He Came Home Early And Found His Mother Eating Beside His Collapsed Wife-hihehu

“Your wife is useless, Caleb… and if she fainted, it’s because she loves playing the victim.”

Those were the first words I heard when I opened the front door of my house in Boise at 2:06 on a Tuesday afternoon.

The house smelled like red rice, stewed meat, and warm tortillas.

Image

The kind of smell that should have meant somebody was being cared for.

Instead, Leo was screaming from the living room with a raw, exhausted sound that made my whole body go cold.

Not newborn fussing.

Not hunger crying.

This was the hoarse, desperate cry of a baby who had been waiting for someone too long.

Three weeks before that day, I had believed my mother, Martha, had moved in with us to help.

That was the exact word she used.

Help.

She said it at the hospital, standing beside Jasmine’s wheelchair with containers of homemade mole in the back seat and rosaries hanging from her purse.

She said it to my coworkers when they dropped off a gift card and a pack of newborn diapers.

She said it to our neighbor Mrs. Patterson when she brought over banana bread and asked if Jasmine needed anything.

“A mother never abandons her son when he needs her most,” Martha told everyone.

People smiled when she said it.

I smiled too.

I was tired, proud, nervous, and completely unprepared for how much danger could hide inside a sentence that sounded loving.

Jasmine and I had been married four years.

We were not perfect, but we were steady.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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