
My Husband Suffocated Our Healthy Newborn for Her
Chapter 1
The ultrasound room at St. Jude's Medical Center was dimly lit, the soft blue glow of the monitor casting shadows across Dr. Hoffman's face. I shifted uncomfortably on the examination table, the cold gel on my swollen belly making me shiver despite the room's warmth.
"Just a routine check at thirty-seven weeks," I whispered to myself, trying to calm my nerves. "Everything's been perfect so far."
Dr. Hoffman's expression remained neutral as he moved the wand across my abdomen. Too neutral. The silence stretched uncomfortably between us.
"Is everything okay?" I finally asked, my voice smaller than I intended.
He stopped moving the wand and turned to face me directly. Something in his eyes made my stomach clench.
"Mrs. Ellis, I need to discuss some concerning findings with you."
The world seemed to tilt sideways. "Concerning? But all the previous ultrasounds were normal. The genetic testing came back clear."
"This is a new development." He turned the monitor toward me, pointing to areas that meant nothing to my untrained eye. "I'm seeing significant neural defects that weren't apparent earlier. The fetus has developed catastrophic abnormalities that are incompatible with life."
My hands trembled as I covered my mouth. "That's impossible. I felt him kicking just this morning."
"The movements you're feeling are reflexes, not conscious actions." His voice remained clinical, detached. "These defects would cause severe suffering if the pregnancy continued."
I stared at the grainy images on the screen, searching desperately for something familiar, something that resembled the perfect baby I'd imagined for months. All I saw were shadows and shapes that suddenly seemed foreign and terrifying.
"We need to induce labor immediately," Dr. Hoffman continued. "To spare the child any further pain."
My mind reeled. "I need to call my husband. Preston should be here—"
"He's already on his way," Dr. Hoffman said, checking his watch. "In fact, he should be arriving shortly."
---
Preston burst into the consultation room with his mother close behind him. I'd never been so relieved to see him, tears streaming down my face as I reached for his hand.
"Preston, something's wrong with the baby—"
"Brittany, darling," Mrs. Greene cut in, her voice dripping with practiced sympathy. "We've spoken with Dr. Hoffman. This is such a tragedy."
Preston didn't meet my eyes. Instead, he stood beside his mother, shoulders rigid with tension.
"I don't understand how this happened," I sobbed. "Everything was fine yesterday. I want a second opinion."
"That's not advisable," Mrs. Greene said firmly. "The longer we wait, the more suffering for everyone involved."
"But our baby—"
"Brittany." Preston finally spoke, his voice hollow. "Think about what kind of life this child would have. Think about the pain they would endure."
I looked between them, suddenly aware of how coordinated their approach seemed. "You're both acting strange. What aren't you telling me?"
"The Greene family has a legacy to uphold," Mrs. Greene said quietly. "A child with these...defects...would bring nothing but shame to our name."
I recoiled as if slapped. "Shame? This is your grandchild!"
"And we're trying to protect you from the inevitable heartbreak," Preston said, taking the consent forms from Dr. Hoffman. "This is for the best, Brittany. Trust us."
Before I could protest further, Preston had already signed the papers, his signature a bold stroke across the bottom of the form.
---
The preparation room was cold and sterile. Nurses moved efficiently around me, attaching monitors and IV lines while I lay frozen in disbelief.
"Where's Preston?" I asked repeatedly, but no one seemed to know.
Finally, as they prepared to wheel me into surgery, he appeared in the doorway. For a moment, I thought I saw hesitation in his eyes—a flicker of doubt or regret.
"You're doing the right thing," he said, approaching the gurney. "I'll be here when you wake up."
He leaned down and pressed his lips to my forehead. The gesture should have comforted me, but something felt wrong. Through my blurring vision, I watched his face.
He wasn't crying.
Instead, Preston checked his watch with a quick, impatient motion, his expression more annoyed than grief-stricken. The anesthesia mask descended over my face, and I caught one last glimpse of his cold eyes before darkness claimed me.
As consciousness slipped away, a single thought crystallized in my fading awareness: something was terribly wrong. This wasn't how a father should look when losing his child. This wasn't grief or compassion or even resignation.
This was...satisfaction?
The last thing I heard before the darkness took me completely was the steady beep of the heart monitor and Preston's quiet voice: "How much longer will this take?"
Not a question about my wellbeing. Not a concern about our baby.
Just impatience to be done with it all.
You may also like





