Daniel Brooks had built his life on routine. Every morning at 6:30 sharp he left his apartment overlooking the Chicago River, coffee in one hand, briefcase in the other. He prided himself on control, precision, and discipline—the tools of a man who had clawed his way into the upper echelons of business.
Yet at 6:45 on an ordinary weekday, a phone call shattered everything he thought he knew about control. “Mr. Brooks?
This is Nurse Turner from Mercy General Hospital. Your wife just gave birth. She’s in the ICU.
Please come quickly.”
Daniel froze, the words crashing into him like glass. Wife? He didn’t have a wife.
He’d never been married. A few girlfriends, nothing lasting. No rings, no vows.
And yet, the urgency in the nurse’s voice bypassed reason. Before he could think, before logic could tell him to laugh it off as a mistake, he was already in his car, tires screeching against asphalt as he tore across the city. The hospital corridors smelled of antiseptic and old coffee.
Daniel barely heard the shuffle of feet around him, the calls over intercoms. Dr. Patel, a tall man with tired eyes, met him at the ICU doors.
“Mr. Brooks, your wife delivered a baby girl this morning. There were complications.
Severe hemorrhage. She’s critical.”
Daniel opened his mouth to correct him, to say you’ve got the wrong man. But then the gurney rushed past.
On it lay a young woman with brown hair matted to her forehead, her skin pale as paper, her breaths shallow. Wires trailed from her arms. Her face, though exhausted and ghostly, carried a quiet beauty.
Something inside Daniel snapped. He turned back to Dr. Patel.
His voice, when it came, was steady, though his chest burned. “She’s my wife. Put everything under my name.
I’ll handle the bills.”
No one questioned it. Papers slid toward him. He signed without hesitation.
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