Analise is 10 days old and sleeping in the plastic bassinet next to the bed. I look down at her face, pale, smooth and slightly translucent, a roadmap of blue veins visible beneath. She has a mop of feathery auburn hair and I hope that her eyes fluttering beneath thin lids will stay blue, unlike her brothers and sister. I feel so blessed, two daughters and two sons, a loving husband, a life I had always wanted.
It’s early spring, and the dreary view outside the hospital window is of a grey sky with a watery sun over a rooftop parking lot. I was sorry to have only sandals on my feet to carry Analise out to the car, it looks so cold out there, and I shove my icy feet under the faded hospital blanket. Tired of the stack of magazines by the bed, of flipping through the channels on the miniscule pay-as-you-stay TV mounted in the corner, I let out a sigh. Let’s just get on with this, I thought, staring at the door, willing the doctor to our room. I want to go home.
Soon there was a knock and our doctor stepped in with a small smile. She was my age, mid thirties and dressed professionally, with long dark hair swept away from her face. We had met two days ago but already I felt very much at ease with her. I think that under different circumstances that we could have been friends.
“We’re all set.” I say after greeting her, eagerly putting on my shoes. I lift the baby to my chest, wearing her new pink sleeper with the puffy white lambs. After two sons her entire wardrobe was varying shades of pink, and I relished it. “I guess that we’ll see you tomorrow?” I ask, still sitting back on the bed.