After my car accident, Mom refused to take my six-week-old baby, saying, “Your sister never has these emergencies.” She went on a Caribbean cruise. From my hospital bed, I hired care and stopped the $4,500-a-month support I had paid for nine years—$486,000. Hours later, Grandpa walked in and said…

After my car accident, Mom refused to take my six-week-old baby, saying, “Your sister never has these emergencies.” She went on a Caribbean cruise. From my hospital bed, I hired care and stopped the $4,500-a-month support I had paid for nine years—$486,000. Hours later, Grandpa walked in and said…

The taste of copper in my mouth was the first thing I noticed when the world stopped spinning. It was a thick, metallic tang that competed with the acrid stench of deployed airbags and the hiss of steam escaping from what was once the hood of my Honda. My name is Rebecca Martinez, and three weeks ago, my life was measured in the rhythmic, agonizing thrum of a fractured collarbone and the sharp, stabbing reminders of three broken ribs.

The paramedics were efficient, their voices a blur of clinical urgency as the Jaws of Life groaned against the twisted wreckage of my car. A delivery truck had decided that a red light was merely a suggestion, t-boning me at sixty miles per hour. As they strapped me onto the gurney, my consciousness flickered like a dying candle, but one thought remained incandescent: Emma.

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