After the accident, I lay motionless in a hospital bed, my legs numb and a physical pain that pierced me with every breath, but nothing compared to that moment.

After the accident, I lay motionless in a hospital bed, my legs numb and a physical pain that pierced me with every breath, but nothing compared to that moment.

Before I could even ask what was wrong, she crossed the room in three quick steps.

The sound of her slap echoed through the room.

My head snapped to the side as shock spread across the faces of the doctors and nurses around us.

Then she did something even worse.

She leaned over the bed and ripped my newborn baby from my arms.

“No!” I screamed instinctively, reaching out, but my body refused to move the way I wanted.

Pain shot through my spine, locking me against the mattress.

“Give him back!” I cried desperately.

Margaret held Ethan tightly against her chest, rocking him possessively as if he belonged to her.

“You useless girl,” she spat. “You nearly killed yourself and my grandson in that accident. You’re not fit to take care of him.”

Her words cut deeper than the slap.

I looked around the room, my vision blurring with tears, searching for the one person who should have defended me.

My husband.

Daniel Bennett stood near the window.

His arms were crossed, his expression distant.

For a moment I waited for him to step forward, to tell his mother to stop, to remind everyone that I was his wife and the mother of his child.

But he didn’t move.

He didn’t say a single word.

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