Stories: Your baby’s gone

When my boyfriend left after finding out I was pregnant, I told myself I didn’t need him. I was twenty-two and terrified, but determined.

Then my son came early.

He was tiny—barely over three pounds—and whisked away to the NICU before I could even hold him. I wasn’t allowed to see him at first because of complications after delivery. I remember staring at the ceiling tiles, counting the dots, begging the universe to let him be okay.

Two days later, a doctor stood at the foot of my bed.

“Your baby’s gone.”

I don’t remember screaming, but I remember the sound in my ears.

A nurse—soft voice, kind eyes—sat beside me while I broke apart. She wiped my tears and said, “You’re young. Life still has plans for you.”

I hated her for saying that.

What plans could possibly replace my child?

I left the hospital with empty arms and a hollow chest. The nursery I’d painted pale blue stayed closed for months. Eventually, I moved apartments. I went back to school. I forced myself to breathe again. But every year, on his birthday, I lit a candle.

Three years later, someone knocked on my door.

When I opened it, my heart stopped.

It was her—the nurse.

She looked older, nervous. In her hands, she held a small envelope and a photo.

“I’ve been looking for you,” she said.

My stomach dropped. “Why?”

She swallowed. “Because I owe you the truth.”

My knees nearly gave out.

She explained everything in a rush. There had been a paperwork mix-up in the NICU. Two premature boys born within hours of each other. Similar last names. Similar medical complications.

“My baby died,” she said gently. “Not yours.”

I couldn’t process the words.

“What?” I whispered.

She handed me the photo.

A little boy with dark hair and my eyes smiled back at me, gap-toothed and alive.

I started shaking.

“Your son survived,” she said, tears in her own eyes. “He was discharged under the wrong file. The error wasn’t caught until a recent audit. I pushed for them to reopen the case. I couldn’t live with it.”

My hands trembled as I opened the envelope. Inside were hospital documents… and a phone number.

“He’s with a foster family,” she said. “They were told his mother had passed. They’ve cared for him since he left the hospital. They love him. But he is yours.”

The world tilted.

Weeks later, I stood in a quiet living room as a small boy with my smile peeked at me from behind a couch.

I knelt down.

“Hi,” I whispered.

He studied me for a long moment, then walked over and placed his tiny hand in mine.

And just like that, the plan life had for me—one I never believed in—wrapped his arms around my neck and called me Mom.

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