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“There is no empire without you,” he said. “I almost lost you today. I won’t run again.”
Slowly, I trusted him—not because of his words, but because of what he did every day.
At thirty-two weeks, I had an in-person ultrasound. Elias drove me to the hospital with intense caution. The main elevators were crowded, so I suggested the old service elevator.
“It’s fine,” I said. “I used it during residency.”
Then it jolted violently and stopped.
The lights flickered out.
Elias found his phone. No signal.
Then warm fluid rushed down my legs.
“Elias,” I whispered. “My water just broke.”
Panic crossed his face. “You’re only thirty-two weeks.”
“I don’t know how to deliver a baby,” he said, voice breaking.
“I do,” I gasped, grabbing his lapels. “I’m the doctor. You are my hands. Listen to me, and we will save our daughter together.”
The dark elevator became the whole world. Elias took off his jacket, put it behind my head, and laid his shirt beneath me. His hands shook, but his eyes stayed on mine.
“When she comes, catch her gently. Check the cord. If she doesn’t cry, rub her back and clear her mouth.”
“I won’t let her go.”
Then the urge to push became impossible to fight.
“Now!” I screamed.
In the dark, trapped between fear and hope, I fought for my baby’s life. Elias did not flinch. He spoke to me through every second.
“One more, Adelaide. I see her.”
With one final push, the pressure released.
Then silence.
“Elias?” I whispered. “Is she breathing?”
“Come on,” he begged. “Breathe for your mother. Breathe for me.”
Then a tiny cry pierced the dark.
I sobbed.
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