He Came Home To A Feverish Newborn And A Note That Blamed His Wife-thuyhien

Diego Ramirez knew the house was wrong before he saw the bedroom, because a home with a newborn should have sounded tired and alive, not abandoned under a television blasting to nobody.

He stood in the entry with diapers under one arm, a bakery bag in his hand, and a green baby blanket tucked between his elbow and his ribs.

The work trip had already made him feel like a coward, even before the smell of sour milk reached him from the hallway.

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He had left Lucia six days after she gave birth because a warehouse contract had cracked open overnight.

His mother had told him to go with that soft, certain voice she used whenever she wanted obedience to look like love.

“I raised two children,” Carmen had said, lifting Mateo from Lucia’s arms as if the baby were proof of her authority.

Lucia had not argued in the hospital room, but Diego had seen her eyes follow him all the way to the elevator.

That look stayed with him for three days while his mother answered Lucia’s phone and told him everything was fine.

Lucia was sleeping, Carmen said the first time, and Mateo had eaten well.

Lucia was showering, Carmen said the second time, and first-time mothers were more emotional than useful.

Lucia finally came on the line on the fourth call, but her voice was so thin Diego stepped out of the warehouse office to hear her.

“Please come home,” she whispered, and then the line went dead.

He booked the first flight back without calling anyone, because some instincts arrive too late but still arrive whole.

Instead, the front door was not latched, the living room was sticky with soda cups, and Karla was asleep on the couch with her shoes on.

Diego did not wake her, because Mateo cried from the bedroom and the sound cut through every excuse he had prepared.

The baby was not wailing; he was rasping, and that difference frightened Diego more than a scream would have.

Lucia lay on her side with one hand trapped under the sheet, her face turned toward the wall like she had run out of strength before she ran out of fear.

Her lips were cracked, her skin had gone a flat gray, and there was a damp shine on her forehead that made Diego’s stomach fold in on itself.

“They took my phone,” she whispered when his shadow crossed the bed.

Diego lifted Mateo, and the heat coming off his son’s small body made the room tilt.

The diaper was dirty, the bassinet sheet was stiff in one corner, and the bottle on the nightstand had separated into cloudy rings.

Then Carmen appeared in the doorway, tying her robe as if the emergency belonged to someone else.

“Do not start,” she said, looking at Lucia instead of the baby.

Diego asked when Mateo had eaten, and his mother pointed to the diaper bag with a little performance of patience.

There was a yellow feeding document clipped to the outside pocket, filled out in Carmen’s careful handwriting.

It said Lucia refused food, refused water, refused to nurse, refused help, and became hostile when offered guidance.

At the bottom was one line that made Diego feel cold from the neck down: “Mother appears unstable and unsafe for infant care.”

Lucia tried to push herself up when she saw him reading it, but her arms shook so violently he put the paper down and moved toward her.

“I begged,” she said, and her voice broke on the second word.

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