The daughter of a married couple killed in a hit-and-run in Surrey on the day of their daughter's engagement party says the other drivers were involved in a street race.
The young bride-to-be, Rupi Badh, wants the drivers charged with her parents' murders, she told CTV News.
"You guys are pathetic, you guys took my parents from me," said Rupi, who is unable to let go of the jewelry her mom was wearing that night, or her sari, stained with her parents' blood.
Dilbag and Bakhshish Badh were leaving the engagement party with Rupi and her sister Varinder early Saturday morning when the car were struck by a vehicle and forced into a power pole.
"I saw this white car and a black car, dead even, and I was thinking, he's coming really fast, he's not stopping," Rupi recalled. "I was about to tell people, 'He's coming really fast and he hit me."
Rupi crawled out her window and found her mom on the floor of the back seat.
"She was bleeding," recalled Rupi. "I told her, 'Mom, just keep on breathing.'
"But she had so much blood coming from her. I ran to my dad, and he wasn't there, he was gone. And I went to my sister in the front seat and I told her...you need to get up, I need your help with mom and dad, wake up for me!"
Minutes later, her brother Raminder arrived at the scene. He couldn't believe what his sister was saying to him.
"She goes, 'Mom's dead.' What do you mean, 'Mom's dead.'" Raminder told CTV News.
"I go, 'Where's my dad? Where's my dad?'" he said. "When I looked inside the car I saw my dad's foot hanging out of the car. I go, 'No way!'
"I saw a cover on top of my father, and I knew he was dead," he said.
Varinder was seriously hurt, but will survive. She hasn't yet been told that her parents didn't make it -- or that the driver and passenger in the car that hit them ran away.
The Surrey RCMP haven't revealed any details of their investigation into the crash.
Raminder wants the drivers to show themselves and face murder charges.
"You guys are cowards," he said. "You need to step up. You guys have taken two innocent lives."
With a report from CTV British Columbia's Shannon Paterson