When I was about to give birth, my husband shouted at me to “stop being dramatic” and left for his mother’s birthday celebration. Two days later, he returned home smiling—until the sight waiting for him made him collapse in terror…..
When my first contraction struck, I was standing in the kitchen with a glass of water in my hand. It slipped from my fingers and shattered across the floor.
“Ethan,” I whispered, pressing one hand to my stomach. “Something’s wrong.”
My husband lifted his eyes from his phone with the annoyance of a man whose attention had been stolen from something important. Except the important thing was not work. It was his mother’s birthday dinner.
He was already wearing a charcoal suit, his hair slicked back, his watch gleaming under the kitchen lights. His mother, Patricia Walker, was turning sixty-five that evening, and in Ethan’s mind, missing her party would be a worse betrayal than leaving his wife in labor.
Another contraction hit, stronger this time. I bent over the counter, struggling to breathe.
“Ethan, please. I think the baby’s coming.”
He rolled his eyes.
“Madison, stop being dramatic.”
The words reached me colder than fear.
I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant. My doctor had warned us that my blood pressure was unstable. She had told Ethan directly, while he nodded and pretended to listen, that if I experienced severe pain, dizziness, or bleeding, I needed to reach the hospital immediately.
Now sweat soaked through my dress, my legs shook beneath me, and every part of my body was screaming that something was wrong.
Ethan snatched up his car keys.
“You always do this,” he snapped. “You turn everything into a crisis when my family needs me.”
I stared at him. “Your child needs you.”
He paused at the doorway and gave a bitter laugh.
“My mother has one sixty-fifth birthday. You’ve been pregnant for nine months. You can wait a few hours.”
Then he walked out.
The front door slammed so violently that the picture frames along the hallway wall trembled.
I tried calling him five times. He declined every call. On the sixth try, his phone went straight to voicemail.
By then, there was blood.
Not a lot at first. Just enough to make the room sway.
With trembling fingers, I called 911 and crawled toward the entryway because I was terrified the paramedics would not be able to see me behind the locked door.
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“My husband left,” I told the dispatcher, sobbing. “I’m alone. I’m pregnant. Please hurry.”
The ambulance arrived nine minutes later.
I remember red lights flashing across the ceiling. I remember a paramedic named Luis telling me to stay awake. I remember hearing the words “fetal distress” and “possible abruption.”
