My Parents Took My Injured Daughter Home, Then Took My Money-olive

The first thing I saw was my mother’s hand on mine.

Not a nurse.

Not a doctor.

Image

My mother.

For one small, foolish second, I believed she had stayed beside my hospital bed because she was scared.

Then I remembered the sound of glass.

I remembered the truck sliding through the red light.

I remembered my daughter Ava screaming from the back seat.

“Where’s Ava?” I rasped.

My mother smiled too quickly.

“She’s fine,” she said. “She was discharged. She’s at home now.”

Ava was nine years old.

Nine was not old enough to be “fine” after a crash because my mother wanted the conversation closed.

I tried to sit up, and pain slammed through my ribs so hard the room blurred.

Mom pressed my shoulder down.

“You need to rest.”

“I need to hear her voice.”

“She’s sleeping.”

“Wake her up.”

My mother’s mouth tightened.

That was the look I knew from childhood, the look that meant I had asked for more than my assigned share.

Mom leaned closer.

“We’ve been taking care of everything while you were out,” she said. “But we need access to your account so we can pay for anything Ava needs.”

There it was.

Not love.

Not fear.

Access.

I should have known better.

But I was hurt, medicated, and terrified for my child.

So I gave it to her.

The moment my mother had the login and card access, her shoulders dropped.

She stood, smoothed her sweater, and reached for her purse.

“I have to run.”

“Are you coming back?”

“Of course.”

Read More