His Ex Attacked His Pregnant Wife. Then Her Father Walked In.-nga9999 - Chainityai

His Ex Attacked His Pregnant Wife. Then Her Father Walked In.-nga9999

The monitor beside my hospital bed was the only thing in that room that seemed to know how to stay calm.

Every few seconds, it gave a soft, clean beep.

Not loud.

Image

Not dramatic.

Just steady enough to remind me that my baby was still there, still moving, still fighting through a day I had been pretending did not scare me.

The room smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and coffee that had been sitting too long somewhere near the nurses’ station.

The blanket over my stomach felt thin and scratchy, the kind of hospital cotton that never quite warms you, no matter how many times a nurse tucks it around your legs.

I was eight months pregnant, swollen in every place I did not know a woman could swell, and trying to breathe through a cramp that had pulled tight across the bottom of my belly for the third time that afternoon.

The nurse had told me it was probably Braxton Hicks.

Probably.

That word stayed with me.

It sat in my chest heavier than the IV tape on my hand.

When you are pregnant, people say probably like it is kindness.

Probably fine.

Probably normal.

Probably nothing.

But when the pain is inside your body and the baby you already love is somewhere behind it, probably does not feel gentle.

It feels like a door left unlocked.

Jason had been trying not to panic all day.

He was terrible at it.

He stood too close to the bed, asked the nurse too many questions, adjusted my pillow three times, and kept watching the monitor like he could learn medicine through sheer fear.

At 2:17 p.m., the nurse filled out my hospital intake notes and wrote probable Braxton Hicks near the top.

Jason read the words upside down from the chair and rubbed both hands over his face.

“You’re staring,” I told him.

“I’m allowed to stare,” he said. “That’s my wife and my son on that monitor.”

We did not know for sure we were having a boy.

The ultrasound tech had guessed, and Jason had built a whole future out of that maybe.

A tiny baseball glove.

A blue blanket his mother had mailed.

A list of names on his phone that he kept pretending not to edit at night.

That was Jason.

He could be stubborn, clumsy with conflict, and too hopeful for his own good.

But he loved in practical ways.

Gas in my car before I knew the tank was low.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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