Eight Months Pregnant, Ignored By My Parents—Then The Helicopter Landed-heuh

When I went into labour at eight months pregnant, my mother looked up from her phone as if I had interrupted a programme she liked.

“Stop being dramatic,” she said.

My father did not even pretend to be frightened.

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He only checked the time, because he and Mum had a dinner booking and I had become, once again, an inconvenience in my own family.

The first contraction had hit me in their kitchen, right between the hum of the dishwasher and the sharp smell of lemon cleaner.

It was the kind of room my mother kept spotless because surfaces mattered to her.

Appearances mattered.

What people thought mattered.

Her pregnant daughter gripping the island with white knuckles apparently did not.

I put one hand under my belly and tried to breathe the way the midwife had taught me.

Slow in.

Slow out.

But the pain had teeth.

It wrapped itself round my back and pulled until the corners of the kitchen blurred.

Outside, the late sun lay across the small back garden, warm and golden and completely wrong for what was happening inside me.

“Mum,” I managed, “please call an ambulance.”

She sat at the breakfast nook with her reading glasses low on her nose, scrolling through her phone beside a mug she had not finished.

A stack of post lay next to her, envelopes lined up neatly, as if bills and catalogues deserved more attention than I did.

“Amelia,” she said, with that tired little sigh she used whenever I asked for something real. “First babies take ages. Don’t start.”

“I’m not starting,” I said.

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