Birthday BBQ Horror: Wife Collapses and Paramedic Questions Her Tea-QuynhTranJP

The concrete was the first thing I trusted that afternoon.

Not my husband.

Not his mother.

Image

Not the fourteen birthday guests standing around the driveway with paper plates in their hands.

The concrete, at least, told the truth.

It was hot against my cheek, rough enough to scrape skin, and gritty with tiny pieces of sand that stuck to the sweat on my face.

Barbecue smoke drifted low from the grill, carrying the smell of charred meat, sweet sauce, lighter fluid, and onions turning brown in a foil pan.

Somewhere behind me, classic rock kept thumping from the speaker Leo had set on the patio chair that morning, before he had decided his wife collapsing in front of his friends was less important than keeping his party mood alive.

A slick thread of barbecue sauce slid from my hairline toward my ear.

I had landed face-down beside the folding table after my knees stopped being mine.

Not weak.

Not shaky.

Gone.

The lower half of my body had become a place I could still see in my mind but could not reach.

“Just stand up,” Leo snapped.

His voice came from above me, sharp and public, the way he spoke when other people were watching and he wanted them to know he was the reasonable one.

I tried.

I pressed my palms into the driveway, felt the sting of gravel bite into my skin, and pushed until my shoulders shook.

My chest lifted an inch.

My hips did not move.

My legs lay behind me with the terrible patience of objects.

“I can’t feel my legs,” I whispered.

It came out smaller than I wanted.

Fear does that sometimes.

It takes the size out of your own voice before anyone else can.

Read More