ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

The Envelope She Couldn’t Hide

“I made the call that any rational parent would make,” he said.

“By letting me die?” I snapped.

“I was trying to protect you from false hope!”

“No,” Chloe said quietly. “You were protecting yourself from loss.”

That hit him.

I saw it.

For the first time, the man who raised me looked… smaller.

“So what did you do?” I asked her.

She hesitated.

Then said the words that changed everything.

They felt like something happening to someone else.

I stood in the hallway, useless, still holding my phone.

It buzzed again.

This time, I answered.

“What did you do?” I said, before she could speak.

There was a pause on the other end.

Then my mother’s voice, controlled, composed, like she was discussing dinner plans.

“Michael, you need to calm down.”

“No,” I snapped. “You were here. She said you told her not to call 911.”

“She was overreacting,” Diane replied. “Pregnancy is messy. Emotional. I was trying to keep her from embarrassing herself—and you.”

I laughed once. It sounded wrong.

“She’s in surgery.”

Silence.

Just for a second.

Then: “That’s unfortunate.”

Unfortunate.

My grip tightened on the phone.

“What did you take from her purse?”

Another pause.

Longer this time.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Don’t do that,” I said, my voice dropping. “Not right now. Not when she’s—” I couldn’t finish the sentence.

I swallowed hard.

“She said you took an envelope. What was in it?”

My mother exhaled slowly, like she was deciding something.

When she spoke again, her tone had changed.

Colder.

“Something you didn’t need to see.”

I don’t remember hanging up.

I just remember staring at the wall, my heart pounding harder than it had in years.

Something you didn’t need to see.

That wasn’t denial.

That was confirmation.

“Michael Carter?”

I turned.

A doctor stood in front of me, mask pulled down, eyes tired.

“I’m Dr. Alvarez,” she said. “Your wife is in surgery. We had to move quickly. There was significant bleeding.”

“Is she—” My voice cracked. “Is she okay?”

“We’re doing everything we can.”

“And the baby?”

A beat.

Then: “We’re working on that too.”

Time stretched.

Minutes felt like hours.

I sat. I stood. I paced.

And then my phone buzzed again.

Not my mother this time.

Dr. Melissa Crane.

I answered immediately.

“This is Michael Carter.”

“Michael,” a calm but urgent voice said. “I’ve been trying to reach Sarah. Is she with you?”

“She’s in surgery,” I said. “Emergency C-section.”

A sharp inhale on the other end.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment