A Bride Survived the Crash. Then the Driver Named the Real Target-eirian

The last thing Daniel said to Mara was meant to comfort her.

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

He said it with one hand on the steering wheel and the other briefly brushing her fingers, as rain ran in silver threads down the windshield.

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They had been married for six hours.

Her dress was folded under her knees because the car was too small for all that satin, all those flowers, all the impossible happiness she had carried out of the reception hall.

Daniel kept laughing every few minutes as if he could not quite believe she was his wife.

Mara remembered the smell of roses from the back seat.

She remembered the vanilla frosting on the cake box.

She remembered the soft click of his wedding ring against the wheel.

Then she remembered light.

Not headlights at first.

Just light.

White, massive, swallowing everything.

The truck came out of the rain as if the road had opened its mouth.

There was no time for Daniel to brake.

There was no time for Mara to scream.

The impact folded the car sideways, throwing glass across her face and metal across her legs, and the world became sound without shape.

Steel shrieking.

Rain hitting pavement.

Daniel’s voice cut off in the middle of breath.

When Mara woke, she was not a bride anymore.

She was a patient with stitches along her hairline, two broken ribs, a fractured wrist, and a hospital bracelet that seemed too ordinary for the life it had been attached to.

A nurse told her not to move.

A doctor told her she was lucky.

Mara looked past them toward the empty chair beside her bed and understood that people used the word lucky when they were afraid to say the truth.

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