
Rejected Father's Last Plea
Chapter 1
The pain tore through me like a white-hot knife, making every breath a battle. I clutched the hospital bed rails, my knuckles turning bone-white as another contraction seized my body.
"Where's my husband?" I gasped when the wave receded. "Has anyone reached Dane?"
The nurse—Emily, according to her name tag—checked her watch with a poorly concealed frown. "We're still trying, Mrs. Richards. His phone appears to be turned off."
Impossible. Dane never turned off his phone. Eight years together, building our design firm from nothing to an industry leader, and he'd always been reachable. Always.
"He promised he'd be here," I whispered, more to myself than to the medical staff bustling around me. "He was just finishing a meeting. He said—"
Another contraction cut my words short, more intense than the last. I bit down on my lip until I tasted blood, trying to breathe through the techniques we'd practiced together.
"Mrs. Richards, your blood pressure is elevating," the doctor said, her voice steady but concerned. "We need to keep you calm. I'm sure your husband is on his way."
I nodded, trying to believe it. Traffic. An emergency at the office. His phone battery died. There had to be an explanation.
Three hours later, my son was fighting to enter the world, and I was fighting to stay conscious. The monitors beeped with increasing urgency as my heart rate became erratic.
"We need to reach her husband," I heard someone say, their voice seeming to come from underwater. "Her vitals are becoming unstable."
"Dane," I whispered between ragged breaths, imagining him rushing through the hospital doors any moment, apologizing for being late. "Please."
The room blurred. Voices grew distant. As darkness closed in, my last conscious thought was of Dane's promise that morning: "I wouldn't miss this for the world, Mira."
* * *
I awoke to the gentle beeping of monitors and the soft weight of a blanket tucked around my body. For a moment, I floated in the hazy space between sleep and wakefulness, before memory crashed back.
"My baby," I croaked, my throat raw.
"He's right here."
Dane's voice. Finally. I turned my head, wincing at the stiffness in my neck, and saw him standing by the window. He held a small bundle awkwardly in his arms, as if unsure what to do with it—with our son.
"You made it," I whispered, relief washing through me despite the lingering pain. I reached out my hand. "I was so scared. What happened? Where were you?"
Dane didn't take my hand. Instead, he shifted our son to his other arm and looked at me with eyes I barely recognized—cold, distant, like he was looking at a stranger.
"I was with Rosa," he said flatly.
The words hung in the air between us. Rosa. The new intern. Twenty-three years old. Beautiful. Ambitious.
"What do you mean, you were with Rosa?" My voice sounded strange to my own ears. "During the birth of your son?"
"I'm sorry it happened this way." He wasn't looking at me now, but at some point beyond my shoulder. "I didn't plan to tell you like this, but I can't keep pretending. I've fallen in love with her, Mira."
The room seemed to tilt. Eight years. Eight years of building a life, a business, a marriage. Eight years culminating in this moment of betrayal so profound I could physically feel something breaking inside me.
"Give me my son," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice.
Dane hesitated, then awkwardly transferred the tiny bundle to my arms. Our baby—no, my baby—squirmed slightly, his perfect face peaceful in sleep, unaware of the earthquake reshaping his world before he'd even properly entered it.
With my free hand, I slowly removed my wedding ring, the platinum band Dane had placed there with promises of forever. I set it on the bedside table with a soft clink.
"His name is Carl," I said, looking down at my son. "Carl Adams. He won't carry your name."
"Mira, be reasonable—" Dane started, his voice rising.
"You abandoned me during labor to be with your twenty-three-year-old mistress," I cut him off, ice crystallizing around my heart. "I nearly died. Our son nearly died. There is no coming back from that."
Dane's face flushed. "You're being dramatic. The doctors had everything under control. And it's not like that with Rosa—"
"Security," I called out, my voice stronger now. "I need security in here, please."
A nurse appeared at the doorway, concern etched on her face. "Is everything alright?"
"No," I said simply. "My husband needs to leave. He's no longer welcome here."
Dane's expression darkened. "You can't just—"
"Sir," the nurse interrupted firmly, "if the patient is requesting you to leave, I'll need to ask you to step out."
As hospital security arrived to escort him out, Dane's face contorted with indignation. "This isn't over, Mira. You're overreacting. We can talk about this when you're thinking clearly."
I didn't respond. Instead, I reached for my phone on the bedside table and dialed a familiar number.
"Sarah?" I said when my best friend answered. "I need you to bring some legal documents to the hospital. And a notepad. I need to start documenting everything."
As I hung up, I looked down at Carl, sleeping peacefully against my chest. "It's just you and me now," I whispered, a tear finally breaking free. "But I promise, we're going to be okay."
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