I thought the hardest part of bringing my newborn home would be the pain, exhaustion, and panic of being a first-time mom. I was wrong. The real shock came when my husband looked at our daughter, then at his car, and made it clear which one mattered more to him.
I gave birth to my daughter on a Friday morning. By that evening, my husband left us outside the hospital because he didn’t want her in his car.
I was bundled in layers under sweatpants that pressed in all the wrong places. My baby was strapped into her infant carrier, one trembling hand hooked through the handle, while the diaper bag dug into my shoulder. Logan walked beside me, carrying nothing—not the diaper bag, not the discharge papers, not even the blanket the hospital had sent home.
When we reached the pickup lane, he stopped abruptly. At first, I thought he’d forgotten where he parked. Then he looked at the carrier and said, “I’m not putting the baby in my car.”
I stared at him. “What?” I thought he had to be joking.
He pointed through the back window. “The seats.”
“Logan, open the door.”
He did, but stood there gazing at the back seat like it was a museum exhibit. “My leather is brand new. If she spits up in there, that smell is never coming out.”
I laughed once—out of disbelief, not humor. “I just gave birth.”
He shrugged. “That doesn’t change the seats.”
The irony was that he had that car because of me. After my dad died, I sold his lake house. Part of the money went into savings, part to bills, and part to Logan—after months of him insisting we needed a reliable luxury car before the baby arrived. He spent more time researching leather cleaner than helping me build the crib.
Still, I asked slowly, “You want me to do what, exactly?”
“Call a cab.”
I couldn’t believe it. “You want me to take our newborn home in a taxi because you’re worried about the car?”
He crossed his arms. “My seats cost more than your whole wardrobe. I’m not wrecking them on day one.”
I said, “I can barely walk.”
He got in, slammed the door, and drove away.