Her Parents Claimed She Was Broke. The Bank Records Said Otherwise-Quieen - Chainityai

Her Parents Claimed She Was Broke. The Bank Records Said Otherwise-Quieen

Snow had a way of making my parents’ street look innocent.

It softened the hedges, blurred the driveways, and covered every ugly thing with a layer of white.

That night, it covered my footprints almost as fast as I made them.

Image

I was two days out of the hospital, wearing the same loose sweatshirt I had worn home, with a newborn tucked inside my coat and a dead phone in my pocket.

Lily’s little body pressed against my chest, but her warmth was fading faster than mine was.

Her cries were not loud.

That was what scared me.

They were thin, tired, and uneven, breaking against the wind while I tried to shield her face with one hand and keep my balance on the icy sidewalk with the other.

Behind me, my parents’ house still glowed like something from a Christmas card.

Porch lights.

Salted driveway.

Big windows shining gold into the storm.

A small American flag near the front walk snapped in the wind, and for one bitter second, I remember thinking that even the flag looked warmer than my daughter.

The house taught me that night that warmth can glow in windows and still not belong to you.

An hour earlier, I had believed I could still go home.

Not forever.

Not even comfortably.

Just long enough to get through the first fragile days of motherhood with someone else in the house.

I had stood in my parents’ foyer with hospital discharge papers folded in my hand and my hospital bracelet still tight around my wrist.

My stitches burned every time I shifted Lily from one arm to the other.

The foyer smelled faintly of lemon polish and the expensive candle my mother liked to burn when guests came over.

There were no guests that night.

Only family.

That made it worse.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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