My father’s words were a slap to my already spiraling senses, and I felt a rush of despair. It was always the same; Jason was the golden child, and I was the overly dramatic daughter. The girl who cried wolf one too many times. But this time, the wolf was real.
As I lay there, the chaos around me seemed to fade, the laughter and music a distant hum. All I could focus on was the terrifying numbness spreading through my body, a silent thief robbing me of my ability to move, to feel. The fear was thick, choking me, and I longed for someone, anyone, to take my cries seriously.
The minutes stretched on like hours, and then, mercifully, the shrill wail of sirens cut through the night. The paramedics arrived in a flurry of efficiency, their calm professionalism a stark contrast to the party’s fading revelry. They knelt beside me, their questions quick and probing.
