He Left His Wife in Labor for a Birthday Dinner. Then He Came Home.-mdue - Chainityai

He Left His Wife in Labor for a Birthday Dinner. Then He Came Home.-mdue

The first contraction hit while I was standing in the kitchen with a glass of water in my hand.

It was late afternoon, and the house had that overheated summer smell of lemon dish soap, clean laundry, and the dinner I never got around to starting.

The glass was cold against my fingers.

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Then pain pulled tight across my stomach so sharply that my hand opened before I even understood what was happening.

The glass hit the tile and shattered.

For a second, all I could hear was the ringing sound of it breaking and my own breath catching in my throat.

“Cameron,” I whispered.

He was by the kitchen island, looking down at his phone, already dressed in the charcoal suit he had picked up from the dry cleaner that morning.

His hair was neat.

His shoes were polished.

His watch caught the light every time his thumb moved across the screen.

He looked like a man preparing to be admired, not a husband standing beside a wife who had just folded over the kitchen counter at thirty-eight weeks pregnant.

“Cameron,” I said again, louder this time. “Something’s wrong.”

He looked up with the kind of irritation people reserve for an alarm clock they cannot shut off.

“What now?”

I remember those two words more clearly than I remember some of the hospital.

What now.

As if my body had scheduled the emergency to inconvenience him.

As if our baby had chosen the worst possible evening on purpose.

His mother, Pamela, was turning sixty-five that night.

She had reserved the back room at her favorite restaurant.

For three weeks, Cameron had talked about it like a family obligation with legal consequences.

The cake had to be picked up by five.

The flowers had to be pale pink because Pamela hated red roses.

The birthday video had to start after dessert because Pamela liked to cry when people were watching.

And I had smiled through all of it because I had learned, slowly and painfully, that in Cameron’s family, Pamela’s feelings were not feelings.

They were weather.

Everyone planned around them.

I bent over the counter as another contraction came, this one harder, and the tile under my bare feet suddenly felt slick and far away.

“Please,” I said. “I think the baby’s coming.”

Cameron let out a breath and rolled his eyes.

“Sienna, stop being so dramatic.”

There are sentences that split your life into before and after.

Not because they are the loudest.

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