
The Christmas Trip That Broke Us
Chapter 2
The world came back to me in fragments—white ceiling tiles, the sharp scent of antiseptic, and a dull, persistent ache that seemed to emanate from somewhere deep in my bones. My mouth felt cotton-dry, and when I tried to move, every muscle protested with a stiffness that spoke of too many hours lying motionless.
"Miss White? Can you hear me?"
I turned my head toward the voice, blinking against the harsh fluorescent lights. A man in a white coat stood beside my bed, his expression grave behind wire-rimmed glasses. His nameplate read Dr. Hermann, and the way he held his clipboard—like it contained news he didn't want to deliver—made my stomach clench with dread.
"Where am I?" My voice came out as a croak.
"University Hospital Zurich," he replied, pulling up a chair beside my bed. "You've been unconscious for eighteen hours. Do you remember what happened?"
The avalanche. Dick turning away from me. The sickening crack of my leg. The memories crashed back with brutal clarity, and I instinctively tried to sit up, only to gasp as pain shot through my left side.
"Please, don't move too quickly," Dr. Hermann said gently. "We need to discuss your injuries."
Something in his tone made my blood run cold. "How bad is it?"
He set his clipboard on his lap and leaned forward, his hands clasped. "Miss White, your left leg sustained severe compound fractures to both the tibia and fibula. There was also significant soft tissue damage from the impact. We've performed surgery to stabilize the bones with metal plates and screws, but..."
The pause stretched on forever.
"But what?" I whispered.
"Even with intensive rehabilitation, there's a strong possibility you may never walk normally again. The damage was extensive, and your athletic career..." He trailed off, but I could read the rest in his eyes.
"No." The word escaped me like a prayer. "No, that's not possible. I have the World Championship in six months. I've been training my entire life for this."
Dr. Hermann's expression softened with what looked like genuine sympathy. "Miss White, I understand this is devastating news, but competing at that level is medically impossible. Your body needs at least a year of rehabilitation just to regain basic mobility, and even then—"
"You don't understand," I interrupted, my voice rising despite the pain it caused in my throat. "Skiing is everything to me. It's who I am. Without it, I'm nothing."
The doctor remained silent for a long moment, and in that silence, the full weight of his words crashed down on me. My career was over. Everything I'd worked for, every sacrifice I'd made, every early morning and late night training session—all of it meaningless now.
"I'll give you some time to process this," Dr. Hermann said quietly, rising from his chair. "The nurses will help you with anything you need. We'll discuss your treatment options tomorrow."
After he left, I lay there staring at the ceiling, my mind reeling. The championship that had been six months away might as well have been on another planet. Dad would be devastated. All those years of pushing me, molding me into a champion, and for what? So I could end up broken in a Swiss hospital bed?
Tears burned my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not yet. I needed air, space to think, somewhere away from the suffocating smell of this sterile room.
When a young nurse with kind eyes came to check on me, I managed to ask, "Is there somewhere I could go? Outside, maybe? I just need some fresh air."
"There's a rooftop terrace," she said, her accent thick with Swiss German. "I could take you up there in a wheelchair, if you'd like. It's quite peaceful."
Fifteen minutes later, she was wheeling me through the hospital corridors, the soft squeak of the wheelchair's wheels marking time like a metronome. The elevator ride felt eternal, and when the doors finally opened to reveal glass doors leading to the terrace, I felt like I could breathe again for the first time since waking up.
"I'll come back for you in a little while," the nurse said, positioning my wheelchair near the doors. "Just ring if you need anything sooner."
The December air hit my face like a slap, sharp and clean and blessedly cold. Snow covered the terrace, and beyond the hospital's edge, the Swiss Alps rose majestically against the darkening sky. It was beautiful and terrible at the same time—a reminder of what had destroyed my life.
I was so lost in my thoughts, so consumed by grief and rage and the crushing weight of my new reality, that I almost didn't hear them at first. A soft laugh, breathless and intimate. The rustle of clothing.
Curiosity overrode my desire for solitude, and I wheeled myself forward, following the sound around the corner of the terrace.
Then I froze.
Dick had Scarlett pressed against the wall, his hands tangled in her blonde hair as he kissed her with a passion I'd thought was reserved for me. Her arms were wrapped around his neck, pulling him closer, and the soft sounds she was making sent a knife of betrayal straight through my chest.
My sharp gasp shattered the moment.
Dick jerked away from her like he'd been burned, his eyes wide with shock when he saw me sitting there in my wheelchair. Scarlett smoothed her disheveled hair with practiced ease, that familiar smirk playing at the corners of her mouth—the same expression she'd worn when she'd beaten me at anything as children.
"Elena," Dick breathed, his face flushing red. "I didn't... we didn't know you were..."
"How long?" The words came out strangled, barely audible. "How long has this been going on?"
Dick ran a hand through his hair, that nervous gesture I'd once found endearing. Now it just looked pathetic. "Elena, look, I can explain—"
"How long?" I repeated, louder this time, my voice cracking with the effort.
He shrugged, actually shrugged, like my question was an inconvenience. "Things just... happened, okay? It's not like we planned it."
Scarlett examined her perfectly manicured nails with feigned indifference, not even bothering to look at me. "These things happen, Elena. People change. Feelings change."
The casual cruelty in her voice hit me like a physical blow. This was my best friend, the girl who'd shared my secrets, who'd braided my hair before competitions, who'd sworn we'd be sisters forever. And Dick—the boy who'd given me a teddy bear when I was seven and crying, who'd been my first kiss, my first everything.
Tears finally spilled down my cheeks, hot against the cold air. "You left me there," I whispered, looking directly at Dick. "In the avalanche. I called for you, and you left me there to die."
Dick's jaw tightened. "That's not fair. I saved Scarlett. Someone had to—"
"You chose," I cut him off, my voice gaining strength from somewhere deep inside. "When it mattered most, you chose her over me. And now I find out it wasn't just a split-second decision. You've been choosing her all along."
Neither of them offered any explanation, any apology. They just stood there, looking uncomfortable, like I was the one intruding on their moment instead of the other way around.
The silence stretched between us, filled with everything that would never be said, everything that was already broken beyond repair.
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