The Voicemail My Mother Left While My Pregnant Wife Was Begging For Help-thuyhien

I did not answer my mother as a son.

I answered her as evidence.

The phone lay flat on the pillow between Lucy and me, speaker glowing blue against the twisted sheets. Rain scraped the bedroom window. The dispatcher’s voice stayed steady from my cell in my left hand, while my mother’s voice filled the room from Lucy’s cracked phone.

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“Is she still being difficult?” my mother asked again, like Lucy had refused dessert instead of begged for help.

Lucy’s fingers tightened around my wrist. Her nails were short and unpainted, but they dug hard enough to leave half-moon marks. Her face had gone almost gray under the bedside lamp.

I looked at the screen. 12:59 a.m.

Then I said, “Mom, you’re on speaker. The 911 dispatcher can hear you.”

The line changed.

Not silence exactly.

A tiny breath. A swallow. The faint click of jewelry against a phone case.

Then my mother’s voice softened into the tone she used for church luncheons and bank managers.

“Adrian, honey, don’t be dramatic. I only told her not to panic.”

The dispatcher cut in.

“Sir, do not hang up. Keep both phones active if you can. Help is less than four minutes away.”

My mother made a small offended sound.

“Who is that?”

“The woman Lucy called because you told her not to call an ambulance,” I said.

Lucy folded forward with a broken gasp. I dropped the argument mid-breath and moved both phones onto the mattress. The damp sheet was cold under my palms. The nightgown tag brushed Lucy’s neck every time she trembled, and for one horrible second I remembered what I had thought when I first walked in.

A man.

A betrayal.

A child that might not be mine.

That thought sat in me like something rotten.

The front door burst open at 1:03 a.m.

Two paramedics came in fast, boots hitting the hallway floor, radios snapping against their shoulders. One was a broad man with silver hair and calm hands. The other was a woman with a dark braid tucked into her collar and eyes that moved over the room like she was reading a page.

“Thirty-one weeks?” she asked.

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