I Came Home From The ICU And Saw Black SUVs In My Driveway-habe

My heart flatlined twice on that delivery table.

By the time I came home, my body felt like it belonged to the hospital more than it belonged to me.

The world outside looked too bright through the car window, all pale afternoon sun and clean sidewalks and normal people carrying groceries like life had not just split open somewhere and left me crawling out of it.

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My newborn daughter was tucked against my chest in a hospital blanket, her cheek warm through the thin cotton, her breath soft enough that I kept looking down to make sure she was still there.

The blanket smelled like antiseptic, warm milk, and the plastic bassinet she had slept in while nurses checked my blood pressure every hour.

My incision burned every time the car rolled over a crack in the street.

The discharge folder sat in my lap, full of instructions I could barely read through the fog of pain medication and exhaustion.

Unstable blood pressure.

Fresh incision.

Strict rest.

Return immediately for dizziness, bleeding, chest pain, or shortness of breath.

The doctor had said it gently, with one hand on the bedrail and the other holding a pen.

‘You need help at home,’ he said.

I looked at Ethan when he said it.

Ethan did not look up from his phone.

He signed the papers at the hospital intake desk like he was accepting a package, not agreeing to take home the woman who had almost died giving him a child.

‘I’ll sign whatever gets her out,’ he told the nurse. ‘We have investors coming tonight.’

The nurse paused.

I saw it in her face.

That tiny hesitation women recognize when another woman wants to ask if you are safe but does not know how to do it with your husband standing there.

I gave her the kind of smile people give when they are too tired to be rescued.

That smile would shame me later.

It always does, when you think back on the moments you helped people hurt you because you were afraid of making a scene.

Ethan pulled into the driveway without a word.

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