He Left His Wife In Labor For A Mall Trip. Then The Door Opened-Ginny

When I was pregnant with twins and trapped in labor, I begged my husband to drive me to the hospital.

His mother stopped us at the door and told him to take her and his sister to the mall instead.

Then my husband looked me straight in the face and said, “Don’t you dare move until I come back.”

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My name is not the important part of this story.

What matters is that I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant with twins, high risk, and standing in my own kitchen with one hand clamped around the counter because my body had stopped asking for help and started demanding it.

The rain had been tapping against the window all afternoon.

It was that cold, needling kind of rain that makes a house feel smaller, turning the glass gray and making every sound seem closer.

The kitchen smelled like lemon dish soap, old coffee, and the damp air pushing in through the cracked window above the sink.

My bare feet were on the tile.

My nightgown was stuck to my skin.

Every breath came out thin and useless.

“Blake,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “I need Mercy General. Now. The twins are coming.”

He had been in the pantry doorway when I said it.

For a second, he looked scared in the way I needed him to look scared.

Not annoyed.

Not inconvenienced.

Scared enough to move.

He grabbed the keys from the hook by the pantry door, and for one foolish moment, I believed the man in front of me was still the man who had spent two evenings installing car seat bases in our family SUV.

I believed he was still the man who had folded tiny white onesies on the nursery dresser.

I believed he was still the man who had told the nurses at Labor and Delivery that he was ready for anything.

Love makes you generous with evidence that should have warned you.

Three weeks earlier, Blake had sat beside me in the Mercy General waiting room with a paper coffee cup cooling between his hands and promised my OB he understood the instructions.

No delays.

No waiting to see if things improved.

No calling his mother before calling the hospital.

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