When Allison’s husband vanishes just days after she gives birth to triplets, she’s forced to rebuild her life from the ground up. Twelve years later, a chance encounter threatens the peace she’s fought so hard to protect, and the truth she thought was behind her begins to twist into something else.
I was 23 when Adam walked out of our lives, and even now, at 35, I can still hear the silence he left behind. There was no final conversation.
No apology. Just the sound of the hospital door closing behind him while I took turns holding our newborn triplets in my arms. I was stunned, stitched, and entirely alone.
I couldn’t even hold all three at once.
Amara was on my chest, Andy was crying in a bassinet, and Ashton had just been handed to me by a nurse.
My body was wrecked, my brain fogged from painkillers and panic, but I still looked toward Adam, waiting for the steady smile he’d worn through my pregnancy.
The one that said, We’ve got this.
Instead, I just saw fear.
“I — I need some air, Allison,” he muttered, avoiding my eyes. “Just a minute.”
That minute turned into an hour, and then two hours. And then two days.
My discharge papers were being drawn up.
All three babies had been absolutely fine, and I’d wanted to get them out of the germy hospital as soon as I could. The babies were being bundled by three different nurses, each of whom offered warm smiles and sympathetic glances.
And Adam?
Oh, he never came back.
I left the hospital alone two days later, my arms full of newborns, my chest hollowed out by a kind of panic I didn’t know was possible. Adam had taken the car.
He said he’d be right back, and I believed him.
I waited. I nursed, I rocked, I cried quietly when no one was looking. But he never returned.
When the nurse asked again if someone was coming to pick us up, I just nodded and reached for my phone.
I didn’t even know what I was saying when the cab company picked up. I think I mumbled something about needing a van. They told me it would be 25 minutes.
I sat in the hospital lobby with three tiny babies tucked into the carrier seats the nurses helped me strap in.
I tried to look calm, capable, like someone who had a plan all along — not a woman with three babies who was on the verge of breaking down.
But I didn’t.
The cab driver was kind. He didn’t ask questions when he saw the state I was in. He just helped me load the babies in and turned down the radio without a word.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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