I Walked Into The Hospital With Flowers For My Sister’s Baby—Then I Found My Husband Holding Their Son, And As They Smiled About Taking My Company, They Had No Idea My Late Grandmother Had Already Decided How Their Story Would End
I Walked Into The Hospital With Flowers For My Sister’s Baby—Then I Found My Husband Holding Their Son, And As They Smiled About Taking My Company, They Had No Idea My Late Grandmother Had Already Decided How Their Story Would End
The Flowers I Never Gave Her
The maternity floor at Hawthorne Regional Medical Center was unusually quiet that Thursday evening.
I walked through the polished hallway carrying an oversized bouquet of white garden roses and pale blue hydrangeas. My younger sister, Mallory, had always loved flowers that looked soft and expensive, even when she could not afford them herself.
I had just finished a sixteen-hour day at my restaurant group, but I was still smiling.
Mallory and I had not been close for several years. She believed I judged her choices, while I believed she only called when she needed something. Still, when our mother told me she had delivered a healthy baby boy, I allowed myself to hope that this child might bring us together again.
Outside room 427, I stopped to straighten the ribbon around the bouquet.
The door was partly open.
A man stood beside Mallory’s hospital bed, leaning toward her with one hand resting gently against her cheek.
It was my husband.
Warren Callahan had been married to me for eleven years. He had attended charity dinners beside me, helped open four restaurants under my name, and held my hand through every disappointing medical appointment when we learned that becoming parents would not be simple for us.
Now he was looking at my sister with a tenderness I had spent years begging him to show me.
Mallory held a newborn wrapped in a soft navy blanket.
Warren touched the baby’s tiny hand and smiled.
“He has your eyes,” he whispered.
Mallory laughed softly.
“And your stubborn chin.”
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