Her Mother Demanded $2,000 After The Birth. Then The Receipts Came Out-mdue - Chainityai

Her Mother Demanded $2,000 After The Birth. Then The Receipts Came Out-mdue

Hours after I delivered my baby alone, my mother texted, “Brenda’s kids are expecting new phones for their birthday—send $2,000.” She had no idea that message would end everything.

A week later, she stormed into my house shouting, “How could you?”

My labor did not begin in some soft, glowing way, with candles on a dresser or a hospital bag waiting by the door.

Image

It began with my body folding over the kitchen counter while my husband’s phone rattled beside the fruit bowl.

The sound was small, but it felt urgent before Derek even picked it up.

He glanced at the screen, and all the color drained from his face.

It was his brother Wade calling from Tucson.

Their father, Earl, had collapsed at a construction site with chest pain bad enough that the crew called an ambulance before anyone could argue about it.

Derek put the call on speaker for half a second, just long enough for me to hear panic, sirens, and Wade saying, “You need to get here now.”

That was how the night changed.

One minute I was trying to decide whether the tightening in my belly was false labor.

The next, Derek was throwing clothes into a duffel bag with shaking hands.

I was thirty-seven weeks pregnant, swollen everywhere, uncomfortable in my own skin, standing barefoot in the kitchen while the refrigerator hummed and the overhead light made everything look too sharp.

Derek kept touching my belly as if he could bargain with our daughter.

“I’ll be back before she comes,” he said.

I believed him.

That was the thing about Derek.

He was not a man who made promises because they sounded good.

He stood under the porch light with his bag in his hand, his eyes full of apology, and I told him to go.

His father needed him.

Earl had treated me kindly from the first time we met, calling me kiddo and saving me the good corner piece of cornbread at family dinners.

So I kissed Derek, swallowed the fear sitting at the back of my throat, and said, “Go. Your dad matters right now.”

He held my face in both hands.

“I mean it, Jo. I’ll be back.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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