Chapter 70
The screen recording of the TikTok LIVE video of Kayla’s accident was eventually removed after a request from the family, but not before it had gotten a million views and three thousand “likes.” I am told that this does not mean people “liked” the fact that Kayla died.
There was a lot of online “chatter” and one small article in a tabloid newspaper, but that was all. Kayla’s family never spoke publicly about the prediction.
Her friend, the passenger who filmed the accident, had to spend weeks in the hospital and she shut down her social media during that time.
People soon got interested in other things, as they tend to do.
To put it in perspective: a video of a dog barking at its own reflection in an oven door got two million views and ten thousand likes.
People forgot. Only those who knew and loved Kayla continued to talk about her.
At this point no one had yet referred to me as “the Death Lady.”
That was all to come.