Mother Demanded My Newborn For My Sister, Then I Opened The Folder-Teptep

One day after I gave birth, my mother walked into the hospital room with custody papers.

She said my “infertile” sister deserved the child more than I did.

I had paid £42,500 for her IVF treatments.

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Later, I discovered that clinic never existed.

When my mother threatened my military career to get my son, I finally showed them who they were messing with.

Noah was less than twenty-four hours old when my mum decided he was negotiable.

He was asleep against my chest, bundled so tightly in the hospital blanket that only his soft cheek and puckered mouth showed.

Outside the window, rain dragged silver lines down the glass.

Inside, everything was too bright, too clean, too loud in the way hospital rooms become loud when no one is speaking.

The monitor beeped beside me.

A plastic cup of tea had gone cold on the table.

My body hurt in places I had not known could hurt, and still I remember thinking that I had never been more awake in my life.

Then the door opened.

Mum came in first.

Not with flowers.

Not with a tiny cardigan or a soft toy from the hospital shop.

She came in wearing her best coat, hair sprayed into place, handbag tucked neatly under her arm, and a brown envelope clutched in one hand.

Lauren followed behind her in a cream coat that looked wrong for the weather.

Too clean.

Too composed.

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