He reached for my fingerprint.
I heard him lean toward his mother and whisper that they were going to leave me at the hospital.
Not later.
Not after I recovered.
Right there.
Right after I lost our child.
But that wasn’t the most horrifying part.
What truly froze my blood was realizing—slowly, painfully—that while I lay unconscious, shattered, drugged into stillness, they weren’t simply planning to abandon me.
They were planning to erase me.
The hospital air reeked of disinfectant, stale medicine, and cold metal.
That unmistakable smell that tells you something has gone terribly wrong—
that whatever existed before will never return the same.
The silence in the room was thick and suffocating.
Not the quiet of comfort.
The kind that settles after devastating news, when no one knows what to say and everyone avoids your eyes.
I forced my eyelids open.
My mouth was dry, like I hadn’t tasted water in days.
My arms felt heavy, useless.
And my stomach… empty.
Not hollow in a physical sense.
Empty of life.
My body felt dismantled from the inside and poorly put back together—careless, rushed, without dignity.
A nurse approached slowly.
Her expression carried the answer before she spoke.
The look of someone who never makes promises.
“I’m so sorry,” she said gently. “We did everything we could.”
That was enough.
That was when I knew.My baby was gone.
There was no scream.
No instant sobbing.
Just an icy numbness spreading from my chest outward, as if something essential had snapped and was quietly draining away.But I didn’t lose my dignity.
And I didn’t lose my future.
And now I ask you…
If you were in my place,
would you report it…
or would you leave to start over?