Brother-In-Law Splashed My Baby For Views, Then A Recording Exposed The Table-heuh

My baby was crying at the dinner table, and my brother-in-law turned him into content for his social media, splashing water on his tiny face in front of everyone.

When my mother-in-law said, “Don’t make a big deal out of it,” my husband grabbed the nappy bag and we walked out, but by the next day a recording surfaced that nobody wanted to remember.

The first warning was not the phone.

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It was the napkin in Mark’s hand.

He had twisted it until the paper looked like a little white cord beside his plate, tight and crushed and almost torn through the middle.

Our seven-month-old son, Caleb, sat in the high chair Susan had pulled close to the Christmas centrepiece, because she said babies made family photographs look warmer.

The room was far too warm already.

The candles were sweet enough to make the back of my throat ache.

The chicken had dried at the edges under the dining room light, and the gravy had formed a skin in the boat because everyone kept waiting for Connor to finish filming before they ate properly.

His phone chimed beside the salt.

Then it chimed again.

Each time, Connor’s face brightened as if strangers tapping hearts on a screen were more reassuring than his own family sitting round the table.

I was twenty-eight, and tired in a way I had stopped trying to describe.

There is a kind of tiredness that comes with a new baby which people respect for about three weeks.

After that, they start treating it like a bad attitude.

Caleb’s red jumper had looked sweet when I put it on him at home.

By dinner, it was clinging damply round his neck.

His cheeks were flushed, his lashes stuck together from earlier tears, and his small fists opened and closed against the high-chair tray like he was trying to grip the air.

He wanted sleep.

He wanted quiet.

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