Mother-In-Law Tried To Take My Twin—Then The Chief Said “Judge”-heuh

I never told my mother-in-law I was a judge.

To her, I was just Julia, the quiet woman her son had married, the one she described as jobless when she thought I could not hear.

For three years, she looked at me across kitchen tables and family meals as if I were something her son had brought home by mistake.

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She never asked what I did before I married him.

She never asked why my phone was always on silent but never out of reach.

She never asked why certain envelopes arrived by hand instead of through the post.

She only decided I had no value, and once Mrs. Sterling made a decision about someone, she treated it like a fact.

That was why, hours after my C-section, when I was still drifting in and out of pain and exhaustion, I thought the soft click of my hospital room door was a nurse.

It was not.

It was her.

The room was warm in that dry hospital way, with the faint smell of antiseptic and clean linen hanging over everything.

Outside the high window, rain slid down the glass in thin silver lines.

Someone had left me a mug of tea on the tray table, but I had not touched it because both my hands were full of babies.

Leo slept against my left side.

Luna was tucked into the crook of my right arm, her little mouth making soft restless movements in her sleep.

Every breath pulled at the neat line of pain across my abdomen.

Every movement reminded me that my body had been opened only hours before.

I was not prepared to fight anyone.

I was barely prepared to sit upright.

Mrs. Sterling came in wearing a damp coat and the expression she usually saved for cheap wine, messy houses, and me.

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