He Left His Wife At The Hospital, Then His Whole Life Froze Cold-Lian

The nurse put my son into my arms at 1:43 p.m., and the first sound he made was not a cry so much as a wet, startled protest against the world.

I remember the weight of him more than anything.

He was warm, slippery, and impossibly small, bundled against my chest while the hospital room hummed with machines and the soft squeak of nurses’ shoes in the hall.

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My body felt like it belonged to someone else.

My legs shook under the blanket.

My throat was raw.

The hospital gown clung damply at my shoulders, and every time I breathed, I could feel the ache of birth settling deeper into me.

Daniel stood beside the bed, looking down at our son.

For one second, I let myself believe everything hard about our marriage had been leading to this tender place.

Then he checked his phone.

Not a quick glance.

Not a nervous new-father reflex.

He unlocked it, read something, and smiled.

“Your mom?” I asked.

He did not answer right away.

His mother, Elaine, was sitting near the window in her long beige coat with her ankles crossed like she had been invited to a lunch she did not enjoy.

His sister Melissa stood beside her, scrolling through her own phone, wearing the dark wool coat she had bought herself after telling me I should “learn how to invest in nicer basics.”

They had shown up twenty minutes after the birth.

Elaine had kissed Daniel first.

Then she had looked at the baby and said, “Well, at least he has a good strong chin.”

That was how she spoke when she wanted me to know I was temporary and Daniel was permanent.

Daniel slipped his phone into his coat pocket and looked at me with the kind of impatience he usually saved for checkout lines and traffic lights.

“Take the bus home,” he said.

I blinked.

“What?”

“I’m taking my family to hot pot.”

For a few seconds, my mind refused to put the sentence together.

There was the hospital bed.

There was my newborn.

There was the IV stand, the discharge folder, the plastic bassinet, the diaper bag I had packed three weeks early because I was afraid of forgetting something important.

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