The ER Thought She Was Ten. Her Labor Room Truth Changed Everything-kieutrinh

Luke Bennett did not remember parking the truck.

He remembered the rain.

He remembered Isabella Reed bent double in the passenger seat, one hand pressed under her belly, the other wrapped around the seat belt like it was the only thing keeping her inside her body.

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He remembered the smell of wet pavement, coffee gone cold in the cup holder, and the terrible small sound she made when another contraction came.

But he did not remember turning off the engine.

He only remembered scooping her out of the passenger seat and running.

“Somebody help me!” he shouted as the automatic doors opened.

His voice cracked through the emergency room like something breaking.

Every person in the waiting area turned at once.

A mother with a toddler on her lap froze with her hand inside a diaper bag.

An elderly man lowered his newspaper and stared over the top of his glasses.

Two nurses behind the triage desk looked up with the tired irritation of people who had already survived twelve hours of emergencies.

Then they saw what Luke was carrying.

In his arms was a tiny, pale young woman who looked, to everyone in that hospital lobby, like a little girl.

Her hair clung damply to her forehead.

Her lips had gone bluish at the edges.

Her fingers were locked so tightly in the front of Luke’s flannel shirt that the fabric twisted around her fist.

Under a loose gray sweatshirt, her belly rose in a hard, undeniable curve.

“She’s in labor,” Luke gasped. “Please. She’s in labor. She needs help now.”

No one moved for three seconds.

Then the room erupted.

“What did he say?”

“Oh my God.”

“She can’t be more than ten.”

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