“I’m about to give birth,” I gasped, clutching the mahogany edge of my parents’ dining table as another sharp, stabbing contraction tore through my abdomen.
My mother didn’t even bother to lift her gaze from her plate, instead raising her crystal wineglass and stating coldly, “Then you had better call a cab because we are currently eating dinner.”
My father barely glanced up from his steak as he remarked, “You are thirty years old now, Sophie, so please figure it out on your own.”
The pain bent me in half, and I dropped to one knee on the cold hardwood floor, breathless and shaking with a crushing sense of humiliation.
Not a single person moved to help me while my brother continued staring at his food as if I were invisible.
My mother reached for the silver bread basket with an air of annoyance, acting as though my suffering was merely an interruption to her evening.
I managed to drag myself to my car and drove toward the lights of Mercy General Hospital, though my vision was swimming and my hands felt slick against the steering wheel.
By the time I staggered through the automatic doors of the emergency room, I could feel blood trailing down my legs, and a nurse rushed forward to catch me before I hit the floor.
“How far along are you exactly?” the nurse asked while trying to steady my trembling body.
“I am thirty eight weeks,” I whispered through gritted teeth, “but please, something feels terribly wrong.”
Then, the world around me dissolved into a chaotic blur of harsh hospital lighting, shouting voices, and frantic medical commands.
I heard a doctor mentioning fetal distress as another voice instructed me not to push, while someone else demanded to know the whereabouts of the father.
I tried to whisper my husband’s name, but the sound came out fractured and broken, remembering how he had vanished three months ago without leaving a single trace behind.
That was the very last coherent thought I possessed before darkness finally swallowed me whole.
When I eventually drifted back to consciousness, there was no baby resting beside me in the maternity ward.
There was no soft cry, no bassinet, and no pink or blue hospital blanket to be seen anywhere in the room.
There was only a woman from the administrative office sitting quietly next to a grim looking state trooper.
The woman leaned forward with a feigned, gentle expression and said, “Ms. Foster, before we discuss the status of your child, there is something vital you need to know about the man you listed as the father.”
A week later, my mother appeared at my front door and demanded, “Let me see the baby.”
I looked straight into her eyes and said with cold, dead certainty, “What baby are you talking about?”
Then, a deep man’s voice echoed from the dark shadows standing directly behind her.
“Sophie,” he said, “do not make this situation harder than it already is because we know exactly what you took.”
I had truly believed that waking up in that hospital bed without my child was the worst thing I could ever imagine.
I was wrong, because the ugly truth waiting on my front porch was darker than any nightmare I could have dreamt up.
My heart began to pound violently against my ribs as a man finally stepped into the warm glow of the porch light.
For a sickening second, I thought I was hallucinating because it was Elias, my husband and the father of my child who had been missing for months.
He looked thinner and colder, as if someone had stripped away the version of him I once loved and left behind a complete stranger wearing his face.
My mother crossed her arms tightly and snapped, “That is enough of these games, Sophie.”
I let out a sharp, hollow laugh and asked, “Games? I woke up in a hospital bed with no child and a state trooper questioning me about my husband, then both of you vanished.”
I continued, “Now you show up at my home demanding a baby that I never even got to hold once?”
Elias flicked his eyes toward the quiet street and muttered, “You need to keep your voice down right now.”
That command terrified me more than anything else he could have said.
“What exactly did they tell you at the hospital?” he asked with a desperate edge to his voice.
“They told me nothing,” I snapped at him, “a woman just said there was something I needed to know about you, and then my room was cleared out.”
I added, “My medical chart simply disappeared, and by morning I was discharged with stitches, an empty car seat, and absolutely no answers.”
My mother stepped closer to the threshold and pleaded, “Sophie, please, just hand him over to us.”