I saw the news about a car accident my husband and parents were involved. I rushed to the hospital, heart pounding. But the doctor stopped me at the door. “You can’t see your family right now,” he said coldly. As I struggled to understand, a police officer approached. “Your husband and parents…” I fell to my knees before he could finish.

I saw the news about a car accident my husband and parents were involved. I rushed to the hospital, heart pounding. But the doctor stopped me at the door. “You can’t see your family right now,” he said coldly. As I struggled to understand, a police officer approached. “Your husband and parents…” I fell to my knees before he could finish.

My name is Claire Bennett, and I found out about the crash the way people find out about disasters now—through a shaky phone video clipped into a news segment, the kind that loops the same fifteen seconds until your brain breaks. A silver SUV on its side. A torn guardrail. Rain streaking across the lens. The reporter’s voice saying, “Three people transported to St. Mary’s Medical Center…” and then the words that made my chest seize: the license plate matched my husband’s car.

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