
I Was Crying in the Hospital After Giving Birth to My Twins – Then a Nurse Whispered Something About My Husband That Made Me Freeze
Four days after I lost my premature twin daughters, I woke up in the ICU to my husband holding my hand and promising we'd survive it together. I believed him until the night nurse bent over my pillow and told me he'd been taking flowers to another woman in Ward 8.
The beeping monitor was the first sound I heard when I opened my eyes. The ICU lights buzzed faintly and yellow above me. My belly was flat under the blanket, and the pain was deeper than any wound a scalpel could leave.
I was 41 and pregnant after fourteen years of trying, five miscarriages buried in silence, and more heartbreak than I knew how to name. Then, finally, there were two heartbeats on a screen.
Now there were none.
The ache in my chest drowned out even the pain in my stomach.
A warm hand wrapped around mine, and I turned my head slowly on the pillow. Daniel sat in the plastic chair beside my bed, his eyes red, his shirt creased as though he had been sleeping in it for days.
"Lydia," he whispered. "You're awake. Oh God, you're awake."
I tried to speak, but I couldn't. The ache in my chest drowned out even the pain in my stomach.
"The girls," I whispered.
Daniel shook his head and pressed his forehead against my hand.
"I know, baby. I know. I'm so sorry."
"They had your nose."
Tears slid sideways into my hair. I had already known. Some part of me had known the moment I woke and felt the emptiness where they used to kick.
"I held them," Daniel added. "Before they took them. They were so small, Lyd. So perfect."
"Did they look like us?"
"They had your nose."
A broken laugh escaped me, then dissolved into a sob. He climbed half onto the bed, careful of the tubes, and gathered me against his chest like I might shatter.
I had lost my babies. I had not lost him.
"We're going to survive this," he whispered into my hair.
"Promise me."
"I promise. I swear on my life, Lydia."
He fumbled in his jacket pocket and brought out two tiny pairs of pink socks I'd carried everywhere for weeks, ever since we learned it was two girls. He pressed them into my palm and folded my fingers around them.
"For when we're ready," he said. "To remember them properly."
I looked at the soft pink wool against my pale skin and felt something almost like peace. I had lost my babies. I had not lost him. That was something.
For the briefest second, something passed across his face.
"I love you," I whispered.
"I love you more than anything in this world, Lyd."
Daniel's phone buzzed in his pocket. He glanced down, and for the briefest second, something passed across his face. Then he stood.
"I have to take this. Work. I'll be right outside."
"Okay."
He kissed my forehead and slipped out into the corridor.
Her eyes followed Daniel down the hallway and stayed there a beat too long.
An older nurse stood just past the threshold, clipboard in hand. Her eyes followed Daniel down the hallway and stayed there a beat too long. When she noticed me watching, she looked away and moved on.
I closed my fingers tighter around the pink socks and let sleep pull me under, certain, for the last time, that I was not alone.
Then the older nurse came in to change my IV.
She had been the one to sit with me through the worst of the first night, when the morphine made me cry for babies that were no longer there. She had not said much. She had only held my wrist and let me ruin the shoulder of her uniform.
Since then, every time she came on shift, she touched my forehead the way my grandmother used to, like she was checking for more than fever.
"Your husband has been bringing flowers and packages to another ward."
That night, she moved more quietly than usual. She checked the bag, adjusted the tape on my wrist, and stood looking down at me. Her eyes were misty.
Her hand brushed my pillow, and she leaned in like she were fixing the corner of it.
"Sweetheart," she whispered, "I would not say this if I had a daughter and someone knew. Your husband has been bringing flowers and packages to another ward while you were unconscious. Number 8. I told you nothing."
She straightened, smoothed the blanket, and squeezed my ankle once through the sheet before she walked out without looking back.
I lay there, rattled.
I shuffled past her, one slow step at a time.
For hours I counted ceiling tiles. Forty-two across, sixteen down.
I kept reaching for explanations. A colleague. A cousin. A friend from work whose name Daniel had simply never bothered to mention while I was busy giving birth too early.
At 5 a.m., I pushed the blanket back. My stitches pulled like wire under the skin, and my legs felt borrowed. I grabbed the IV stand and used it like a cane.
The corridor was empty. A young aide slept with her cheek on her forearm at the nurses' station. I shuffled past her, one slow step at a time.
A soft yellow light spilled into the corridor, and inside it, I heard Daniel's voice.
Down the long hallway. Through the double doors. Past a janitor who looked up, then politely looked away.
Ward 8 was at the end of a quieter wing. The numbers on the doors climbed slowly. Four. Six. Eight.
The door was cracked open. A soft yellow light spilled into the corridor, and inside it, I heard Daniel's voice.
Not the voice he used at meetings or with my mother on the phone. The voice he used to use on me, years ago, when we were still new and I was not yet a list of failed pregnancies.
"She's beautiful," he was saying. "She has your nose."
A woman laughed softly.
"She has my stubbornness, Daniel. She would not sleep all night."
I knew that face.
I pressed my palm flat against the door.
"Just a little while," he said. "Then I have to go back. She woke up yesterday; she keeps asking where I am."
"Go," the woman said. "We are fine. We will be fine."
I pushed the door open.
The room was warm. There was a bouquet of white lilies on the windowsill, and a paper bag from the bakery I liked.
In the bed sat a woman holding a newborn against her chest, the baby's tiny hand curled into her hospital gown. She lifted her face toward the door, and I just froze.
I knew that face.
The color drained from his face so fast I watched it happen.
I had sat behind it in chemistry class. I had watched it laugh in a yearbook photo Daniel kept in a shoebox in our garage.
Samantha.
She saw me, and her smile froze halfway. The baby made a small sound against her shoulder.
