The call came at 6:17 p.m. I remember the exact time because I had just sat down with a cup of tea when my phone rang. The voice on the other end was calm but urgent.
“Are you Emma Collins’ mother?”
My heart skipped. “Yes.”
“There’s been a car crash. Your daughter was hit leaving her workplace.
I pulled her from the vehicle and brought her to the ER. You need to come now.”
For a second, I couldn’t breathe. The cup slipped from my hand and shattered across the kitchen floor, but I didn’t even look down.
I grabbed my keys and drove, barely aware of the traffic lights or the tears blurring my vision. When I arrived at the hospital, everything felt too bright and too loud. Nurses rushed past.
Monitors beeped. The smell of antiseptic burned my nose. “She’s in surgery,” a doctor told me gently.
“Her condition is critical. Another vehicle slammed into hers and fled the scene. The impact was severe.”
The word echoed in my mind like a drumbeat.
And then I saw him. He was standing near the vending machines in the hallway—tall, neatly dressed, though his shirt was wrinkled and streaked with dirt. His sleeves were rolled up, and there was dried blood on his cuff.
His face looked pale but steady. “You’re her mother,” he said softly. I nodded, unable to speak.
“I was driving behind her when it happened. I saw the other car speed off. I pulled her out before the engine caught fire.”
My knees nearly gave out.
“Thank you,” I whispered, the words feeling far too small. He smiled gently—almost sadly—and reached into his coat pocket. He pulled out a red tie, slightly torn near the edge.
“Don’t lose this,” he said, pressing it into my hands. “When she wakes up, tell her she did the right thing. Tell her not to blame herself.”
Before I could ask what he meant, he stepped back.
“I have to go.”
“Wait—what’s your name?” I asked. “Sam,” he replied. And then he was gone.
I sat in that cold hallway for hours, clutching that red tie like it was a lifeline. I didn’t understand what it meant. I assumed it had fallen from him in the chaos.
My daughter, Emma, stayed in surgery for nearly five hours. Every minute felt like an eternity stretched thin. But she survived.
Broken ribs. A fractured leg. Internal injuries.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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