Chapter 726
โBut fortunately, both babies are very healthy.โ
When it came to the last sentence, Vonnieโs eyes flickered slightly.
I frowned deeply and anxiously asked, holding her hand, โAre the babies really healthy? Where are they? I want to see them.โ
Vonnie comforted me to sit down and smiled at me, saying, โDonโt worry, the babies are in the incubator now, doing well.โ
โWhy did they go to the incubator?โ
I donโt know why, but when I couldnโt see the babies, my heart was very anxious.
โBecause one of them inhaled amniotic fluid and had some other minor issues; the nurse took him to the incubator.โ
โDonโt worry, Ralda. I just went to check, the two babies are doing well. And your brother may have eaten; the nurse just told me that he can now drink 60 milliliters of milk powder.โ
I had no concept of how long it had been. I just asked her, โHow long have I been unconscious?โ
โItโs been three days, but your wound hasnโt healed yet, and your body is also injured, so you have to stay in the hospital for another week.โ
I looked at her and thought of the babies who had not yet been unmasked; my heart clenched tightly.
โHow much longer do the babies need to stay in the incubator? I want to go see them.โ
Vonnie couldnโt resist my pleading, and in the end, she helped me to the neonatal department.
When we arrived, Anton was waiting outside the neonatal department.
Seeing me coming over, he hurried to help me. โHow did you fall?โ
โIโll go take a look at the babies,โ I said to him.
Anton glanced at Vonnie.
Vonnie lowered her gaze and said, โRalda was very worried about the babies, so I helped her come over to take a look.โ
I looked at the two of them. I donโt know if I was too nervous or sensitive, but I vaguely felt that they were hiding something from me about the children.
While I was thinking, Anton smiled at me and said, โItโs okay, the babies are fine. I just checked on them.โ
โWas it?โ
With Vonnieโs support, I quickly arrived at the entrance of the neonatal department.
Apart from nurses, family members were not allowed to enter.
I could only stand at the door, looking inside through the glass.
There were many incubators inside; I didnโt know which incubators my babies were in.
Anton said, โCounting from the left, the third and fourth incubators are your babies; the one in front is the brother, and the one behind is the sister.โ
I listened and tiptoed to look inside, but still couldnโt see anything.
Vonnie supported me and said with a smile, โRalda, we donโt need to rush. In another ten days, they will come out, and then you will have two chubby little babies to cherish.โ
โAre they going to stay in there for ten more days?โ
For a woman who has just given birth, those ten days were really hard to get through.
Since I woke up, I felt like the days were dragging on like years, counting them one by one.
The longing for the babies has overshadowed the pain in the wound.
Finally, on the day when the babies were discharged from the hospital, Vonnie asked me to wait in the ward, and she and Anton went to bring them over.
But I couldnโt wait, so I followed them directly.
The wound was not healed yet, and it hurt to walk.
Arriving at the entrance of the neonatal department, I gave my name, and the nurse went in to pick up the babies.