He Came Home Early And Found His Postpartum Wife Abandoned-mdue - Chainityai

He Came Home Early And Found His Postpartum Wife Abandoned-mdue

When Ethan Parker changed his flight from Munich to Chicago, he imagined the kind of homecoming people talk about for years.

He pictured his wife laughing before she cried.

He pictured his mother making too much noise and pretending she was angry he had not warned her.

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He pictured his sister Madison recording everything for Instagram, because Madison recorded every moment she thought made the family look beautiful.

Most of all, he pictured holding Lily for the first time.

His daughter had been born eleven days earlier by C-section while he was still in Germany, finishing a manufacturing project that had already taken too much from him.

The contract said he would return after the holidays.

But on December 30, sitting alone in a hotel room with snow pressing against the glass, Ethan opened his laptop and booked the earliest flight he could manage.

He bought small gifts at the airport because guilt has a way of disguising itself as generosity.

Cream cashmere scarf for Claire.

Swiss chocolates for Lily, though she was far too young to eat them.

A silver bracelet for Claire, simple and quiet, the kind she liked.

He also checked his bank before boarding.

The $8,000 wire transfer had cleared before Christmas.

That money was supposed to cover everything Claire needed while he was gone.

Formula.

Groceries.

Postpartum meals.

Vitamins.

Laundry help if she needed it.

A ride service if she had to get to a doctor.

Ethan had left the apartment stocked before he flew out, and he had given his mother Margaret the security code because she insisted no daughter-in-law of hers would recover alone.

Margaret had said it in the warm voice she used when other people were listening.

“Don’t worry about your girls,” she told him. “I raised two babies. I know what a new mother needs.”

Ethan believed her.

That was the part that later made him sick.

He believed her because she was his mother.

He believed Madison because she was his sister.

He believed family would know the difference between inconvenience and emergency.

At 11:43 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, Ethan opened the door to his Chicago apartment and knew before he turned on the light that something was wrong.

The darkness was too still.

Not cozy darkness.

Not everybody-in-the-living-room darkness.

It was the kind of dark a home gets when people have left it behind.

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