She Paid For Her Sister's IVF, Then Her Mother Came For Her Baby-olweny - Chainityai

She Paid For Her Sister’s IVF, Then Her Mother Came For Her Baby-olweny

Twenty-four hours after Noah was born, Emma thought the hardest part was already behind her.

Her body told a different story every time she moved.

The stitches pulled when she shifted on the hospital bed.

Image

Her back ached from the hours before surgery.

Her hands still trembled from exhaustion, adrenaline, and the strange terror of loving someone so small he could disappear inside a blanket.

Noah slept against her chest with one tiny fist tucked under his chin.

The room smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and the thin coffee a nurse had brought at dawn.

Outside the door, carts rattled down the hallway.

Somewhere nearby, a newborn cried once and then settled.

Emma looked down at her son and whispered his name again.

“Noah.”

She had chosen it before anyone else could suggest something softer, older, or easier to claim.

She wanted one thing in that room that belonged to him because she gave it freely.

Not out of guilt.

Not out of duty.

Not because her family had decided love was something Emma owed them.

Just Noah.

The name felt steady in her mouth.

At 8:17 a.m., the door swung open.

Emma turned her head, expecting the nurse who had been checking her blood pressure every few hours.

Instead, her mother walked in.

Marlene did not knock.

She never had, not when Emma was sixteen and changing in her bedroom, not when Emma was twenty-seven and home on leave, not when Emma was recovering from surgery with a newborn in her arms.

Behind her came Lauren.

Emma’s older sister looked perfectly dressed for a tragedy she had rehearsed in advance.

Camel coat.

Pearl earrings.

Soft makeup.

A folded tissue pressed under one eye.

She looked less like a grieving woman than someone playing one for a room that had not yet understood the scene.

Marlene carried a thick manila folder.

Emma noticed it before she noticed her mother’s face.

That was the first warning.

Marlene had brought paperwork to a maternity room.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *