Her Family Demanded Her Baby’s Nursery, Then Her Husband Heard Everything-mdue - Chainityai

Her Family Demanded Her Baby’s Nursery, Then Her Husband Heard Everything-mdue

The second I stepped into my parents’ dining room, my mother looked up from her plate and told me to come closer.

Her voice was so cold it barely sounded like it belonged to a person.

“Since your sister is pregnant now,” she said, “you’re going to hand over everything you bought for your baby and sign over the house your in-laws gave you.”

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For a second, I thought I had heard her wrong.

The smell of pot roast filled the room before the meaning of her words could settle in my body.

Salt, onions, thick gravy, warm bread, the kind of dinner smell that usually meant family was pretending to be normal for at least an hour.

The chandelier above the dining table gave everything a polished yellow shine.

Outside, October wind moved through the front yard, and the little American flag my mother kept on the porch snapped once against its wooden pole.

Inside, every fork stopped moving.

My sister Jessica sat beside my mother with one hand resting on her stomach.

She did not look nervous.

She looked pleased.

Her mouth curved slowly, soft and mean, like she had been waiting for this exact moment and wanted to watch my face change.

“Wow,” she said. “So I get the nursery, the gifts, and the house, and you don’t even get a congratulations. I guess that tells you who deserves it more.”

I was thirty-two weeks pregnant.

I was still wearing my navy scrubs from a twelve-hour shift at the hospital.

My feet throbbed inside shoes I had wanted to kick off before I ever pulled into the driveway.

At 6:18 p.m. that Tuesday, I had come to tell my parents that Michael and I were having a daughter.

I had even imagined the scene on the drive over.

My mother might blink too fast.

My father might clear his throat and pretend he was not touched.

Jessica might roll her eyes, but maybe, for once, she would let the moment exist without poisoning it.

That was the version I still carried in me when I stepped through the door.

Instead, I stood in that dining room with one hand on my belly while my family discussed my baby’s crib like it was a spare lawn chair in the garage.

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