He Left His Wife And Newborn At The Hospital, Then Lost Everything-olive

I had barely stopped bleeding when my husband looked me in the eye and told me to take the bus home.

He said it like he was telling me to grab milk.

Not like I was two days postpartum.

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Not like our newborn daughter was tucked against my chest in a hospital blanket.

Not like every step I took felt as if my body had been sewn together with wire.

The doors of St. Mary’s Medical Center slid open behind us with a tired mechanical sigh.

Cold evening air came through the valet lane, carrying rain off the pavement and that hospital smell that clings to your skin even after they cut the wristband off.

Antiseptic.

Burnt coffee.

Plastic bassinet wheels.

My discharge papers were folded inside the diaper bag, right beside three newborn diapers, a half-empty pack of wipes, and the little pink hat the nurse had pulled over our daughter’s head.

Brian Coleman stood at the curb in a pressed navy polo, checking his watch.

He looked rested.

That was what I noticed first.

While I had been bleeding, sweating, shaking, and trying to learn how to feed a baby whose mouth was smaller than my thumb, Brian had slept in the reclining chair with his phone glowing against his chest.

Then he had gone home to shower.

Then he had come back smelling like cedar soap and cologne.

Then he had looked at me and said we needed to be realistic.

“The bus stop is right there,” he told me.

I thought I had misheard him.

The baby stirred under my chin, her little face turning toward the wind.

I pulled the blanket tighter around her and stared at my husband.

“What?”

Brian sighed as if I was making something difficult.

“It’s one transfer, Claire. You’ll be okay. I need the car. Mom booked the private room.”

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