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Posted on January 27, 2026 By admin No Comments on

It lined up perfectly with her spring break. I couldn’t go. Neither could my husband. Work, for both of us. And I don’t fly.

I mean, I really don’t fly. Haven’t in over ten years. It’s not just a preference; it’s a full-on, crippling phobia. Sweaty hands, racing heart, the distinct, metallic taste of panic rising in my throat the second I’m near a boarding gate. Even the scent of jet fuel makes my throat feel like it’s closing. So, we drive. We take trains. We stay grounded. That’s how I stay functional.

The point is, I wasn’t bracing for trauma. I was expecting a selfie from a street market. I answered the call, a smile already on my face. The smile died instantly.

There was no noise. Just Sophie, my 15-year-old daughter, sitting rigid on the edge of a generic hotel bed.

“I’m tired,” she said softly. Then, “Hey, Mom.” She paused, and her eyes, even through the pixelated screen, looked… hunted. “Can I tell you something,” she whispered, “but promise not to freak out?”

Spoiler: I absolutely freaked out. Not on the outside. My voice didn’t even raise a decibel. But inside, it was a full-blown, five-alarm internal meltdown. “What’s going on, honey?” I asked, my voice terrifyingly calm as I slowly got to my feet.

She turned the camera. Her leg was resting on a hotel pillow. It was swollen, red, and a deep, angry purple. The skin was stretched taut along her ankle and shin. It wasn’t just bruised; it was ballooned. It looked wrong.

“I think I broke it,” she said, her voice flat.

My mind blanked. “What do you mean, you think you broke it?”

“I fell yesterday,” she replied. “On the stairs at that old palace place. Yesterday.”

I sank slowly back into my chair, like gravity had suddenly doubled. “Yesterday? Who’s looked at it? Where is everyone?”

“Grandma, Grandpa, and Uncle Mark,” she said. “They… they didn’t think it looked that bad. It wasn’t really swollen at first. They figured it was just bruising.”

I blinked, the information failing to compute. “So… they didn’t take you anywhere? To a doctor?”

She shook her head, her hair falling over her face. “No. We kept going. I just… walked through it.”

I shut my eyes, a cold sickness rising in my stomach. “How long, Sophie? How long did you walk?”

“Three hours? Maybe more.”

“Three… hours.”

She nodded, finally looking at me. “They told me I was overreacting.”

That line. That classic, familiar line. “They said I’d feel better once the tour was over,” she added, her tone so casual it made me want to scream. “And now… now it hurts a lot more.”

My voice was ice. “Where are they now, Sophie?” She hesitated, and that’s when I knew. “Out. They… they said I could stay at the hotel and rest.”

I froze. “You’re by yourself?”

She nodded again, a small, jerky motion.

“In another state. Alone.” I stared at the screen, at my child, who was clearly in agonizing pain and had been abandoned.

“Hey,” I said, my voice sharp, professional. “Don’t move. I’m coming to get you.”

“What? Mom, you don’t have to…”

“I do. But you’d have to fly.”

“I’m aware.”

She blinked. “You haven’t flown since…”

“I know.” I was already on my laptop, my fingers flying across the keys. “I’m already checking flights.”

This time, she didn’t argue. Her voice grew quiet. “Okay.”

I hung up. I found one flight. One single, non-stop seat, leaving in 90 minutes. There was no time for fear. No time for logic. No time for anything but motion. I booked it.

Then I called my parents. Voicemail. Tried again. Voicemail. I called Mark. He answered, chipper. “Hey, Erica! How’s it going?”

“You left Sophie alone in a hotel room with a possibly broken leg.”

The chipper tone vanished. “Whoa, hold on. She said she was fine. She’s 15, she can…”

“She can’t walk, Mark. She told you it hurt yesterday, and you made her walk for three hours.”

“We didn’t make her. She’s always been a little sensitive, come on. It’s probably just a sprain. The swelling didn’t even start until last night.”

“Sensitive,” I repeated. The word felt like acid on my tongue. “You saw her leg and you left her alone because she ‘couldn’t move’?”

He sighed, a sound of pure, unadulterated annoyance. “You’re blowing this out of proportion. Just like you always do.”

There it was. Always. Me. Her. I hung up without another word. I didn’t have time to shout.

I grabbed my bag, shut my laptop, and bolted. My boss looked up as I burst into his office, halfway out the door.

“Family emergency,” I said. “I have to go.”

“What kind of emergency?”

“The kind where I leave right now.”

He frowned. “You were just assigned…”

“I know. I’m sorry.” I didn’t wait to hear the rest. I was already in the elevator, booking a cab. In the cab, I texted Sophie. I’m coming. Don’t take anything. Stay in bed.

She replied with a single heart emoji. I stared at that tiny red heart the whole ride to the airport, a single point of focus in a sea of rising panic.

I ran. Through check-in, through security. Sweaty, disoriented, fighting the irrational, screaming itch in my brain to turn back, to get on solid ground. But I didn’t. I ran like I was being chased.

Maybe I was. Chased by the ghost of every time I’d been told I was too sensitive, too much, too scared.

I made it to the gate with minutes to spare. No checked bags, no clean shirt, just me, my credit card, and a phobia I didn’t have time to entertain.

I hate flying. I really, really hate it. But I hate what they did to her more. So, I boarded the plane. I didn’t shout. Not yet. But four days later, they were the ones screaming.

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