An otherwise healthy teenage boy presented with a mass on his right neck. The lesion had initially appeared 1 year before as a small lump that subsequently resolved. Seven months later he was involved in a motor vehicle accident resulting in minor neck trauma. Soon after, the mass reappeared and continued to enlarge. The lesion was asymptomatic except for tenderness and numbness of the right arm when direct pressure was applied. There was no history of recent foreign travel, fevers, weight loss, or night sweats. Purified protein derivative test was negative. Physical examination was notable for a 1-cm 9 6-cm firm, skin-colored mass on the right neck (Fig. 1). There was no regional lymphadenopathy. Ultrasound showed a mildly heterogeneous vascular and bilobed mass deep to the sternocleidomastoid muscle. A fine needle aspiration was inconclusive and the patient was referred to otolaryngology for surgical excision of the mass (Figs. 2-4).