New Mum’s Uncle Saw The Bruises — Then His Old Tattoo Terrified Them-heuh

I was cradling my newborn daughter when my uncle stepped into the hospital room and noticed the dark bruises shaped like fingers around my throat.

Across the room, my husband sat back with a smug little smile, as if the sight of me shaking in a hospital bed was nothing more than a private joke.

“Just reminding her who’s in charge of this family now,” Brandon said.

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The words hung there, ugly and ordinary at the same time.

My daughter Emma slept against me, wrapped in the thin hospital blanket, her mouth opening and closing in tiny soft breaths.

She had been in the world for six hours.

I had been in labour for nineteen.

My body felt like it no longer belonged to me, every muscle sore, every sound too sharp, every movement slow and heavy.

There was a paper cup of tea on the tray beside me, long cold.

My discharge forms were clipped together under a cheap pen that did not work.

A visitors’ chair had been dragged close to the bed, but Brandon had not sat there to comfort me.

He had sat there to supervise.

His father, Charles Whitmore, stood near the window in his expensive coat, one hand tucked into his pocket, looking around the room with faint distaste.

He did not look shocked by the bruises.

He looked inconvenienced by them.

Uncle Jack paused just inside the door.

He had brought a small bunch of supermarket flowers and a packet of biscuits, because Jack had never arrived anywhere empty-handed.

His old coat was damp at the shoulders from the drizzle outside.

His hands were rough from a lifetime of engines, tools, and work that left marks no expensive watch could hide.

He looked first at Emma.

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