A New Mother Heard Her Husband Trading Her Baby Away-myhoa

My daughter had only just been born when I heard my husband whisper outside the nursery, “Give the baby to Celeste before Mara wakes up.”

The maternity ward smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and coffee that had burned too long on a nurses’ station warmer.

The ceiling lights were so bright they made everything look false.

Image

My hands were cold under the blanket, but my neck was damp with sweat, and every breath felt like it had to pass through broken glass before it reached my lungs.

Lily had arrived at 2:17 a.m.

Six pounds exactly, fierce and red-faced, with fists so tiny and clenched that one of the nurses laughed and said, “This one came ready.”

I believed her.

I named my daughter before anyone could turn her into an idea.

Before anyone could call her “the baby” in that vague, ownerless way.

Before Grant could look over my shoulder and speak for both of us.

“Lily,” I whispered when they laid her against me.

Her cheek was hot against my chest.

Her hair was dark and damp.

Her cry was sharp enough to cut through every drug they had pushed into me.

Grant stood beside the bed with tears in his eyes.

At least, that was what the nurses saw.

He kissed my forehead, pressed his cheek to mine, and said, “Our miracle.”

For one small second, I wanted to believe him.

That is the humiliating part of betrayal nobody warns you about.

Even after a person shows you who they are, some tired corner of your heart still reaches for who they pretended to be.

Grant and I had been married for four years.

He knew how I took my coffee.

He knew I hated driving at night.

He knew the song I played when I had won a hard case and needed ten minutes in the driveway before going inside.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *