Mum Chose A Cruise Over My Newborn—Then I Cancelled £486,000-heuh

The first thing I tasted after the crash was blood.

The second was rain.

It came through the broken edge of the driver’s window in cold little bursts, sharp on my lips, while my six-week-old son screamed behind me.

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For one second, I did not understand where I was.

There had been traffic lights.

There had been the soft whimper Evan made whenever the car slowed.

There had been the steady slap of wipers against the windscreen and the grey shine of the road ahead.

Then there was a truck running the red light.

There was a noise like the world being torn open.

My car spun across the junction, metal shrieking, glass spraying, my body thrown hard against the belt.

When everything stopped, Evan was still crying.

That was the sound that kept me conscious.

Not the horn blaring somewhere nearby.

Not the rain.

Not the taste of blood or the terrible heat blooming under my ribs.

My baby was crying, and I could not reach him.

“Evan,” I gasped.

My voice sounded wrong, thin and wet, as if it belonged to someone at the end of a long corridor.

I tried to turn.

Pain tore through my side so violently that the breath left me.

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