There had been actual news.
Hannah survived, but only barely.
She was rushed to the specialized care unit with tubes thinner than shoelaces taped to her tiny face. I lost far too much blood and my blood pressure crashed twice. For sixteen hours, doctors watched me like a candle they were not sure would keep burning.
My sister, Wendy, arrived before dawn after seeing all my missed calls. She found my empty house, the broken glass still scattered across the kitchen floor, and a smear of blood near the hallway.
She was the one who came to the hospital.
She was the one who signed forms when I could hardly grip a pen.
She was the one who stood beside the small incubator and cried quietly, whispering that she was loved, even if her father was a coward.
On the second morning, I woke to Wendy sitting beside my bed with my phone in her hand. Her face was pale with fury.
“Sienna, you need to see this,” she said. “Cameron posted pictures.”
I blinked through the haze of heavy medication. “What are you talking about?”
She turned the screen toward me.
There he was, smiling beside Pamela, holding champagne, and surrounded by relatives beneath gold balloons. The caption read that family always comes first.
Something inside me went silent.
A nurse came in to check my vitals and saw my face.
“Do you feel safe going home with your husband?” she asked.
It was such a simple question.
But it opened a door I had spent years pretending was only a wall.
I thought about every time Cameron had dismissed my pain. Every time Pamela had called me sensitive. Every time I had apologized just to keep the peace. Then I thought about Hannah, struggling for air inside a glass box because her father had treated my labor like an inconvenience.
By the time Cameron drove home on the third afternoon, smiling with leftover cake in the passenger seat, I had already made my choice.
A woman can forgive being ignored. She can even survive humiliation. But when a man abandons her at the doorway between life and death and leaves his own child there too, something sacred shifts. Love does not always die with noise. Sometimes it dies in a hospital room, beside a tiny heartbeat, while a mother finally realizes that protecting her child matters more than protecting a marriage.
Cameron opened the front door at two thirty seven in the afternoon with his mother’s leftover birthday cake in one hand and a smirk across his face.
“Sienna?” he called out. “I hope you are done being mad.”
Then he saw the blood.
Wendy had refused to clean it. She said he needed to see exactly what he had walked away from. The smear near the hallway had dried into a dark brown stain. Broken glass still sparkled across the kitchen tile. My hospital bracelet sat on the entry table beside a stack of legal papers, printed and waiting.
Cameron dropped the cake. It landed face down on the floor.
“What happened here?” he whispered.
From the living room, my brother in law, Robert, stepped into view. He was a police officer, still in uniform after driving straight from his shift to help Wendy change the locks.
Cameron’s face fell apart.
“Where is Sienna?”
“At the hospital,” Robert said. “Where you should have been two days ago.”
Cameron staggered back, gripping the wall for support. “And the baby?”
Wendy came down the stairs carrying a small overnight bag. Her eyes were red, but her voice was ice cold.
“Your daughter is alive, but no thanks to you.”
His knees nearly gave out. For one terrifying second, I think he truly understood that his neglect had almost killed us. Not as a dramatic accusation, not as my overreaction, but as a fact.
He reached for his phone. “I need to go there right now.”
“No,” Robert said firmly.