
My Husband Ignored My Miscarriage to Hold Her Infant
Chapter 3
The morning light filtered through the hospital blinds in pale, anemic strips. I counted them. Seven horizontal bars of gray-gold across the sterile white wall. If I focused on counting, I didn't have to think about the hollow ache in my pelvis or the way my body felt like a house after the tenants had moved out—empty, echoing, purposeless.
The door swung open without a knock.
Callahan stood in the threshold, his suit immaculate despite the early hour. The small cut on his forehead had been covered with a neat butterfly bandage. He looked tired, irritated, like a man who'd been inconvenienced by a minor traffic delay.
"Isla." He didn't move closer to the bed. "We need to talk about this hospital bill. Do you have any idea how much a private room costs per night?"
I stared at him. His mouth kept moving, forming words about insurance deductibles and unnecessary expenses, but the sound reached me as if through water. Thick. Distorted. Meaningless.
"And Eloise is devastated," he continued, finally stepping inside and closing the door behind him. "You traumatized her baby. He wouldn't stop crying for hours. You owe her an apology, Isla. A sincere one."
Something that might have been laughter tried to claw its way up my throat, but it died somewhere in my chest, smothered by the weight of what he didn't know. What he hadn't bothered to ask.
"You think I fell," I said quietly.
He blinked. "What?"
"You think I just... slipped. That's what you've been telling yourself." I shifted slightly, ignoring the scream of protest from my broken ribs. "You haven't asked if I'm okay. You haven't asked why I came to that party looking like that. You haven't asked anything."
Callahan's jaw tightened. "You're being dramatic. The doctors said you'd be fine. A few bruises, maybe a cracked rib. You'll be discharged in a day or two."
A cracked rib. The clinical understatement of the century.
"Get out," I whispered.
His eyebrows shot up. "Excuse me?"
"Get. Out." Each word cost me, scraping against the raw edges of my throat. "Go back to Eloise. Go comfort her baby. Go live your life. Just get the hell out of my room."
"Isla, you're being completely unreasonable—"
"NOW!" The word ripped out of me with a force that sent white-hot pain radiating through my torso. "Get out before I call security!"
For a moment, shock flickered across his face. Then it hardened into something cold and distant. "Fine. When you're ready to act like an adult, we'll talk."
The door clicked shut behind him with a soft, final sound.
I lay there, trembling, my heart monitor beeping erratically. The afternoon sun crawled across the wall, and I watched it with the detached interest of someone watching paint dry. Rebecca came and went, adjusting my IV, her eyes red and worried. David Chen stopped by to leave pamphlets about hospice care that I didn't touch.
When the door opened again as dusk painted the windows purple, I didn't bother looking up.
"Isla."
That voice. Low, careful, textured with old pain and older love.
My head turned before I could stop it.
Magnus Gonzalez stood just inside the doorway, backlit by the hallway fluorescents. He'd grown taller since I'd last seen him, broader through the shoulders, but his eyes—those dark, watchful eyes that had followed me through childhood—were exactly the same. His hands were shoved deep in his jacket pockets, hiding the scars I knew lived there.
He didn't speak again. He simply moved to the nightstand and set down a paper cup, the string of a tea bag dangling over the rim. Steam curled upward, carrying the scent of chamomile and honey.
My favorite. He remembered.
Something inside me cracked. Not the clean break of bone, but the slow, catastrophic fracture of a dam that had been holding back an ocean.
"Magnus," I choked out, and then I was sobbing—ugly, gasping, full-body sobs that tore through my broken ribs and didn't care. "He's gone. My baby's gone. I'm dying and my baby's gone and he doesn't even know, he doesn't even care—"
Magnus was beside me in an instant, his arms carefully, reverently wrapping around my shaking frame. He didn't shush me or tell me it would be okay. He just held me, one scarred hand cradling the back of my head, and let me shatter against his chest.
Hours passed. Maybe minutes. Time had lost all meaning.
When my tears finally dried to hiccupping gasps, Magnus pulled back just enough to look at me. His thumb brushed away the wetness on my cheek with infinite gentleness.
"The doctors told me you refused treatment," he said softly.
I nodded, my throat too raw for words.
"I'm not going to tell you to fight," he continued, his voice steady and sure. "I'm not going to give you platitudes about hope or miracles. But Isla... let them help with the pain. Let Dr. Chen start the palliative care. You don't have to suffer like this."
"What's the point?" I whispered.
"The point," Magnus said, his eyes holding mine with an intensity that made my breath catch, "is that you deserve peace. You deserve comfort. And I promise you, I will be here. Every single day. I will protect you from every person and every pain I can. I'm asking for nothing, Isla. Just let me do this for you."
Something in his absolute, unconditional presence steadied the spinning chaos in my mind. I thought of the chamomile tea cooling on the nightstand. Of his scarred hands that had always shielded me, even when I didn't deserve it.
"Okay," I breathed. "Okay."
Magnus pressed a kiss to my forehead, and for the first time since Dr. Chen's office, I felt something other than despair.
I felt seen.
You may also like





