Her Parents Ignored The Hospital Call. Then Her Lawyer Walked In-Ginny

My parents refused a hospital’s call to donate lifesaving blood for me because they were shopping for my sister’s new suburban home.

So I called my estate lawyer to the ICU, revoked everything on the spot, and when they finally stormed in, they learned exactly what their greed had cost them.

I counted the calls because the clock was directly across from my bed.

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Nine.

The red numbers on the hospital wall glowed through the thin blue dark of the ICU room, every minute too bright, every beep too sharp.

The air smelled like antiseptic, plastic, cold metal, and something faintly coppery that I could not decide was real or just memory from the accident.

My mouth was dry.

My phone screen was cracked from the crash, and every time I pressed my thumb against it, a thin line of glass caught against my skin.

I called my mother first.

Voicemail.

I called my father.

Voicemail.

I called the family group chat.

Nothing.

Then I called again.

And again.

By the ninth attempt, the monitor beside me was beeping hard enough that nurse Marisol looked up from the IV pump with that careful hospital expression people use when they are trying not to scare you.

The text from my mother arrived at 6:09 p.m.

“We’re furniture shopping for Lauren. Is this urgent?”

I stared at the word urgent until the letters stopped looking like English.

A few hours earlier, a delivery truck had run a red light and hit my car on the passenger side.

I remembered the sound first.

Not a crash the way people describe it later, with drama and slow motion.

It was a hard, ugly folding sound, metal giving up all at once.

Then glass.

Then gasoline.

Then someone outside yelling for me not to move.

I had tried to answer, but the pressure in my side made my voice come out like air through paper.

By the time the ambulance doors slammed shut, my blouse was soaked through and my hands were shaking so badly the paramedic had to hold one of them still to get the line in.

At the hospital intake desk, they asked for emergency contacts.

I gave them the numbers because even after everything, you still say your parents’ names automatically when someone asks who should be called if you might die.

That is the cruel little habit of family.

Your body remembers hope long after your mind has stopped trusting it.

By 5:18 p.m., a trauma surgeon had told me I had internal bleeding.

By 5:42 p.m., Marisol told me they had reached my mother.

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