Her Husband Stole Their Baby’s Crib Days Before Delivery-heyily

The snow under Mia turned red before she understood she was screaming.

Cold bit through her robe.

Concrete scraped one side of her face.

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Above her, the porch light buzzed faintly in the freezing morning air, and the little black security camera Evan had installed months earlier stared down from its bracket without blinking.

Down the street, her husband’s pickup truck disappeared through the gray slush with their baby’s crib strapped in the bed.

It looked almost ridiculous from where she lay.

A walnut crib rail stuck up above the tailgate, wrapped in one of Evan’s old moving blankets, like it was furniture headed to storage instead of the last gift her father had ever made.

Three days before her due date, Mia had woken before sunrise with that restless heaviness only late pregnancy brings.

Her back ached.

Her hands were puffy.

Her daughter had been quiet through most of the night, then suddenly active at dawn, nudging hard beneath Mia’s ribs as if she knew the house was not peaceful.

The nursery light was on.

At first Mia thought Evan had finally decided to help.

The hospital bag was still missing half the things she had asked him to pack.

The car seat base was still sitting in the hallway, unopened beside the linen closet.

A stack of washed baby clothes waited in a laundry basket because Mia had not had the energy to fold them the night before.

For one soft moment, she let herself believe her husband was in the nursery doing something kind without being asked.

Then she heard the scrape of metal.

Not a drawer.

Not a closet rod.

A wrench.

She pushed herself upright, one hand under her stomach, and walked down the hallway in her robe and slippers.

The nursery smelled faintly of fresh paint, baby detergent, and the lavender sachet her mother used to tuck into drawers.

The room was small, but Mia had spent months making it feel warm.

White curtains.

A secondhand rocking chair.

A thrift-store lamp with a crooked shade.

A soft pink blanket folded over the arm because it had belonged to Mia’s mother and had somehow survived thirty years in a cedar chest.

In the middle of the room stood the walnut crib.

Or what was left of it.

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