Pregnant With Twins, She Begged For Help. Then The Doorbell Rang-nga9999 - Chainityai

Pregnant With Twins, She Begged For Help. Then The Doorbell Rang-nga9999

“Blake,” I gasped, gripping the kitchen counter so hard my fingers went numb.

The contraction hit before he could answer.

It rolled through me like something tearing open from the inside, stealing my breath, bending me forward, making the clean white edge of the counter blur in front of my eyes.

Image

The kitchen smelled like dish soap, stale coffee, and the damp metal odor coming from the sink.

A fly buzzed once against the window over the breakfast table, then disappeared behind the blinds.

The whole house felt too bright and too quiet for what was happening inside my body.

“I need to go to the hospital,” I said.

Blake stared at me from beside the refrigerator, keys already in his hand.

“The twins are coming,” I said. “Something is wrong.”

At thirty-eight weeks pregnant with twins, I had been told not to wait.

Not by a friend.

Not by a pregnancy app.

By my doctor, at the hospital intake desk, while Blake sat beside me nodding like he understood the weight of every word.

She had printed the instructions herself.

High-risk pregnancy.

Twin delivery.

Do not delay transport.

I had taped the checklist inside the pantry door because Blake kept joking that he was going to forget something important.

The hospital bag sat by the front closet.

The blue folder with my registration papers, insurance card copy, birth plan, and emergency numbers sat on the counter.

We had rehearsed this.

We had talked about which road we would take, where he would park, who he would call, which elevator led to the maternity floor.

For months, Blake had promised me I would not have to be brave alone.

Then Diane stepped into the hallway.

My mother-in-law had her purse on her shoulder, her lipstick fresh, her face already tight with annoyance.

Behind her stood Blake’s sister, phone in hand, thumb hovering over the screen like the world inside it mattered more than the woman doubled over ten feet away.

My father-in-law leaned near the front door with his arms crossed.

He looked tired of me before I had even finished begging.

“Where exactly do you think you are going?” Diane asked.

I blinked at her.

“To the hospital,” I whispered.

Diane gave a little laugh, like I had said something childish.

“No, you are not,” she said. “Blake has to take me and his sister to the mall first. The sale ends at five.”

Another contraction gripped me.

Read More

Leave a Reply

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