He Left His Pregnant Wife In Surgery, Then His Rival Walked In-hamyt

The nurse ran after Marcus Hartwell with the emergency surgery paperwork pressed flat against her chest, and Sarah Morrison heard every squeak of her shoes through the open hospital door.

Sarah was seven months pregnant with twin boys, swollen, terrified, and already drifting in and out of the strange white noise that comes before a body gives up.

Dr. Catherine Wells had said the words emergency C-section with the calmness doctors use when panic would only waste oxygen.

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The boys were in distress.

Sarah’s blood pressure was climbing.

The paperwork said doctors needed consent to save a mother and two premature babies before the hallway swallowed the last good minute they had.

Rebecca Torres, Sarah’s best friend since college and the only nurse in the room who still looked at Sarah like a person instead of a crisis, found Marcus by the elevators.

She said, “Your wife could die.”

Marcus did not lower his phone.

He looked past Rebecca toward the glowing elevator numbers and said, “Stay quiet. Tokyo matters more.”

Then he pushed the paperwork back into her hands as if the paper were a receipt he did not want.

Sarah heard Rebecca say his name again, sharper this time, but Marcus was already stepping into the elevator.

The doors closed with a soft chime that sounded almost polite.

Sarah stared at the ceiling as the bed started moving, and every excuse she had ever made for him seemed to fall behind her in the hallway.

In the operating room, the lights were bright enough to erase the corners of the world.

Sarah heard metal trays, clipped voices, and Dr. Wells saying she was going to sleep for a little while.

The anesthesia took the questions before anyone could answer.

When Sarah woke, the first thing she felt was the missing weight.

Her hands moved to her stomach, and pain tore through the incision so quickly she gasped.

Dr. Wells leaned over her with a face that had aged ten years in one night and said Lucas and Daniel were alive.

They were tiny.

They were in the neonatal intensive care unit.

They were breathing.

Sarah cried until the monitors around her answered with nervous beeps.

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