He Left His Wife And Newborn On A Bus. Then Her Father Answered.-ruby - Chainityai

He Left His Wife And Newborn On A Bus. Then Her Father Answered.-ruby

Five days after giving birth, I thought the hardest part was already behind me.

I had survived the emergency C-section.

I had survived the shaking, the lights, the cold operating room, and the moment a nurse told me to stay awake because my baby was almost here.

Image

I had survived four nights of hospital alarms, blood pressure cuffs, lactation charts, and sleeping in twenty-minute pieces while Leo learned the world in tiny cries.

By the fifth day, all I wanted was to go home.

Not to a perfect home.

Just home.

I wanted my own pillow.

I wanted the quiet of our bedroom.

I wanted to sit on the couch with my newborn son and believe, for one fragile afternoon, that the family I had built still had a chance.

The maternity ward smelled like disinfectant and warm coffee from the kiosk downstairs.

Every hallway had that soft squeak of nurses’ shoes against polished floors.

Somewhere behind me, a baby cried in a room we had just passed, and the sound went straight into my chest because my body had already learned to answer every newborn sound like a command.

A nurse named Carla helped settle Leo into my arms.

She moved with the careful patience of someone who had seen women try to be brave when they could barely stand.

“Go slow,” she said.

“I will,” I promised.

Dominic stood beside us holding the diaper bag.

He looked clean, rested, and impatient.

His hair was perfectly combed.

His watch flashed when he checked the time.

I noticed that because I had barely brushed my hair since surgery, and my body felt stitched together by tape, medication, and stubbornness.

Still, I smiled down at Leo.

His mouth was slightly open.

His cheek was warm against my robe.

“Let’s go home,” I whispered.

That was when Dominic pressed a crumpled fifty-dollar bill into my hand.

“This should cover your bus fare.”

At first, I honestly thought I had misheard him.

Hospital noise does strange things.

Automatic doors open.

Voices echo.

Wheelchairs rattle over thresholds.

So I looked at the money, then at him, and waited for the correction.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *