Her Mother Chose A Cruise Over The Baby. Grandpa Changed The Bill-Lian

The ambulance smelled like burned rubber, antiseptic, and copper.

For a few seconds after the crash, I could not understand why my left eye would not clear.

Then I touched my forehead, saw blood on my fingers, and heard a paramedic say, “Stay with me, ma’am.”

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My name is Rebecca Miller, and on the evening my daughter turned six weeks old, I learned exactly how much my mother thought my little family was worth.

Less than a spa appointment.

Less than a seaweed wrap.

Less than a Caribbean cruise she had not even paid for.

The truck had come through the intersection too fast, or maybe I had only registered it that way because everything afterward happened in pieces.

The horn.

The glass.

The baby seat.

The terrible silence before Emma screamed.

Mrs. Keller, my neighbor, had been two cars behind me on her way home from the grocery store, and she ran across the road with a paper bag still swinging from one elbow.

She got Emma out before I could even turn my head.

I remember her voice through the broken window, saying, “I have her, Rebecca. I have the baby.”

That sentence kept me from falling apart.

My husband, Daniel, was in the air on a work flight, unreachable until he landed.

So in the ambulance, with an oxygen mask fogging against my mouth and a paramedic pressing gauze to my hairline, I called my mother.

Patricia answered on the third ring.

Soft music played behind her, the kind of spa music that sounds like water trying very hard to be expensive.

“Rebecca,” she said, already tired of me. “I’m at the spa.”

“Mom,” I said. “I’ve been in an accident.”

There was no gasp.

No chair scraping back.

No sharp little mother-sound that tells you someone loves you before words arrive.

Just a pause.

“An accident?” she said. “Are you sure you’re not overreacting?”

I tried to blink, but my lashes were sticky with blood.

“They’re taking me to the hospital,” I said. “Emma is with Mrs. Keller. Daniel is on a plane. I need you to go get her.”

Another pause.

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