She Cut Off Mom’s $4,500 Lifeline From A Hospital Bed After The Crash-kieutrinh

The first thing I tasted after the crash was blood.

The second was betrayal.

Rain was coming down so hard that night it turned the windshield into a sheet of gray noise.

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The wipers were still moving even after the front of my SUV had crumpled, dragging muddy water across cracked glass like they were trying to erase what had happened.

My six-week-old son was screaming from the back seat.

That was the only sound I could hear clearly.

Not the horns.

Not the man from the other SUV shouting that he had not seen the red light.

Not the tires hissing against wet pavement or the distant siren beginning somewhere beyond the intersection.

Just Eli.

Tiny, furious, terrified Eli.

“Baby,” I tried to say, but my voice came out wet and weak.

My ribs felt like someone had hooked wires through them and pulled.

My left leg would not move at all.

For a second, I thought the crash had thrown me into some strange dream, because my mind kept reaching for ordinary things.

The bottle in the diaper bag.

The soft blanket with little blue stars.

The spare pacifier I had clipped to the carrier handle before we left the house.

Then lightning flashed across the intersection, and I saw the other SUV sitting sideways with steam rolling up from its hood.

The driver’s door hung open.

A man was standing in the rain with his phone in his hand, looking dazed and angry and alive.

My baby was still screaming.

“Eli,” I gasped.

I tried to twist toward him, and pain tore through me so fast the whole world went white around the edges.

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