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    My husband told me to “call a taxi” while I was in labor.

    26/04/2026

    At dinner, my stepson looked straight at me and said, ‘You’re a loser. But my mom isn’t.’ My husband said nothing. I said nothing. I just sat there and took it. A week later, he had no job, no car, and nowhere left to stay. That night, my husband called me in a panic.”

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    Home » My husband told me to “call a taxi” while I was in labor.
    Moral

    My husband told me to “call a taxi” while I was in labor.

    Han ttBy Han tt26/04/20266 Mins Read
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    PART 1

    “Just call a taxi, Valeria. I’m not missing a meeting because you decided to go into labor in the middle of the night.”

    Those were the last words my husband said before rolling over and pulling the sheet over his face.

    It was 2:14 a.m. in our house in Zapopan. I stood in the doorway, legs shaking, my nightgown soaked, another contraction hitting so hard I had to bite my lip to stay quiet. Outside, the gated neighborhood slept peacefully—perfect homes, security cameras, manicured lawns—like nothing bad could ever happen there.

    “Oscar… my water broke,” I whispered, trying not to panic. “The baby is coming.”

    He barely opened his eyes. No urgency. No concern. He didn’t even sit up.

    “You’re overreacting, Valeria. The doctor said it could take hours.”

    “I can’t drive like this.”

    He sighed, annoyed.

    “Then use an app. That’s what taxis are for. I have a presentation tomorrow. I need rest.”

    Another contraction bent me in half.

    “Oscar, please…”

    He silenced his phone and muttered, “Don’t start with the drama.”

    Then he closed his eyes again.

    I stood there waiting—hoping he’d change his mind, remember this was his child too. But nothing happened. Just the sound of his steady breathing while I struggled to stay upright.

    In the living room, shaking, I tried to book a ride. The first driver canceled. The second didn’t move. The third was unavailable. I called my mother—she lived hours away. I called Oscar again. His phone was off.

    That’s when I realized this wasn’t an accident.

    It was a choice.

    I dressed as best I could, grabbed my hospital bag, my ID, the small blue blanket I’d bought at the market, and my keys. One hand against the wall, the other on my belly, I made it to the garage.

    Driving alone down the empty avenue, I whispered prayers between contractions. Every red light felt cruel. Every wave of pain reminded me: I was alone because the man who promised to protect me chose to sleep.

    I reached the hospital at 3:02 a.m. A guard rushed out with a wheelchair.

    “Are you with someone?” he asked.

    That question hurt more than anything.

    “No,” I said. “I came alone.”

    My son was born at 6:11 a.m.—small, premature, fists clenched, crying loudly like he was claiming his place in the world.

    “Hello, Emiliano,” I whispered.

    Oscar had wanted to name him after his grandfather.

    Not anymore.

    At 8:26 a.m., I got a message:

    “Are you at the hospital yet?”

    Not “Are you okay?”
    Not “How’s the baby?”

    Just that.

    I didn’t reply.

    Later, while Emiliano slept on my chest, I opened my banking app—and saw it. Transfers. Five thousand. Eight thousand. Ten thousand. All going to the same account. Then charges—for an apartment in Providencia.

    It wasn’t stress.

    It wasn’t work.

    My husband had another life.

    And days later, he showed up at my door—with his lover and his mother—demanding to see the baby.

    I had no idea how much worse it would get.

    PART 2

    The next day, Oscar texted again:

    “Tell me when you’re discharged. I’m busy, but I’ll stop by to see the child.”

    The child.

    Not Emiliano. Not our son.

    Just… “the child.”

    Something inside me changed. Not anger. Not numbness. Something steadier.

    A nurse named Socorro touched my shoulder gently.

    “There are pains that don’t come from childbirth,” she said.

    I looked at her.

    “When a man leaves you alone at your most vulnerable moment,” she added, “it’s not a mistake. It’s a message.”

    That stayed with me.

    Before leaving the hospital, I called a lawyer—Fernanda Ibarra. I told her everything.

    “Don’t confront him yet,” she said. “Gather proof. Screenshots. Bank records. Messages. And don’t let him take the baby without legal protection.”

    “Isn’t that too harsh?” I asked.

    “It was harsh to let you drive while in labor,” she replied.

    When I got home, I didn’t go straight inside. I stopped at a locksmith. Changed the front door. The patio door. The gate access.

    Then I went in—with my son.

    The house looked the same—wedding photos, furniture we chose together, dishes his mother always criticized. But it no longer felt like home.

    It felt like a stage.

    A place where I played the happy wife while he built a second life behind my back.

    That afternoon, I kept digging. The expenses weren’t random—restaurants, flowers, boutique hotels.

    And one note that made me sick:

    “For rent, my love.”

    At 7:18 p.m., the doorbell rang.

    Through the camera, I saw them.

    Oscar.
    His mother.
    His lover.
    And his boss.

    I opened the door—but kept the chain on.

    “We came to talk,” Oscar said.

    “I came to meet my grandson,” his mother added.

    “We just want to see him,” Oscar insisted.

    I held Emiliano closer.

    “He’s asleep.”

    Natalia—the lover—shifted nervously.

    “Oscar told me you were separated,” she said softly.

    His boss turned slowly.

    “You said your wife was on bed rest.”

    The lies began to collapse.

    I looked at Oscar.

    “Do you want to see the baby?”

    “Of course,” he said.

    I met his eyes.

    “Which one?”

    “The one you sent to the hospital alone while I was in labor?”

    No one breathed the same after that.

    PART 3

    Oscar tried to speak—but for once, he had no words.

    “These aren’t accusations,” I said calmly. “They’re proof.”

    I read the messages out loud.

    “Call a taxi.”
    “I need sleep.”
    “I’ll see the child later.”

    His mother turned pale.

    “You let her go alone?”

    Natalia started crying.

    “You told me the baby might not even be yours…”

    Everything shattered.

    His boss stepped forward.

    “HR tomorrow,” he said coldly. “This isn’t your first issue.”

    Natalia stepped back.

    “You used company money too?”

    I showed the transfers.

    “You used our joint account,” I added.

    His mother whispered, “I didn’t know…”

    “Now you do,” I said.

    Oscar stepped closer.

    “Let me in.”

    “No.”

    “He’s my son.”

    “He’s the baby you ignored while I begged for help.”

    “I have rights.”

    “So does he.”

    His voice cracked.

    “You’re destroying our family over one mistake?”

    I shook my head.

    “Our family wasn’t destroyed that night. That’s just when I realized I was the only one trying to save it.”

    Silence.

    I closed the door.

    The sound of the lock felt like freedom.

    Three months later, Emiliano and I moved into a small house near my aunt. Oscar lost his job. Natalia left him. His mother went to therapy.

    And me?

    I learned something no one should have to learn in the middle of the night, in pain and fear:

    Sometimes, being abandoned doesn’t break you.

    It wakes you up.

    Now when I watch my son sleep, I don’t think about the night his father chose comfort.

    I think about the night I chose myself.

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    My husband told me to “call a taxi” while I was in labor.

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    At dinner, my stepson looked straight at me and said, ‘You’re a loser. But my mom isn’t.’ My husband said nothing. I said nothing. I just sat there and took it. A week later, he had no job, no car, and nowhere left to stay. That night, my husband called me in a panic.”

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