Her Husband Died On Their Wedding Night. Then The Driver Spoke. – olive

The last thing Daniel Voss said to his wife was not a warning.

It was a promise.

“Don’t be scared, Mara. I’ve got you.”

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Mara remembered the warmth of his hand over hers on the center console.

She remembered the rain sliding down the windshield in crooked silver lines.

She remembered the faint cedar smell of his tux jacket, the champagne still on his breath, and the crushed ribbon of her bouquet digging into her palm.

They had been married for six hours.

Six hours of photographs, shaky vows, too much cake, and Daniel dancing badly because he knew it made her laugh.

Six hours of his mother staring through the reception like the whole wedding had been a personal insult.

Six hours of believing that love, once spoken out loud in front of witnesses, could protect people from anything.

Then the truck came out of the rain.

It did not swerve.

It did not slow.

Mara saw the headlights fill Daniel’s window, white and enormous, and then the night tore open.

The sound was not one sound.

It was metal folding.

Glass bursting.

Daniel shouting her name.

Her own breath leaving her body so violently she thought she had been punched by the dark itself.

When the car flipped, her mind caught strange little pieces of the world.

The heel of her wedding shoe.

A spray of tiny glass beads across the dashboard.

Daniel’s left hand still reaching for her.

Then nothing.

She woke up to fluorescent light.

A heart monitor clicked beside her bed.

Her mouth tasted like copper.

Something pulled tight across her forehead every time she tried to blink.

For a few seconds, she did not know where she was.

Then she turned her head and saw the empty chair beside her bed.

Daniel would not have left the chair empty.

Not if he could help it.

A nurse came in first.

Then a doctor.

Then a police officer stood in the doorway with his hat in his hands.

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