A Mother-In-Law Stormed Into Delivery And Tried To Claim The Baby-nga9999 - Chainityai

A Mother-In-Law Stormed Into Delivery And Tried To Claim The Baby-nga9999

The delivery room smelled like antiseptic, sweat, and the sour ice chips Marcus kept pressing to my lips because he did not know what else to do with his hands.

The fluorescent lights buzzed above me.

The fetal monitor kept tapping out the small, stubborn beat that had carried me through thirty-six hours of labor.

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By then, my whole body felt wrung out and left under a cold hospital sheet.

My hair was damp against my temples.

The paper gown stuck to my skin.

Every time I opened my eyes, the room looked too bright, too white, too far away.

“One more big push, Evelyn,” Dr. Winters said.

Her voice was calm enough to make me believe her.

“We can see his head. You’re doing great.”

Marcus stood beside me squeezing my hand so hard both of us had lost feeling in our fingers.

He kept whispering, “You’ve got this, Eevee. You’ve got this.”

He had called me Eevee since our second date, when I spilled coffee down the front of my shirt in a diner booth and laughed so hard I cried.

That was one of the things that made it hurt later.

He had known how to hold my hand through small humiliations.

He had known how to make me feel safe when nothing was really at stake.

But some people only know how to be brave when bravery is convenient.

At 2:14 p.m., according to the clock over the supply cabinet, I took the deepest breath I could and pushed.

Pain tore through me in one long, burning wave.

I remember the ceiling tiles.

I remember Marcus saying my name.

I remember thinking that my son was almost here.

Then the delivery room door slammed open.

“Where is he?” Judith screamed.

Her voice cracked against the walls so hard that even Dr. Winters looked up.

“Where is he?”

My mother-in-law stormed in like she owned the hospital.

Her expensive handbag swung from one elbow.

Her silver hair, usually shaped into a smooth helmet, had come loose around her face.

Mascara was smeared under her eyes.

A nurse came in behind her, already reaching for her arm.

“Ma’am, you cannot be in here,” the nurse said. “You need to leave now.”

Judith did not even turn her head.

She pointed straight at me.

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