What Marcus Left Behind When His Wife Brought Their Baby Home-nhu9999 - Chainityai

What Marcus Left Behind When His Wife Brought Their Baby Home-nhu9999

I Buckled My Three-Day-Old Baby Into Her Car Seat and Drove Home Thinking the Hospital Had Been the Hardest Part Only to Reach My Street and See It Blocked by Police, My House Surrounded by Yellow Tape, and an Officer Informing Me I Wasn’t Allowed to Step Back Into My Own Life

The hospital doors opened with a soft mechanical sigh, and for one second I believed the worst was behind me.

Outside, the air smelled like warm pavement, cut grass, and coffee going stale in a paper cup beside the curb.

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Eliza was three days old.

Three days.

That was all the time she had been outside my body, and already the world felt too sharp for her.

The nurse watched while I eased my daughter into the car seat, checked the chest clip, and told me, “You’re doing great, Mom.”

I wanted to believe her.

My body felt stitched together with thread and stubbornness.

My milk had come in overnight, my stitches burned, and every movement tugged somewhere tender.

But Marcus had texted that morning, and I held his words like a handrail.

Everything’s ready. I cleaned the house. Take your time. I can’t wait to see you both.

He sent it at 9:06 a.m.

I read it while signing discharge papers at the hospital intake desk, one hand resting on Eliza’s bassinet because I still needed proof she was real.

Marcus Hale was not a dramatic man.

He was the husband who checked smoke alarm batteries, filled my gas tank before it hit empty, and labeled the breaker box because he said emergencies were no time to guess.

When we bought our little house five years earlier, he painted the nursery pale green because I could not choose between yellow and white.

He stood in the doorway with paint on his hair and said, “It feels like a place where a kid could breathe.”

He assembled the crib twice because the first time he decided the screws did not feel right.

So when Marcus said the house was ready, I trusted him.

The drive home should have taken fourteen minutes.

I took every turn slowly.

Every few seconds, I checked the little mirror above Eliza’s car seat and watched her mouth move in her sleep.

At 10:18 a.m., I passed the gas station where Marcus bought coffee on Saturdays.

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