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Stories published in the book "Para vivir Seguros" (2005)
Mrs. Granados had to pick up her daughter, who was studying at night at a Technical Institute. She arrived and parked her car, but since it was very hot, she left the engine running to keep the air conditioning on.
A few minutes later, she felt a tap on her window. A man was telling her to lower the window, showed her a revolver, and hit the glass with the weapon. On the other side of the vehicle, a second armed man appeared.
Mrs. Granados understood that it was a robbery, but the only thing that worried her at that moment was that her twenty-year-old daughter was about to come out, and she didn't want her to be caught as well. So, she put the car in gear and accelerated. She felt the window beside her shatter. She thought the assailant had broken the glass with a blow. She accelerated, but she was in a dead-end street and had to turn around to get out. She turned around. The two men were standing in front of her, pointing at her. She stepped on the gas and drove the car towards them. She saw the windshield shatter and felt something in her chest. But she managed to get through. She put her hand to her chest. It was full of blood. She knew she was wounded.
Even so, pressing her hand to try to contain the blood, she managed to reach a nearby clinic. She parked in front of the Emergency room. She opened the door. When she tried to get out, her legs couldn't support her. Besides the wound in her chest, she had a shot in her leg that had fractured the bones. The first assailant had not broken the window with a blow. He had shot her. She had not realized that initial wound.
Mrs. Granados survived her injuries...
This is not an example of what we should do in a similar situation... It is simply an example of what happens in a high-stress situation...