I was dying on the nursery floor while my husband drov

Tyler believed that distance and denial could rewrite reality, that a curated feed of sunsets and bourbon glasses would drown out the sound of his son’s screams. What he never understood is that the truth doesn’t vanish; it waits. It lingers in dried blood, in hospital charts, in the quiet fury of a woman who survives what should have killed her. My sister’s shaking hands held my life together when my husband chose an audience over a family.

In the weeks that followed, grief and rage became discipline. Passwords changed. Cameras were synced. Every arrogant post, every timestamp, every recorded silence formed a map of his neglect. By the time he swaggered back through the front door, the house was no longer his stage; it was my witness. The judge didn’t just grant me custody; she named what he’d done. Now, in a home where laughter drowns out ghosts, I watch my son run freely and know that the blood on that nursery floor was the last thing I ever sacrificed for a man who mistook performanc