Her Husband Took Their Newborn. One Name Changed Everything-mdue - Chainityai

Her Husband Took Their Newborn. One Name Changed Everything-mdue

The first thing my daughter heard after entering the world was her father saying she belonged to another woman.

The second was my scream.

I had delivered Alicia at 6:18 a.m. on a gray Tuesday morning, forty minutes before my life split into before and after.

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The maternity room smelled like antiseptic, plastic tubing, warm cotton blankets, and the stale coffee someone had left on the counter near the sink.

My body was shaking under the thin hospital blanket.

The nurse had told me that was normal.

Labor did things to the body that the body understood before the mind did.

My stitches burned every time I breathed too deeply.

My hair was plastered to my neck, my hospital gown stuck to my skin, and Alicia was curled against my chest like a hot little secret the whole world had been waiting to hear.

She was six pounds, nine ounces.

She had Bennett’s mouth.

She had my fingers.

She had the kind of furious newborn cry that made every exhausted part of me want to laugh and weep at once.

For forty minutes, I believed that pain had ended in something holy.

Then the door opened so hard it struck the wall.

Bennett Vargas stepped into the room in a charcoal suit, his hair combed back, his shoes polished, his face dry and rested.

He looked nothing like a man whose wife had just given birth.

He looked like a man arriving to close a deal.

Miranda stood on one side of him, her hand hooked around his arm.

She wore a cream dress that had no business in a delivery wing and heels that clicked softly against the hospital floor.

Diane, my mother-in-law, held his other arm.

She smiled at me like we were meeting for brunch.

For one strange second, I thought maybe I was still half under the medication.

Maybe I was seeing them wrong.

Maybe grief, pain, exhaustion, and blood loss had turned my husband into a stranger and his mother into something colder than I remembered.

Then Miranda looked at Alicia and whispered, “She has Bennett’s eyes.”

Not our baby.

Not your daughter.

Not congratulations.

She has Bennett’s eyes.

Diane stepped closer to the bed, and her perfume came with her, sharp and expensive under the hospital smell.

She looked at my daughter the way women inspect jewelry in locked glass cases.

Then she looked at me.

“Your surrogacy job is done.”

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