Business Trip Horror: Doctor Spots Wrist Bruises And Calls Police-heuh

I came home from a business trip expecting tired smiles, a kettle boiling, and my newborn son wrapped in the small green blanket I had bought on the way back.

Instead, I found my wife fighting to keep her eyes open while our baby cried beside her.

The first words I heard were not a welcome.

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They were my mother’s voice, cool and clipped, coming from behind our bedroom door.

“If looking after a baby feels this impossible for you, perhaps you should never have become a mother.”

I stood in the narrow hallway with rain still on my coat and a packet of nappies tucked under my arm.

For a second, I could not move.

The house smelt of old milk, cold tea, and something sour that had been shut in for too long.

The television downstairs was still blaring, loud enough to shake through the floorboards.

Somewhere beneath it all was Owen’s cry, thin and frantic, the sound of a baby who had learnt that nobody came quickly.

My wife Hannah had given birth less than a week earlier.

She had come home from hospital moving carefully, one hand on the wall, pretending she was stronger than she was because that was what Hannah always did.

She smiled when visitors arrived.

She said she was fine when her face had no colour.

She thanked people for cups of tea she never got to drink before they went cold.

I should have noticed more.

I should have noticed everything.

My mother, Patricia, had never liked Hannah.

She called her independent as though it were a fault.

She said Hannah had opinions in the same tone other people used for unpaid bills.

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