New Mum Slapped In Hospital Room As Husband Played Games-heuh

The private room still smelt of sanitiser, warm formula, and the bitter hospital coffee Mark had forgotten on the windowsill.

My hair was damp against my neck.

The sheet felt rough beneath my knees.

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My newborn daughter was tucked against my chest in a pink-and-white hospital blanket, making those soft little bird noises babies make when they are not yet sure whether the world is safe.

It should have been peaceful.

It should have been the first quiet hour of our new life.

Instead, the loudest thing in the room was my husband’s phone.

Mark sat under the low wall light in the visitor’s chair, shoulders rounded, jaw set, thumbs moving fast across the screen.

He looked as if the only urgent matter in that room was his game.

Not his wife.

Not the baby.

Not the woman in the bed who had just gone through labour and was trying to sit without wincing.

He had not held our daughter once.

Not when the nurse wrote 2:17 a.m. on the bassinet card.

Not when the receipt for the room was placed inside my discharge folder with my signature on it.

Not when I whispered, “Your daughter is here.”

I told myself he was overwhelmed.

I told myself some men froze when things became real.

I told myself a lot of things that morning because the alternative was admitting that I had married a man who could watch me become a mother and still not look up.

Three years earlier, Mark had seemed gentle.

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