A Midnight Call, A Stranger Baby, And The Name She Feared Most-mdue - Chainityai

A Midnight Call, A Stranger Baby, And The Name She Feared Most-mdue

Before midnight, my phone rang with my mother’s name, and for one second I thought somebody had died.

That is where your mind goes when a woman like Diane Avery calls at 1:17 a.m.

My mother did not do late-night drama.

Image

She did not call because she was bored, lonely, or restless.

She had tea at nine, checked the front door at ten, watched the weather, washed her cup, and went to bed like the world stayed upright because she kept her little habits in order.

So when her name lit up my phone, buzzing against the wooden crate I used as a nightstand, my body understood fear before my mind had words for it.

The apartment was cold enough that the blanket had slipped around my shoulders like damp paper.

Lily slept beside me, eight months old and warm, one fist tucked under her cheek, the other twisted into my shirt.

Her breath came soft and steady.

Real.

Mine.

I answered with my throat already tight.

“Mom?”

At first, all I heard was breathing.

Not sleepy breathing.

Not confused breathing.

It was the careful, shallow sound of a person trying not to wake whatever stood near her in the dark.

Then my mother whispered, “Morgan… when are you coming back for the baby?”

I looked down at Lily so fast pain shot up my neck.

“What are you talking about?” I asked.

“You dropped her off,” Mom said, each word shaking loose like it had been trapped in her chest. “You said you were exhausted. You said you needed a few hours. I told you to go home and sleep. I put her in the living room so I could hear her if she woke up, but then you never came back.”

I pressed my hand against Lily’s back.

She was there.

She was breathing.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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