Pain exploded through me. The room tilted. Leah screamed my name. Someone shouted for an ambulance.
As I collapsed, I saw my mother clutching the donation box tightly to her chest.
She thought she had won.
But even through the pain, just before everything went dark, I remembered one thing—
The camera was still recording.
I woke to the steady beeping of machines.
For a few seconds, I didn’t know where I was. Then the pain hit, memories rushed back, and I tried to sit up.
“Noah?” I whispered.
Leah appeared beside me, her eyes red. “He’s alive.”
I sobbed.
“He’s in the NICU,” she said softly. “Tiny, angry, fighting everything—just like you.”
My son had been delivered by emergency C-section. Too early. Too small. Surrounded by tubes.
But alive.
The doctor said the next forty-eight hours were critical.
Then the police arrived.
Two officers stood near my bed while my mother sat outside, crying loudly for attention.
“She’s confused,” my mother sobbed through the door. “My daughter has always had emotional problems. Pregnancy made her unstable.”
I closed my eyes.
The same story again.
When she stole my scholarship, I was “ungrateful.”
When she opened credit cards in my name, I was “dramatic.”
When I cut contact, I was “mentally fragile.”
Now she had nearly killed my baby—and still played the victim.
“Ms. Bell,” the officer asked gently, “would you like to give a statement?”
My body was weak.
My mind was not.
“Yes,” I said. “And collect the video footage from the hall before my mother gets to it.”
Leah’s eyes lit up.
“There’s video?” the officer asked.
“Three cameras,” I replied. “One above the gift table. One at the entrance. One facing the dessert table.”
Outside, my mother’s crying stopped.
Then footsteps hurried away.
Leah grabbed her phone. “I’m calling Mark.”
Mark—her husband—had already set the footage to upload to the cloud.
By sunset, my mother changed her strategy.
She gave an interview in the hospital parking lot, crying to a gossip page.
“My daughter attacked me over money,” she claimed. “I was just trying to protect the donations.”
Aunt Carla stood beside her, nodding.
They looked convincing.
Clean.
Innocent.
Then they filed a legal request claiming I was unfit to manage the donation fund—and that my mother should take control “for the baby’s benefit.”
Leah read it out loud, shaking with anger.
“She wants the money while Noah is in surgery?”
I stared at my son through the NICU glass, his tiny chest rising and falling.
“No,” I said quietly. “She wants me overwhelmed so I forget who I am.”
Leah frowned.
I reached for my laptop.
Before maternity leave, I wasn’t helpless.
I was a forensic accountant for the district attorney.
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