My Mom’s Belly Kept Growing Until The Baby Monitor Exposed The Truth-mdue - Chainityai

My Mom’s Belly Kept Growing Until The Baby Monitor Exposed The Truth-mdue

Six months after my mom moved into our apartment to help care for my daughter, I started noticing her belly growing day by day.

By the time the baby monitor showed me what I was not supposed to see, I had already made myself believe half a dozen ugly explanations.

My name is Emily Carter.

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I was twenty-nine then, married to Michael, and our daughter Olivia had just crossed from newborn fragility into that soft, round, bright-eyed stage where every sound she made felt like a message only I could translate.

We lived in a two-bedroom apartment near a small neighborhood park, the kind with a mailbox cluster by the sidewalk, a few family SUVs always parked crooked near the curb, and a little American flag stuck in one planter outside the leasing office.

Nothing about our life looked dramatic from the outside.

It looked tired.

It looked like takeout containers in the trash, folded baby blankets on the couch, formula coupons on the fridge, and my laptop open long after everyone else had gone to bed.

I worked for a tech company, which sounds cleaner than it felt.

Most days were meetings, reports, client calls, and messages that arrived after hours with the cheerful cruelty of people who knew I would answer.

When Olivia was born, I kept waiting for the exhaustion to pass.

It did not pass.

It settled in my neck, behind my eyes, in the place where patience used to be.

Michael helped as much as he could, but he had his own office emergencies, his own late calls, his own talent for believing a problem was smaller if he lowered his voice while discussing it.

We could have hired a sitter.

I even interviewed two.

Both were kind.

Both had references.

Both made me feel like a terrible mother because I could not hand my baby over without imagining every impossible thing that might happen while I was gone.

That was when I called my mom.

Her name was Sarah.

She lived alone in a small rental after my father died, and although she never said the word lonely, I could hear it in the silence behind her voice.

When I asked if she would come stay with us for a while, she did not hesitate.

‘I’ll pack tonight,’ she said.

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