She Said She Was In Labour — Her Family Kept Eating Dinner-heuh

At a family dinner, I told my parents I thought I was in labour.

My mother told me to take an Uber because they were in the middle of dinner.

My father did not even look up from his plate.

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One week later, my mother came to my door demanding to see her grandbaby.

I looked at her and said, “What grandbaby?”

That was the moment her face changed.

It was also the moment I realised she already knew more than she should have.

The first pain came while Mum was pouring wine.

It was not the gentle tightening people describe in calm birth stories, the kind where there is time to laugh, count minutes, pack a bag, and phone someone who loves you.

It was low and brutal and sudden, and it made me grip the edge of the dining table so hard my knuckles went white.

The room smelled of roast potatoes, gravy, and the lemon cleaner Mum used whenever she wanted the house to look better than the people inside it.

Rain ticked against the kitchen window.

A tea towel hung over the oven handle.

The kettle had boiled, clicked off, and been ignored.

“I think the baby’s coming,” I said.

My voice shook badly enough that I heard it myself.

Nobody moved.

Mum looked at me with the same expression she used when I wore the wrong shoes to a family event.

Not panic.

Not concern.

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