She Refused Her Sister’s Mortgage. Then the Garage Went Silent-iwachan

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

Antiseptic, burnt coffee, and the sharp plastic scent of the oxygen tube brushing my cheek.

Then I heard my mother crying into a paper cup from the hospital vending area.

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Her breath shook so hard the plastic lid clicked against the rim.

The ceiling above me was painfully white.

The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.

For a few seconds, my body did not feel like it belonged to me.

Then the pain came back through my shoulder and down my arm like a live wire.

I tried to move and nearly blacked out.

My arm was trapped in a sling.

Every breath made my ribs tighten.

One side of my face throbbed so badly I could barely open my eye.

My jaw felt like someone had locked it from the inside.

“Sweetheart,” my mother whispered when she saw my lashes move.

Her hand hovered over mine, afraid to touch me.

“Thank God. Thank God you’re awake.”

My father stood behind her with both hands gripping the back of a plastic hospital chair.

His knuckles were white.

His work jacket still had sawdust on the sleeves from the garage.

He looked like he had aged ten years between dinner and sunrise.

Beside my bed sat a police officer with a small notebook on her lap and a body camera clipped to her uniform.

“I’m Officer Ramirez,” she said gently.

“You’re safe now.”

Safe.

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