Stories

In the Hospital, My Sister Accused Me of Trying to Kill Her—Then My Mother Attacked My Pregnant Belly

I stood there, completely frozen in the hospital room, as everything spiraled out of control in a way I never could have predicted. My sister Brittany suddenly ripped the oxygen tube from her face and began screaming hysterically, her voice piercing and dramatic as she pointed directly at me. “Help! She did it! She’s trying to kill me so she can take my house!” The accusation hit me like a shockwave, so sudden and so absurd that my mind couldn’t even catch up to what was happening. One second I had been reaching out to adjust her tube, worried about her breathing, and the next, I was being painted as something monstrous.

Before I could even form a sentence, the door burst open. My parents rushed in, their faces already twisted with panic and fury, as if they had been expecting to find me guilty. My mother didn’t hesitate for even a heartbeat. She didn’t ask what happened, didn’t look at me, didn’t question Brittany’s wild accusation. Instead, she grabbed the metal IV stand beside the bed and hurled it straight toward me with all her strength. “How could you try to murder your own sister?” she screamed, her voice cracking with rage as the heavy metal slammed into my eight-month pregnant stomach.

The pain was instant. Blinding. It exploded through my body so violently that I collapsed before I could even cry out. My breath vanished, my hands instinctively wrapping around my stomach as if I could shield my baby from what had just happened. The room tilted, sounds distorted, and the last thing I remember was Brittany’s exaggerated sobbing mixed with my mother shouting for help—help not for me, but because of me.

Then everything went dark.

When I opened my eyes again, harsh hospital lights burned above me, and my body felt distant, heavy, like it no longer belonged to me. A doctor hovered close, his face tense, his expression carefully controlled, as if he was weighing every word before speaking. “Lauren,” he said gently, “there’s something you need to know about your baby.” His tone alone was enough to send a wave of panic crashing through me, my heart racing as fear took hold.

Before he could continue, my mind dragged me backward through memories I had spent years trying not to confront. My name is Lauren Hayes, and for as long as I can remember, my sister Brittany has been the center of my parents’ world. Even as children, she had a way of controlling every situation—crying on command, twisting stories, making herself the victim no matter what happened. And every single time, my mother would rush to her side as if nothing else mattered. I learned early that Brittany didn’t just want attention—she needed to be seen as the one who deserved everything.

Just two weeks before this nightmare, Brittany had been admitted to the hospital after a severe asthma attack. Despite everything, I visited her every day. I ignored the discomfort of my pregnancy, the exhaustion weighing me down, and showed up anyway. I brought her food, clean clothes, the little comforts she liked. I stayed by her side even when she snapped at me or complained endlessly, convincing myself that being a good sister meant enduring it.

But something changed.

She started asking about Grandma June’s house—questions that felt too specific, too intentional. Grandma had updated her will recently, and somehow Brittany knew about it. The house had been left to me, not out of favoritism, but because I had been the one there—driving Grandma to appointments, buying her groceries, sitting with her through chemotherapy when no one else would. But Brittany didn’t see it that way. To her, it was something stolen.

In the hospital, her personality shifted depending on who was watching. When we were alone, her voice was sharp, cold, almost calculating. When our parents walked in, she transformed instantly—soft, fragile, wounded. “It’s not fair you get everything,” she would say quietly, only to turn it around moments later with, “Lauren’s always manipulating people.” Each visit left me more unsettled, but I ignored it, telling myself I was overthinking.

Until that morning.

I walked into her room and noticed her oxygen tube wasn’t sitting properly. Without thinking, I reached to fix it. I barely touched it before she slapped my hand away, her eyes narrowing in a way that made my stomach drop. Then, without warning, she tore the tube out herself and started screaming like I had attacked her. Within seconds, nurses rushed in, alarms blared, and chaos filled the room before I could even explain.

And then my parents came in.

Already convinced.

Already furious.

My mother didn’t question anything. She saw Brittany crying and immediately chose her side, lifting the IV stand and throwing it at me as if I were the enemy. That moment ended with me unconscious on the floor… and Brittany perfectly playing the victim once again.

Now, lying in the hospital bed, I watched the doctor carefully, my chest tight with dread. “Lauren,” he said slowly, “the impact caused complications. We’re monitoring your baby’s heart rate very closely.” His words alone made my breath hitch, fear gripping me so tightly I could barely think.

Then he hesitated.

“But there’s something else,” he added quietly.

My throat went dry. “What?” I whispered.

He lowered his voice, glancing briefly toward the door before looking back at me. “Your medical records… they don’t match what your family told us,” he said. “There’s a note in your file about your mother. And… a prior case.”

My heart pounded. “What prior case?” I asked, barely able to get the words out.

The doctor’s expression darkened slightly. “Years ago, your mother signed paperwork here,” he said. “It involved a baby… and your sister.”

Before I could even begin to process what that meant, the door opened.

My mother walked in.

Her face was calm. Smiling. As if nothing had happened.

Behind her, I could still hear Brittany crying dramatically down the hallway, her voice echoing like a performance that refused to end.

My mother closed the door softly behind her, her movements controlled, practiced, like she had already planned exactly what she was going to say. “Lauren, honey,” she said sweetly, her tone almost comforting, “you really scared us. You can’t go around attacking your sister like that.”

I tried to sit up, but a sharp wave of pain shot through me, forcing me back against the bed. My hands trembled as I gripped the sheets. “I didn’t touch her,” I whispered, my voice weak but desperate. “She pulled it out herself. You threw that stand at me.”

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