After my husband’s funeral, I leaned in and whispered, “My water just broke.” His mother curled her lip and said, “We’re grieving. Call a taxi yourself.” His brother added under his breath, “Not tonight.” So I called one. By myself. Twelve days later, she stood at my door and said, “I’ve come to see my grandchild.” I answered, “Which grandchild?”
The first contraction struck as they lowered my husband into the earth. The next came when his mother glanced at me and said, “Don’t make today about you.”
Rain streaked down black umbrellas like ink running loose. I held the edge of Samuel’s coffin so tightly my knuckles blanched. I was nine months pregnant, widowed for three days, surrounded by people already carving my life into portions.
My mother-in-law, Vivian Hale, wore a veil thick enough to disguise her dry eyes. Next to her stood Samuel’s younger brother, Derek, jaw set, hands spotless, wearing a suit far too costly for a man who had once borrowed from us for “one last investment.”
I leaned closer to Vivian and whispered, “My water just broke.”
She didn’t even react.
“We’re grieving,” she scoffed. “Call a taxi yourself.”
Derek checked his watch. “Not tonight, Claire.”
Not tonight.
As though labor could be postponed like a reservation.
As though Samuel’s child was a minor inconvenience.
A few relatives glanced over, then quickly turned away. No one wanted to step between a pregnant widow and the Hale family matriarch.
So I did exactly what they expected from the quiet wife.
I nodded.
I stepped back.