Time stretched.
Minutes felt like hours.
I sat. I stood. I paced.
And then my phone buzzed again.
Not my mother this time.
Dr. Melissa Crane.
I answered immediately.
“This is Michael Carter.”
“Michael,” a calm but urgent voice said. “I’ve been trying to reach Sarah. Is she with you?”
“She’s in surgery,” I said. “Emergency C-section.”
A sharp inhale on the other end.
“I was afraid of that.”
“What’s going on?” I demanded. “She had test results. My mother took them.”
Another pause.
Then: “Those results showed a complication. A serious one.”
My chest tightened again.
“What kind?”
“Placental instability,” she said. “High risk of abruption. We flagged it as urgent. I told Sarah she needed to be monitored closely. If she experienced pain or fluid leakage, she was to call 911 immediately.”
I closed my eyes.
“She did,” I whispered. “My mother told her not to.”
Silence.
Then, carefully: “Michael… your mother contacted me earlier today.”
My eyes snapped open.
“What?”
“She asked for a copy of the results,” Dr. Crane said. “She claimed she was helping coordinate care.”
“That doesn’t make any sense.”
“No,” the doctor agreed quietly. “It doesn’t.”