Pregnant Wife Was Treated Like A Maid Until One Door Opened-nhu9999 - Chainityai

Pregnant Wife Was Treated Like A Maid Until One Door Opened-nhu9999

He Walked Into The House Expecting Dinner And Silence. Instead, He Found His Pregnant Wife Breaking Apart At The Sink.

Diana had once loved the quiet hour before dinner. Before Vanessa started coming over whenever she felt bored, before friends began treating the house like a free lounge, before pregnancy turned ordinary chores into tests of balance and breath.

At seven months pregnant, Diana moved carefully through the day. Her ankles swelled by late afternoon. Her back ached when she stood too long. Still, she tried not to complain because she believed family should feel welcome.

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Her husband worked twelve-hour shifts, sometimes coming home with sawdust in his hair and cold in his shoulders. He did not ask for much when he walked through the door. Dinner. Silence. Diana’s tired smile.

Vanessa was his younger sister, the kind of person relatives excused for years because she was “just young,” “just dramatic,” or “just having fun.” Those excuses had become armor. She wore them everywhere, especially in Diana’s kitchen.

Diana had tried to like her. She remembered buying Vanessa a birthday cake one year when nobody else remembered. She remembered driving her to an appointment in the rain. She remembered lending her money that never came back.

But pregnancy changed what Diana could absorb. The small insults no longer rolled off. They landed heavier. Every demand became another reminder that kindness, when offered to selfish people, could be mistaken for permission.

That afternoon, Vanessa arrived with friends and bags of snacks. She did not ask whether Diana was tired. She did not ask whether the house was ready for guests. She simply walked in and took over the living room.

The music started first. Then the laughter. Then the cans opening, chips spilling, voices rising over one another as Diana moved between the sink, refrigerator, and counter with slow, careful steps.

Vanessa asked for soda. Then plates. Then napkins. Then water. Each request sounded casual, but none of them were really requests. They were orders wrapped in family entitlement, tossed toward a pregnant woman like she had nowhere else to stand.

Diana tried to keep her face calm. She rinsed cups while warm water ran over her wrists. The smell of lemon soap mixed with grease from pans Vanessa had dragged from the cabinet and abandoned.

Her lower back tightened. She paused once, pressing her palm against the counter until the ache passed. Nobody noticed. Or worse, they noticed and decided it was not their problem.

One friend laughed when Diana moved slowly. Another joked that married life must be boring if dishes were her whole personality. Vanessa did not stop them. She smiled at her phone as if silence made her innocent.

By the time Diana’s husband turned onto their street, the house already felt less like home. He had spent the day waiting for the moment he could sit beside his wife and feel the baby move under his hand.

Instead, he heard music before he even reached the porch. The bass was too loud. The front window glowed with television light. A soda can had been left on the entry table, sweating onto the wood.

When he opened the door, the smell hit him: chips, sugar, old grease, and the faint sourness of spilled soda. Vanessa and her friends were laughing on the couch like the room had never belonged to anyone else.

He did not speak at first. He looked at the crumbs ground into the carpet, the empty bags on the table, the cans tipped sideways. Then he looked toward the hallway, where the kitchen light burned too bright.

“Where’s Diana?” he asked.

Vanessa did not even lift her head properly. “Kitchen,” she said, like she was naming a room instead of a person. That tiny carelessness told him more than a confession could have.

He walked down the hall quickly. Every step gathered the day’s exhaustion into something sharper. He expected to find Diana cooking or setting plates. He did not expect to see her bracing herself against the sink.

The first thing he noticed was her hand. It was wet, red from hot water, and shaking. The second was the way she stood, bent forward slightly, trying to carry the weight of the baby and the room.

The plate had already slipped from her fingers and struck the sink. Not hard, not loud, but clean enough to make her flinch. Water ran over the counter and dripped slowly onto the floor.

Diana looked used to it. That was the sentence that formed in him before any anger did. Not surprised. Not offended. Not even fully scared. Used to it, as if humiliation had become part of the furniture.

“Diana,” he said softly.

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