Chapter 1: The Zero Balance
The nursery was painted a soft, hopeful, buttercream yellow. The sunlight streamed through the plantation shutters, illuminating the pristine white crib and the stack of freshly folded, tiny blankets. It was a room designed for pure joy. But as I sat heavily on the floor, leaning back against the cool plaster wall, the air inside the room was suffocatingly, terrifyingly cold.
I was thirty-two years old, and I was exactly thirty-six weeks pregnant.
My pregnancy had been a nightmare from the beginning. I had been diagnosed early on with placenta accreta, an incredibly severe, high-risk condition where the placenta grows too deeply into the uterine wall. It carried a massive, terrifying risk of catastrophic hemorrhaging during delivery. My local OB-GYN had looked at me with grim, serious eyes and told me I could not deliver at our standard community hospital. I needed a highly specialized, out-of-network cardiothoracic surgical team present during a scheduled C-section to ensure I didn’t bleed to death on the table.