Six Years After Our Baby’s Death, The Hospital Footage Changed Everything-heuh

The day my baby died, my husband looked at me as though I had done it on purpose.

Not with rage.

Not with the wild, broken grief I might have understood.

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With certainty.

The neonatal unit was too bright for that hour of the morning, all polished floors, clipped footsteps and machines that kept breathing for babies who were too small to do it alone.

Outside the room, someone had left a paper cup of coffee on a windowsill, and the smell of it had gone bitter under the strip lights.

Rain tapped against the glass in a thin, miserable rhythm.

Inside, our son Liam lay beneath a tangle of wires so fine they looked like threads from a sewing box.

He had been fighting for days.

Every hour had become a bargain in my head.

Let him get through this one.

Let him open his eyes again.

Let him grow big enough for the blue blanket folded at home, the one I kept smoothing with my palm even though he had never slept in it.

Daniel stood on the other side of the cot.

His shirt was creased, his face grey, his hands still.

I remember thinking that stillness was shock.

I remember wanting to reach for him, even then.

At 2:16 a.m. on a Friday, the monitor made a sound I can still hear if a room goes quiet enough.

A nurse moved quickly.

A doctor came in.

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