Pregnant Wife Denied Surgery As Her Twin Reveals His Secret-Teptep

The first thing Caleb Whitmore did when the emergency consent form appeared in front of him was not reach for the pen.

He did not ask how Hannah was breathing.

He did not ask whether the twins could hear the alarm in the room, or whether the blood meant what everyone in the corridor already feared it meant.

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He looked at the sheet pulled over his wife’s body, looked at the shape of the two babies beneath it, and said, “How much is this going to cost me?”

For a second, no one answered.

The corridor outside the labour ward at St. Ambrose Medical Centre had that early-morning hospital chill that seems to sit inside the walls.

It smelt of disinfectant, burnt coffee from a vending machine, and wet coats hanging from tired shoulders.

The fluorescent lights hummed over the nurses’ station.

Somewhere beyond the theatre doors, a metal tray crashed against another one, and Hannah Whitmore flinched as though the sound had landed on her skin.

She was on a trolley with one hand spread across her stomach.

Her fingers moved every few seconds, not quite stroking, not quite protecting, as if she was trying to hold the babies in place by touch alone.

Her lips had gone so pale that Denise, the midwife beside her, had stopped pretending not to watch them.

Dr Elaine Mercer stood with the form held flat against a clipboard.

She had the kind of calm that only appears when a doctor has already moved past fear and into work.

“Mr Whitmore,” she said, “your wife has a placental abruption. Her blood pressure is falling. One of the babies is showing distress. We need to operate now.”

Caleb’s eyes moved from her face to the paper.

Not to Hannah.

Not to the monitor.

The paper.

“How dangerous is it?” he asked.

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