My Mother Brought Custody Papers The Day After I Gave Birth-heuh

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.

Image

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.

Twenty-four hours after Noah was born, I was still measuring time by the sounds inside that hospital room.

The soft beep beside my bed.

The wheels of a trolley moving down the corridor.

The distant murmur of nurses speaking in that careful, lowered way people use around new mothers who look as if one sharp word might split them open.

My body ached in places I did not know could ache.

The surgery had left me hollowed out and heavy at the same time, every breath pulling somewhere tender.

A paper cup of tea sat untouched on the tray table, gone pale and cold beneath the practical light.

Outside the window, rain moved down the glass in thin lines, blurring the car park into grey shapes and yellow reflections.

Noah slept against me, wrapped in a white blanket, one tiny fist pressed near his cheek.

I had never known fear could sit so close to love.

I kept looking at him as though he might vanish if I looked away too long.

When the door opened, I thought it would be a nurse.

I expected the usual gentle knock, the clipboard, the little smile, the question about feeding or pain or whether I had passed water yet.

Instead, my mother walked in.

Marlene had dressed as though she were going somewhere important after this.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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