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My phone rang while I was heading home. It was my six-year-old daughter, sobbing, saying she was in pain everywhere and terrified. I asked where her dad was. She said he was there—suffering too, helpless. I drove faster than I ever had, my heart pounding with fear. What I walked into moments later shattered every expectation I had.

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People didn’t interrupt. Some cried. A few left early, pulling out their phones to text family members.

That meeting turned into another invitation, then another. Soon, a local nonprofit asked if I’d help with an awareness campaign. Michael supported me quietly, driving me when I was exhausted, standing in the back of rooms, listening.

Sophie came once. She stood beside me, holding a small pink flyer.
“This thing saves families,” she told a stranger, tapping the picture of a carbon monoxide detector.

Our house was repaired professionally—new ventilation, new appliances, new detectors in every room. I tested them obsessively. Still do. I keep spare batteries in the kitchen drawer, the car, my purse.

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