My Mom Said She Had My Baby—But My Daughter Was Beside Me-nga9999 - Chainityai

My Mom Said She Had My Baby—But My Daughter Was Beside Me-nga9999

My mother did not sound scared when she called.

That was what made it worse later.

She sounded annoyed, like I had left a laundry basket in her hallway or forgotten to pick up a prescription she had been holding for me.

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The call came at 11:47 p.m., long after my Evanston townhouse had gone quiet in the particular way a house goes quiet around a newborn.

Not peaceful.

Listening.

Rain tapped the front windows in uneven little clicks, and the refrigerator in the kitchen hummed like it had been left in charge of the room.

The lamp beside the couch threw a soft yellow circle over Lily’s bassinet, over the baby book I had not had the energy to fill out, over the cold coffee cup I kept reheating and forgetting.

I was sitting on the edge of the couch with one hand on the bassinet sheet.

That was something I had started doing without thinking.

After Lily was born, I touched everything.

Her blanket.

Her forehead.

The rise and fall of her chest.

The first month of motherhood had turned trust into a physical act.

Lily was asleep beside me, one tiny fist curled near her cheek, her pale hair shining under the lamp like a little halo made of dryer lint.

My phone buzzed against the couch cushion.

Mom.

Carol never called that late unless something had gone wrong in a way that could not wait until morning.

She had worked thirty-one years as a nurse, and even in retirement she carried herself like somebody might need her to take charge of a hallway at any minute.

She kept disinfecting wipes in her purse.

She corrected strangers who wore hospital bracelets too tight.

She could hear panic before words formed around it.

So when I answered, I braced myself for fear.

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