The ER Report Exposed the Secret Her Husband Tried to Bury Behind a Staircase Lie-yumihong

The second doctor did not rush.

He came in with steady steps, a gray folder tucked beneath one arm and a tablet in his hand. The rubber soles of his shoes made soft sounds against the polished floor. The room smelled like antiseptic, paper tape, and the faint burnt-coffee odor drifting from the nurses’ station.

Daniel still held the bent X-ray film in his fist.

Dr. Greene did not look at him. She looked at me.

“Sarah,” she said, “this is Dr. Howard from maternal-fetal medicine. He reviewed the scan we ordered after radiology flagged your injuries.”

Daniel’s head snapped toward the doctor.

“Scan?” he said.

Dr. Howard lifted the tablet just enough for the light to catch the screen.

“There is a fetal heartbeat,” he said. “Strong. One hundred forty-six.”

My hand moved before my mind did. It slid over the thin hospital blanket and stopped on my stomach. The blanket was scratchy under my palm. My fingers shook against the place where I had learned to protect quietly.

Daniel swallowed.

Dr. Howard turned the tablet toward him.

“And based on the lab work in her chart,” he said, “the fetus is male.”

Daniel’s face changed in pieces.

First his mouth opened. Then the skin around his eyes tightened. Then his hand dropped, and the X-ray film tapped against his thigh.

A son.

The word did not come out of anyone’s mouth, but it filled the room anyway.

The two security officers stayed at the doorway. One had his hand resting near his radio. The other watched Daniel’s shoulders.

Dr. Greene set the sealed folder on the tray table beside me.

“That is not the part that concerns me most,” she said.

Daniel’s eyes flicked toward the folder.

Dr. Greene opened it.

“These images show multiple fractures in different stages of healing,” she said. “Not from one fall. Not from stairs. Not from today.”

Daniel’s nostrils flared.

“She’s fragile,” he said.

Read More