Instead, it became the week that shattered everything I believed about the people closest to me.
When I unlocked the front door that Monday afternoon, the house felt unnaturally quiet.
Not peaceful.
Empty.
The kind of silence that presses against your ears until your heartbeat becomes the loudest sound in the room.
I called my wife’s name.
No answer.
I smiled to myself, assuming Emma had finally managed to catch a few minutes of sleep while our seven-day-old son rested nearby.
She had barely slept since labor.
Neither of us had.
I slipped off my shoes and walked toward the nursery.
That was when I heard it.
A weak cry.
Not the healthy, demanding cry of a hungry newborn.
A tiny, exhausted whimper.
Every instinct inside me ignited.
I rushed into the room.
Our son lay in his bassinet.
His face was unnaturally red.
His tiny fists barely moved.
When I lifted him into my arms, heat exploded against my skin.
He was burning with fever.
I pressed my lips gently against his forehead.
He was hotter than anything I had ever felt.
Still nothing.
Fear tightened around my chest.
Cradling our son carefully, I searched the house room by room.
Bedroom.
Bathroom.
Laundry room.
Kitchen.
Then I found her.
Emma lay unconscious on the living room floor beside the couch.
One hand still reached toward the baby monitor lying inches away.
Her breathing was shallow.
Her skin looked ghostly pale.
A half-empty bottle of water rested beside her.
The room smelled faintly of stale coffee and untouched food.
“Emma!”
I knelt beside her.
No response.
My hands shook as I dialed emergency services.
Within minutes, flashing lights painted the front windows red and blue.
Paramedics rushed inside.
One team carried Emma onto a stretcher.
Another checked our son.
The thermometer beeped.
The medic’s face changed instantly.
“We’re moving now.”
The ambulance ride felt endless.
I sat beside the incubator, watching machines surround a baby who had been home for less than a week.
Across from us, another paramedic monitored Emma.
She still hadn’t opened her eyes.
I kept asking the same question.
“What happened?”
Nobody answered.
When we reached the emergency department, doctors separated us immediately.
A pediatric specialist examined my son.
Another physician evaluated Emma.
Minutes later, an older emergency doctor walked briskly into the examination room.
He looked at my son.
Then at my wife.
Then back at me.
His expression hardened.
Without another word, he turned toward a nurse.
“Call the police.”
The room froze.
I stared at him.
“What?”
The doctor looked directly into my eyes.
“Sir, I need you to stay calm.”
“My baby has a fever.”
“My wife is unconscious.”
“Why are you calling the police?”
He didn’t answer immediately.
Instead, he continued examining Emma.
His eyes paused on faint bruising hidden beneath the sleeve of her hospital gown.
Then he noticed something else.
Something I couldn’t see from where I stood.
His jaw tightened.
The nurse quietly left the room.
Less than two minutes later, two uniformed officers entered the emergency department.
I felt my stomach collapse.
One officer approached gently.
“Mr. Carter?”
“Yes.”
“We just need to ask a few questions.”
“What questions?”
“When was the last time your wife ate?”
I blinked.
“I…”
“I don’t know.”
“When did she last sleep?”
“I don’t know.”
“Has anyone else been staying in your home?”
Before I could answer…
A familiar voice echoed across the waiting room.
“If your wife couldn’t take care of her own baby for one week…”
“…maybe she never should’ve become a mother.”
I didn’t even have to turn around.
I knew that voice.
My mother.
Margaret Carter.
She stood near the entrance carrying flowers that suddenly felt more like decorations than sympathy.
She looked at Emma’s empty hospital bed with complete contempt.
Then she looked at my son.
“I warned you she wasn’t strong enough.”
I slowly stood.
For the first time in my life…
I realized the greatest danger to my family might never have been inside my home.
It might have been standing only a few feet away.