The paramedic froze mid-motion, his gloved hand hovering just above Sarah’s abdomen.
“What envelope?” he asked, sharper now.
But Sarah had already squeezed her eyes shut again, her face contorting as another wave of pain ripped through her. Her fingers clutched my sleeve like she was trying to anchor herself to something real.
“Sir, we need to move,” the second paramedic said, urgency rising. “We can talk on the way.”
I nodded, but my mind wasn’t in the room anymore.
It was on my phone.
Still vibrating.
My mother’s name flashing again and again.
Diane Carter.
I declined the call.
Hard.
The ride to the hospital blurred into fragments—sirens screaming, the medic calling out vitals, Sarah’s strained breathing counting seconds between contractions or spasms or something worse.
I sat beside her, holding her hand, but my thumb kept brushing against my phone screen.
That second name.
Dr. Melissa Crane.
And what Sarah had labeled her:
EMERGENCY IF DIANE INTERFERES
My stomach turned.
“Sarah,” I said quietly, leaning close so only she could hear, “what envelope?”
Her lips trembled. For a moment, I thought she wouldn’t answer.
Then she whispered, barely audible over the siren:
“Test results.”
My chest tightened.
“What kind of test results?”
Her eyes opened just enough to meet mine.
“The baby’s.”
At the hospital, everything moved fast.
Too fast.
Doctors. Nurses. Questions. Machines.
Sarah was wheeled away almost immediately, a team surrounding her like a wall I couldn’t break through.
“Possible placental abruption,” I heard someone say.
“Fetal distress.”
“Prep for emergency C-section.”
The words didn’t feel real.
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.