Ryan Parker stood motionless in the nursery doorway, staring at the bloodstain on the cream rug as though his brain could not process what his eyes were showing him.For several seconds, he did not move.He did not breathe.The room felt unnaturally still.The house that had always greeted him with familiar little sounds—the refrigerator humming, Emma’s quiet footsteps, Ethan’s newborn cries—had turned into an empty shell.Emma?” he called again.His voice broke.No answer came.He stepped into the nursery carefully, the way a man might enter a crime scene before admitting the crime belonged to him.The blood had dried deep into the carpet, forming a dark, ugly stain. It stretched from beside the rocking chair toward the bassinet, as if someone had tried to drag themselves across the floor.
Ryan’s throat tightened.He remembered my face when he walked out.Pale.Sweating.Terrified.He remembered my hand shaking against the doorframe.He remembered me saying that this was not normal.he remembered his own voice, flat and annoyed.He had told me to stop being dramatic because it was his birthday weekend.His knees nearly buckled.“Emma,” he whispered.Then louder.“Emma!”He ran from one room to the next.The bedroom looked untouched except for the half-folded laundry I had left on the chair. The kitchen still had the mug of tea I had made and never finished. The bottle warmer remained on the counter. Ethan’s tiny blue blanket was lying across the sofa.But there was no wifNo baby.No sign of anyone alive.grabbed his phone and called me.Somewhere inside the house, my ringtone began to sound.oft.Muffled.Coming from the nursery.He followed the noise with trembling hands.