age where every cry went straight through my ribs and found the most frightened part of me.

That cry came from my house, where an emergency sitter I barely knew was pacing my sitting room with my daughter while I lay strapped to a hospital bed under white lights.

The paramedic had found my phone on the floor of the car because I kept asking for it.

I do not remember asking once.

He told me later I had asked six times.

“Call my mum,” I had kept saying.

I had said it as if it were obvious.

As if my mother would come.

As if family meant someone dropped everything when a baby was crying and a daughter was bleeding.

A drunk driver had gone through a red light and hit my car so hard the front end folded around me.

By the time they got me out, my left leg was braced, my hairline was sticky with blood, and every breath felt as though someone had tied wire around my ribs.

Still, the only thought I could hold was Lily.

She had a bottle due.

She hated being held by strangers.

She liked the white muslin cloth with the little yellow stars.

She settled best if you rocked her near the kitchen window, where the light came in grey and soft even on bad days.

The sitter was doing her best, but she had only been meant to cover an hour.

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