He Took Her Card for Cancun While Their Newborn Was Turning Blue-olive

When my mother-in-law said my three-day-old baby’s blue lips were just because I was wrapping him wrong, she sounded almost bored.

Not cruel in the loud way.

Not panicked.

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Bored.

She stood in my kitchen stirring coffee while my newborn son struggled to breathe in my arms.

The spoon tapped the mug in small, bright clicks.

The sound still comes back to me sometimes.

My son, Noah, was three days old.

Three days since the hospital nurse had placed him on my chest, damp and warm and impossibly small, with his fists clenched like he had arrived ready to fight for every inch of life.

Michael, my husband, had cried when we named him.

He said Noah sounded peaceful.

He said our house would feel different now.

He was right about that, just not in the way he meant.

That morning, our small suburban living room smelled like cold coffee, baby detergent, and the plastic hospital bag we still had not unpacked.

Gray light pushed through the kitchen blinds.

The dryer hummed from the laundry room.

I was sitting on the couch in a milk-stained robe, my hair stuck to my face, my stitches burning with every breath.

I had slept maybe twenty minutes at a time since we came home.

But exhaustion did not make me stupid.

It did not make me blind.

Noah’s lips were purple.

His skin had gone ashy around his cheeks and hands.

His breathing would pause for a few seconds, then restart with a small, broken sound that made every nerve in my body light up.

“Michael,” I whispered. “Call 911.”

He was standing at the kitchen island with his phone in his hand.

At first, I thought he was texting work.

Then I saw the travel page open on his screen.

“Sarah,” he said without looking up. “Again?”

That one word told me how the whole morning was going to go.

Again.

Like I had been rehearsing panic for fun.

Like I had chosen to bleed through a robe and shake on a couch because I wanted attention.

His mother, Jessica, laughed softly into her coffee.

“I told you,” she said. “She wants attention. First it was the crying. Then she couldn’t walk. Now she sees the baby turning blue.”

I looked at her and waited for some part of her to become a grandmother.

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