At a family dinner, I stood up smiling and announced I was pregnant. The whole

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“…Emily,” the doctor began, his voice somber, “you have suffered multiple injuries, but what’s most urgent is that you have experienced a placental abruption.” The room’s silence deepened, the gravity of the situation pulling everything into a standstill. “This is a serious condition where the placenta detaches from the womb,” he explained, casting a sympathetic glance at both Ethan and me.

Ethan’s grip on my hand tightened, his eyes widening in fear. “But… what does it mean for the baby?” he stammered, his voice cracking with desperation.

The doctor took a deep breath, as if steeling himself to deliver news no one ever wants to hear. “We’ve done everything we can,” he said, “but the situation is critical. We need to perform an emergency surgery immediately to give your baby any chance of survival.”

I felt the world crumbling around me, fear intertwining with the pain, and a desperate hope clinging to the edges of despair. The baby I had cherished, even before knowing of its existence, was in jeopardy. It felt surreal, like a nightmare I couldn’t wake from. Ethan nodded, his face a mix of terror and determination. “Do whatever it takes,” he said, barely above a whisper.

As the medical team prepared to wheel me into surgery, Ethan leaned close, his forehead touching mine. “I love you, Emily. You and our baby mean everything to me,” he said, a solitary tear sliding down his cheek. I nodded, unable to speak, overwhelmed by emotions I couldn’t begin to articulate.

The bright lights of the operating room were blinding, starkly contrasting with the shadows of fear looming over me. As the anesthesia began to pull me into unconsciousness, I clung to the hope that our child was as much a fighter as its parents.

Hours later, I awoke in a recovery room, disoriented but alive. Ethan was there, his eyes bloodshot, a mixture of relief and anxiety etched into his features. “Emily,” he said softly as he saw my eyes flutter open. “You’re okay. The surgery went well.”

“And the baby?” I asked, my voice barely a whisper, a question that felt heavier than anything I’d ever asked before.

Ethan hesitated, his silence dragging on like an eternity. “Our baby is in the NICU,” he said finally. “The doctors say it’s a miracle… but they’re still monitoring… complications.”

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