He Took My Fingerprint While I Was Losing Our Baby — Then I Laughed-heuh

The first thing I noticed when I woke up was the smell. Bleach, stale tea, and that hard metallic scent that seems to live only in hospitals, where every surface has been wiped clean and nothing in the room can hide what has happened. The light was too bright. The curtains looked washed out and tired. Everything in that room felt too clean for what had happened there, as if the building itself was trying to pretend the worst thing in my life had not just taken place.

For a few seconds, I did not remember why I was there. Then the truth came back in pieces. The cramp. The rush of blood. The fear in the nurse’s voice. The run down the corridor. The quiet, dreadful faces. My hand moved under the blanket before I could stop it, searching for a shape that was no longer there.

My baby was gone.

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There was no dramatic scream. No sobbing fit. Just a coldness spreading from my chest outward until it felt as though my body no longer belonged to me. The nurse came close and spoke gently, and I knew from the care in her face that she was delivering the sentence she had already delivered to herself a hundred times. They had done everything they could. She was kind. She was careful. None of it changed the fact that my life had split open and something irreplaceable had fallen out of it.

Raymond, my husband, sat beside the bed with his hands folded and his head slightly bowed, every line of him arranged to look like grief. If I had not lived with him, if I had not known the lazy calculations behind his politeness, I might have believed it. His mouth was set in that solemn, wounded expression he wore when he wanted sympathy without responsibility. Lorraine stood by the window with her arms crossed and her jaw tight, staring out at the grey sky with the impatience of a woman who thought misfortune was a poor use of everyone’s time.

The room was full of people and, somehow, I had never felt so alone.

I drifted in and out after that. The medication blurred the edges of everything, turning the room into patches of light and shadow, voices into distant water, pain into a deep, dull ache that still found a way to hurt. I remember the nurse checking my pulse. I remember a cup of cold water untouched on the side table. I remember the rustle of paper. I remember Raymond answering questions in that smooth tone he used whenever something was inconvenient.

And then I heard Lorraine’s voice.

It was so low that I might have missed it if I had not already been half awake, half drowning in painkillers.

“I told you this would go smoothly.”

I could not turn my head. My limbs felt heavy, useless, as though someone had filled them with wet sand. Raymond replied just as calmly, as if they were discussing a late bill or the weekly shop.

“The doctor said she won’t remember. The medication is strong. We only need her thumb.”

Thumb.

Not my signature. Not my consent. My thumb.

The words made no sense at first, and then they made too much sense. I tried to move. Nothing happened. I tried to speak. My mouth would not shape the sound. Panic rose in me like a second sickness, sharper than anything physical. I felt my hand lifted. I felt my finger guided. I felt something cold pressed against my skin, a surface I could not see but somehow understood. A device. A pad. A scanner. Something meant to turn me into a mark on a page.

“Quickly,” Lorraine urged. “Transfer everything. Leave nothing behind.”

The room seemed to tilt. I was trying to scream from somewhere far away inside myself, but my own body had shut me out. I heard the soft exhale of Raymond’s breath, the tiny sound of satisfaction.

“After this, we’re done,” he said. “We’ll say the loss was too much. The stress. She’ll fall apart. And we’ll be free.”

Free.

The word landed in the room like a dirty plate being dropped on the floor. They were not speaking about me as a person. I was already being turned into a problem to solve, a set of accounts to close, a house to claim, a life to empty out and leave behind.

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