PART 1
“Mom… Dad is waiting for you to die. Please don’t open your eyes.”
That was the first thing I heard after twelve days trapped in a dense, suffocating darkness—like being buried alive without a coffin.
I couldn’t move. I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t even draw a full breath without pain splitting through my skull.
But I recognized that voice instantly.
“Ethan…”
My nine-year-old son was right beside my hospital bed, crying quietly, his small hand wrapped around mine the same way he used to hold it when fireworks frightened him.
“Mom… if you can hear me, squeeze my hand. Please.”
I tried.
God knows I tried.
But my body wouldn’t obey.
A nurse walked in, talking about IV fluids, blood pressure, and the “miracle” that I was still alive. She mentioned my SUV had gone off the road near a mountain pass outside the city.
Everyone kept repeating the same thing:
“Poor Emily… she lost control on the curve.”
But I didn’t remember losing control.
The last thing I remembered was Ryan—my husband—sitting at our kitchen table, sliding a stack of papers toward me with a tight smile.
“Just sign, Em. It’s to protect our assets before the IRS comes sniffing around.”
I refused.
That same night, my brakes failed.
The hospital room door opened. Ethan quickly let go of my hand.
“You again?” Ryan’s voice was low, sharp. “I told you, your mom can’t hear you.”
“I just wanted to see her.”
“Go sit with your Aunt Claire.”
Claire. My older sister.
The one who braided my hair when we were kids. The one who lent me her dress for my wedding. The one who cried in front of everyone at the hospital, saying she’d give her life for me.
Her heels clicked in first. Then came her expensive perfume—the one she loved to brag about because it made her “smell like money.”