Daniel turned, a bunch of pink tulips in his hand, and the color drained from his face so fast I watched it happen.
Nobody spoke. The baby breathed against Samantha's neck, and the three of us stood in a silence that would not let any of us out.
It was the unbearable truth that I should have been holding my daughters too.
"Lydia, oh my God!" Daniel finally said. "You shouldn't be out of bed."
I held onto the doorframe.
"What are you doing here, Daniel?"
"I went down for coffee and ran into her in the hallway. I didn't even know she had been admitted here."
From the bed, Samantha lifted her hand in a small, careful wave.
"Hi, Lydia. It has been a long time. I'm so sorry about your girls. Daniel mentioned, and I just wanted to say I was thinking of you."
I looked at her, then at the bassinet beside her, and finally at the baby in her arms. Something in me cracked wide open. It wasn't jealousy, not exactly. It was the unbearable truth that I should have been holding my daughters too.
The stone settled in my chest and would not move.
"Hey, been a long time," I finally said, forcing a small smile.
Daniel crossed the room and put his arm around my waist.
"Let me take you back, sweetheart. You're bleeding through your gown. Please."
I let him walk me down the corridor.
But the stone settled in my chest and would not move.
Over the next two days, I watched him. The way he tilted his phone screen away when he typed. The way his eyes slid past mine whenever I mentioned Ward 8.
The two pink socks sat folded in my palm like a prayer.
"How is she doing?" I asked once, casually, stirring sugar into tea I could not taste.
"Who?"
"Samantha."
"Oh, fine, I think. I haven't been back up there."
He had been back. The nurse with the kind eyes had told me again that evening.
***
On discharge day, I dressed slowly. My stitches still pulled. The two pink socks sat folded in my palm like a prayer.
I waited in the lobby for Daniel to bring the car around.
Instead, a yellow taxi pulled up, and he came through the sliding doors with a paper bag of my medications and a guilty smile.
"You booked me a cab?"
"Baby, I am so sorry. There's a meeting at the office I cannot push. The Henderson account. You remember."
"You booked me a cab?"
"I prepaid it," he replied. "The driver is lovely. You'll be home in twenty minutes and I'll be right behind you, I promise."
He kissed my forehead the way he had every morning of this nightmare week.
"Go rest, Lydie. I love you."
I climbed into the back seat, clutching the socks. The driver, an older man with gray at his temples, nodded at me in the mirror and pulled into traffic without a word.
He was laughing at something she had said.
I rested my head against the cool window and closed my eyes.
When I opened them, we were stopped at a red light, and two lanes over sat Daniel's silver sedan. He was in the driver's seat. Samantha was in the passenger seat. Strapped into a car seat in the back was the baby from Ward 8.
He was laughing at something she had said.
My hand went flat against my empty belly, against the place where my daughters had been.
"Sir," I urged softly. "Please. Don't lose that silver car."
The driver glanced at me in the mirror, took in the hospital bracelet, and nodded once.
"Ma'am. You don't have to go in."
We wound through the city, out past the bypass, into a quiet street on the outskirts. Daniel parked in front of a modest house with a small garden. A stroller already sat on the porch.
I watched him lift the baby from the car seat with a tenderness I knew by heart. Samantha followed him inside.
The driver turned in his seat, his voice low, like he understood exactly what it had done to me to see my husband carrying another woman's child and walking her into a home that wasn't mine.
"Ma'am. You don't have to go in."
"I do."
The sound that left me was not a scream.
I walked to the door and slowly pushed it open.
Daniel was holding the baby with one arm, his lips against Samantha's forehead. They both turned and froze.
Daniel's arm dropped to his side.
"LYDIA?"
The sound that left me was not a scream. It was something smaller, more broken.
"How long?"
"Lydie, please. Let me explain."
"How long, Daniel?"
His shoulders folded inward. The baby stirred against his chest.
Samantha had gotten pregnant around the same time I did.
"Three years. I couldn't leave you. Not while you were still trying. Not after the miscarriages."
Samantha pressed a hand to her mouth, her eyes filling slowly with shock.
"Lyd, I'm so sorry. We met three years ago and... it just happened."
"It just happened?" I hissed.
Then Daniel told me Samantha had gotten pregnant around the same time I did.
"He promised he was going to sort things out slowly," Samantha added.
A dry laugh worked its way up my throat. "He promised me a lot of things, too."
"People make mistakes. I never wanted to lose you."
I looked at the baby. I looked at the man who had carried two pink socks in his pocket while another woman carried his child.
"In one week, I lost my daughters. And I lost my husband." I drew a slow breath and met Daniel's eyes. "I will not lose myself too."
"Lydie, please," Daniel pleaded. "People make mistakes. I never wanted to lose you."
Samantha turned on him right away, but I was too shattered and too furious to hear another word. I turned and walked back to the taxi, where the driver was already holding the door open for me.
"Where to, Ma'am?"
I looked at the pink socks in my palm. Two tiny pairs, for two daughters who would never wear them.
My late father helped me buy it.
"I need a lawyer," I said. "My sister gave me a number months ago when I asked for some legal advice about my estate, but I never called. Then home."
He nodded and pulled away from the curb.
I did not look back at Samantha's house or at Daniel calling after me from the doorway. I wasn't leaving my house to him, not after everything. My late father helped me buy it.
I packed up Daniel's things.
The moment I got back after meeting the lawyer, I packed up Daniel's things, set them outside, and left a note on top: "Talk to my lawyer."
The pink socks now remain in a wooden box on the windowsill, beside a photograph of two heartbeats on a screen.
I kept painting the unfinished portrait of my daughters, the one I'd started so hopefully before my water broke too soon. I dipped the brush back into the paint and kept going.
