He Tore Off His Pregnant Wife’s Blanket After A 2:07 A.M. Photo-hihehu

My name is Alexander Hayes.

At 6:30 every morning, my house in Greenwich, Connecticut, woke up before anyone in it knew what they were feeling.

The sprinklers hissed across the hedges outside.

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The staff moved through the kitchen with the quiet precision of people who had learned which rooms held anger and which rooms held silence.

Coffee cups clicked against trays.

Fresh flowers sat in the entryway, stiff and expensive, giving the air that cold green smell my mother loved because it made everything look controlled.

From the back windows, the lawn rolled toward the water like a painting nobody was allowed to touch.

That was the house I had built around my life.

Or maybe it was the house my family had built around me.

Upstairs, behind a white bedroom door with gold trim, my wife had not gotten out of bed in three days.

Victoria Hayes was six months pregnant with our first child.

She should have been complaining about swollen ankles, asking me to pick up the ice cream she suddenly liked, laughing at the baby books piled on the nightstand.

Instead, she lay beneath a heavy gray blanket with one hand over her stomach and her face turned toward the window.

She barely ate.

She barely slept.

She barely spoke.

When I came in, she pulled the blanket tighter.

When I asked what was wrong, she gave me the same answer every time.

“Please, Alexander… just leave me alone today.”

The first day, I thought she was exhausted.

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