The Baby in My Mother’s Living Room Had My Past on Her Wrist-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Baby in My Mother’s Living Room Had My Past on Her Wrist-nga9999

My mother’s call came at 1:17 a.m., and before I even answered it, I knew something was wrong.

Diane Avery did not call late.

My mother believed the world stayed manageable if you respected routine.

Image

Tea at nine.

Doors locked by ten.

Television off by ten-thirty.

Bed by eleven.

She had lived in that little white house long enough for every board in the hallway to know her footsteps, and every neighbor on the street knew that if Diane’s porch light was still on after midnight, somebody in the family was either sick or in trouble.

That night, my apartment smelled like baby lotion, warm laundry, and the peppermint tea I had forgotten beside the bed.

Rain tapped lightly against the window.

Lily slept curled against my side with one fist hooked into my shirt, eight months old and fierce even in her sleep.

When the phone vibrated against the wooden crate I used as a nightstand, the sound went straight through my chest.

I looked at the screen.

Mom.

For half a second, I stared at it like looking longer might turn it into a harmless mistake.

Then I answered.

“Mom?”

There was breathing on the line.

Not the sleepy, embarrassed breath of someone who had dialed by accident.

Not the confused little laugh my mother would have made if her thumb had slipped on the screen.

This breathing was controlled and thin.

It sounded like she was trying not to wake something.

“Morgan,” she whispered. “When are you coming back for the baby?”

I looked down so fast my neck hurt.

Lily was still there.

She was warm under the blanket, one cheek pressed into my side, her lashes dark against her skin.

I could smell milk on her breath.

I could see the little crease above her wrist where her sleeve had bunched up.

She was real.

She was mine.

“Mom,” I said carefully, “what are you talking about?”

“You dropped her off,” my mother said.

Her words came too fast, as if she was afraid she would lose them if she slowed down.

“You said you were exhausted. You said you needed a few hours. I told you to go home and sleep. I put her in the living room so I could hear her if she woke up, but then you never came back.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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