
My Husband Suffocated Our Healthy Newborn for Her
Chapter 3
The surgical lights blinded me each time I briefly surfaced from the darkness. Voices floated around me, urgent and sharp.
"Blood pressure's still dropping!"
"Get more units of O-negative in here!"
"Where's that authorization?"
I tried to speak, to ask about Preston, but my lips wouldn't form words. Something was pressing against my chest, making it hard to breathe.
"We need to make a decision now!" A woman's voice, authoritative but trembling. "The hemorrhaging isn't stopping."
"Dr. Hoffman's notes say the procedure was routine." A man's voice, confused and angry. "This isn't possible."
"Well, it's happening! Look at these sutures—he missed a major vessel!"
I felt a strange detachment as they argued over my body. The pain came in waves, each one threatening to pull me under completely. Was this what death felt like? This floating sensation, this indifference to the chaos around me?
"Prepare for emergency hysterectomy," someone announced. "We're losing her."
Hysterectomy. The word penetrated my fog. No. Not that. Not my womb. Not the place where my baby had grown.
"Wait," I managed to whisper, my voice barely audible. "My husband—"
"Mrs. Ellis, we don't have time for consent forms." The surgeon's face appeared above me, her eyes tired but determined. "We're doing what we need to do to save your life."
Save my life. But what life would be left without my child? Without the ability to ever have another?
The mask descended over my face again as darkness claimed me.
---
"Brittany? Brittany, can you hear me?"
I blinked against the harsh fluorescent lights. A familiar face swam into focus—Samira Jenkins, my oldest friend since college. Her dark eyes were wide with concern, her usually perfect makeup smudged as if she'd rushed here without a thought for appearances.
"You're awake," she breathed, taking my hand. "God, I've been trying to reach Preston for hours. He's not answering his phone."
Of course he wasn't. He was probably still celebrating with Tiffany.
"What happened?" Samira asked, her lawyer instincts kicking in as she surveyed the monitors and IV lines. "The nurse said something about complications, but they're being vague."
"They took everything," I whispered, my throat raw. "The baby... and my uterus. They said it was the only way to stop the bleeding."
Samira's face hardened. "And Preston?"
"Not here." My voice cracked. "He's with her."
"Her?"
"Tiffany Reyes." I swallowed hard. "They're together. They have been for months."
Samira's expression shifted from confusion to fury in an instant. She stood abruptly, her chair scraping against the floor. "That absolute bastard. I'll kill him myself."
"No." I gripped her wrist weakly. "I need your help with something else first."
She leaned closer as I whispered my suspicions about the diagnosis, about Dr. Hoffman's strange behavior, about the convenient timing of everything.
"You think they deliberately ended your pregnancy?" Samira's voice was barely audible, her horror palpable.
"I need proof," I said. "Before they destroy everything."
Samira nodded, already pulling out her phone. "I know a pathologist who owes me a favor. But we need to move fast—hospitals usually dispose of tissue samples within forty-eight hours."
"Can you get it?"
She flashed me a grim smile. "Watch me work."
---
Two days later, Samira returned with a thick envelope and a determined expression.
"It wasn't easy," she said, settling into the chair beside my bed. "I had to flash my legal credentials and threaten half the administration with wrongful death suits."
I pushed myself up against the pillows, wincing at the pain that still radiated through my abdomen. "And?"
Samira handed me the envelope. "Read it yourself."
With trembling hands, I opened it and scanned the contents. The clinical language couldn't mask the devastating truth:
"Examination of fetal tissue reveals no evidence of neural defects or genetic abnormalities... Development consistent with healthy 37-week gestation... Evidence of bruising consistent with suffocation after live birth..."
The report blurred as tears filled my eyes. "He was healthy," I whispered. "Our baby was perfect."
"And he was born alive," Samira added quietly, her voice tight with controlled rage. "According to this, someone suffocated him after birth."
I looked up at her, a cold clarity washing over me. "Tiffany."
Samira nodded grimly. "The hospital records say 'stillborn due to complications,' but this report contradicts everything."
"They murdered him," I said, my voice hollow. "They murdered my son."
The truth settled over me like a physical weight. This wasn't just betrayal or infidelity. This was calculated, premeditated murder of an innocent child—my child.
And they had tried to kill me too.
As I clutched the report in my shaking hands, something hardened inside me—a resolve as unyielding as steel. Preston and Tiffany had taken everything from me: my child, my future, my trust.
Now I would take everything from them.
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