He Found His Wife Too Weak To Stand—Then The Doctor Saw Her Wrists-Teptep

I came home thinking the worst thing waiting for me would be a tired wife, a crying baby, and two days’ worth of apologies I had not yet worked out how to say.

Instead, I heard my mother’s voice through the bedroom door.

“If caring for one little baby is already too much for you, maybe motherhood was never meant for you.”

Image

For one second, I did not move.

The rain was still dripping from the hem of my coat onto the hallway floor, and the paper bag of pastries was warm against my palm.

Under my other arm was a packet of newborn nappies I had picked up on the way home, because I wanted to arrive with something useful and something sweet.

It sounds pathetic now.

Useful and sweet, as if that could cover the fact that I had left my wife six days after she had given birth.

My name is Luke Bennett.

At the time, I was thirty-three, married to Mara, and newly father to a tiny boy called Finn.

He had been in the world less than a week, but already the house felt rearranged around him.

The washing basket was full of muslins.

The kitchen counter was covered in bottles, wipes, appointment cards, cold mugs of tea, and the little hospital leaflets everyone gives you when you are too exhausted to read them properly.

Every sound mattered.

Every silence mattered more.

Mara had come home from hospital pale and careful, walking as if the floor might tilt beneath her.

She smiled when people looked worried.

She said, “I’m fine,” even when her face had gone grey with the effort of crossing the room.

I believed the smile because it was easier than understanding what it cost her.

Finn was our first baby.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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