The couple's car was a write-off after the crash on Friday night. Photo / Supplied
The couple's car was a write-off after the crash on Friday night. Photo / Supplied
Nancy De Arcos had always dreamed of having a little girl.
Her husband, Eder Rivera, says they already had an 18-month-old son and his wife was 4 months' pregnant.
They were yet to discover the sex of the baby, but just last week De Arcos had phoned excitedly to tellhim that she felt it move for the first time.
However, just before midnight on Friday, after finishing their first night at the Papatoetoe night markets near K-Mart, his wife's dream was horrifically taken away from her.
As they drove off, in separate cars, from the market after packing up their Mexican food stall, Tacos El Carnal, they headed to their Avondale home.
But as Rivera, 29, drove off, a couple of minutes later, he heard a loud bang.
"I think I was a block ahead of her and about to take the [SH20] motorway when I heard this loud noise and I looked in the rearview mirror and I didn't see her."
He turned around and then discovered his wife's car up against a tree on a neighbouring property after smashing through a fence, because of the impact of colliding with another vehicle.
Rivera, who has been in New Zealand for four years and De Arcos for three years, said they were both excited about the pregnancy, especially his wife.
While he has an older daughter with a former partner she desperately wanted a girl.
Eder Rivera, 29, with wife Nancy De Arcos, 28, and their children, Amy, 8, and Diego, 18 months. Photo / Supplied
"This was going to be our second child. Obviously we were very excited because we were hoping to have a girl and sadly the baby was a girl.
"The baby was already formed and it was basically just ready to grow."
He said Friday had been "a very special day" as his wife finally got to open a small business selling Mexican food they had set up.
They'd a reasonably busy night at the markets and were heading home when the tragedy struck.
Rivera said they were told when his wife went into surgery at Middlemore Hospital during the early hours of Saturday morning that his wife had internal bleeding and their baby was not responding.
Speaking to the Herald from his wife's beside today, said after surgery to have their baby removed, De Arcos was able to hold it in a strikingly emotional moment.
"They gave her the baby ... she started singing to the baby, kissing her. It was tough to see. I was trying to hold it together and not to break, but that was just too much.
"I was still hoping that it didn't look like a baby, but it was fully formed."