She Hid Her Judge’s Robe Until Her Mother-In-Law Took Her Baby-mdue - Chainityai

She Hid Her Judge’s Robe Until Her Mother-In-Law Took Her Baby-mdue

The recovery room smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and the sour kind of fear that settles into a hospital blanket when nobody in the room wants to name what is happening.

My C-section incision burned every time I breathed.

The sheet was cold against my legs.

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The monitor beside my bed kept making its small, steady beep, like it was the only thing in the room still committed to telling the truth.

Leo was on my right.

Luna was on my left.

Both of them were wrapped in hospital blankets, both so new their cries still sounded surprised by the world.

I had one arm around each of them, careful because the incision pulled if I moved too fast, careful because every nurse had warned me not to twist, careful because pain makes you humble in ways pride never can.

I remember the IV tape itching on the back of my hand.

I remember the plastic water cup on the rolling tray.

I remember thinking David would be back any minute from the discharge desk.

Then Mrs. Sterling walked in.

She did not knock.

She did not smile.

She did not ask how I was feeling after major surgery or whether the twins had latched or whether I had slept for more than twenty minutes since they were born.

She came in wearing her beige church coat and pearls, holding a manila folder against her ribs like it was more precious than either of the babies in my arms.

For three years, my mother-in-law had treated me like an inconvenience David had dragged into the family and forgotten to apologize for.

At Sunday dinners, she would ask him whether I had “found anything useful to do yet.”

At cookouts, she would make little comments about my old SUV, my plain flats, and the fact that I never seemed to be “busy enough” to justify being tired.

Once, she slid three printed job listings under my dinner plate while everyone was passing potato salad.

She called it encouragement.

I called it what it was.

Humiliation with a smile on it.

David knew I worked.

Of course he knew.

He knew why my phone went silent during certain hours, why I carried sealed files in a locked briefcase, and why some evenings I came home so drained I stood in the laundry room for five minutes before I could even take off my shoes.

But I had never told Mrs. Sterling that I was a judge.

I had not hidden it because I was ashamed.

I had hidden it because people like her do not learn respect when you hand them your title.

They learn how to perform respect until it benefits them.

So to her, I was just Elena, the jobless wife who married her son, kept a quiet house, drove a practical car, and never defended herself loudly enough to satisfy anyone watching.

That was the version of me she felt safe abusing.

The folder landed on the rolling tray beside my cup with a soft slap.

Across the top page, in clean black letters, were the words Waiver of Parental Rights.

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