Her Family Planned Her Funeral While She Was Alive In The ICU-chloe

The first thing Nora Parker remembered was not a voice.

It was concrete dust.

It sat on her tongue like chalk and grit, thick enough that even inside the darkness, she knew something terrible had happened.

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Then came the smell.

Antiseptic.

Plastic tubing.

That sharp hospital-clean scent that always made a room feel both safe and frightening.

A monitor beeped somewhere to her right, steady and flat, and a woman kept saying her name as if each syllable was a small hook thrown into deep water.

“Nora Parker. Stay with us.”

Nora tried to answer, but her throat would not work.

Later, a trauma surgeon told her she had been crushed under a steel collapse at the Harborview Towers job site.

He told her the rigging had snapped during inspection.

He told her the scaffold had folded in on itself, fast and ugly, before anyone could get clear.

He told her they had restarted her heart twice.

Nora listened from a bed in MetroHealth’s ICU with a tube mark still raw at her throat and pain living in every inch of her body.

She had broken ribs.

A shattered spine.

A punctured lung.

A chest that turned every breath into a negotiation.

The doctor said she was lucky.

Nora did not feel lucky yet.

She felt pinned under something heavier than steel.

When she finally woke enough to understand where she was, the room looked too white.

Fluorescent lights buzzed over her bed.

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