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A Life Cut Short: Remembering a 12-Year-Old Who Died Days After Being Struck by a Car Outside Her Middle School
There are moments when the news stops feeling distant.
It’s the kind of story that silences a room. One that parents read with a tightening throat, that teachers struggle to address in classrooms, that classmates carry quietly in backpacks far heavier than books.
This wasn’t just an accident.
It was a loss that rippled outward—through a family, a school, and an entire community.
A Normal Day That Ended in Tragedy
By all accounts, it began like any other school day.
Students arriving and leaving. Parents dropping off children. Buses pulling away. Teachers standing at doors, reminding kids to be careful crossing the street. A place meant to be safe, predictable, routine.
Somewhere in those ordinary moments, everything changed.
The 12-year-old was struck by a vehicle in front of her middle school—an area meant to protect children, not endanger them. She was rushed to the hospital, critically injured, and for days, her family and community held their breath.
Then came the news no one wanted.
The Waiting That No One Talks About
When tragedies unfold over days instead of minutes, there is a particular kind of pain that comes with the waiting.
Families live in hospital rooms suspended between hope and dread. Friends light candles, pray, and refresh updates endlessly. Communities cling to the possibility of a miracle.
Those days are filled with:
Machines humming through the night
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