Her Girls Were Left In A Blizzard After Grandma Locked The Door-chloe

The hospital smelled like bleach, wet wool, hot plastic, and coffee that had been sitting too long on a burner.

Sarah Anderson remembered that smell later more clearly than she remembered her own voice.

She remembered the buzz of the fluorescent lights.

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She remembered the melted sleet sliding under the collar of her coat.

She remembered standing in a hallway at Riverside General with one hand wrapped around a paper coffee cup and the other hand holding a phone that suddenly felt too heavy to be real.

Three floors above the ER, her husband David was fighting his way back from a Christmas Day crash that had almost killed him.

A delivery van had run a red light on black ice and struck the driver’s side of David’s pickup so hard the door folded inward like paper.

By 12:18 p.m., Sarah had signed the hospital intake form with fingers so cold she could barely make her name.

By 12:41, a trauma nurse was cutting David’s shirt open and asking about allergies.

By 1:30, Sarah was sitting between her daughters in a surgical waiting room, trying to explain the unexplainable without frightening them more than they already were.

Maisie was eight, old enough to watch faces for the truth adults tried to hide.

Ruby was three, small enough to believe a plush rabbit could keep her safe if she held it tightly enough.

Christmas morning had been cinnamon rolls, torn paper, and Ruby wearing velvet shoes with pajama pants because she said fancy shoes made Santa proud.

By afternoon, those same velvet shoes would be sealed in an evidence bag.

When the surgeon finally came out, Sarah saw the answer in his eyes before he spoke.

David was alive.

His spleen had ruptured.

Two ribs were broken.

There had been internal bleeding from a liver laceration, but they had controlled it.

He would spend the night in ICU.

He was alive, but nobody could promise Sarah he was safe.

That was when she looked at her daughters and knew she could not take them upstairs.

David would be pale, swollen, and covered in tubes.

Machines would breathe and beep around him.

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