Seventy-two hours after bringing my son into the world, my mother entered my hospital room carrying a manila folder like it held a weapon. My newborn slept against my chest, warm and milk-heavy, when she said, “Don’t make this ugly, Mara.”
I stared from her pearl earrings to the documents in her hands.
Behind her stood my sister, Celeste, wrapped in cream-colored linen, sunglasses resting on her head, fake grief painted carefully across her face. She did not resemble a heartbroken woman. She looked like someone waiting for a purchase to be gift-wrapped.
“What is that?” I asked.
Mom set the folder onto my tray table. “Temporary custody papers.”
The room fell silent except for the soft sound of my son breathing.
I laughed once because screaming would have hurt more. “You brought custody documents into my maternity room?”
Celeste stepped closer. “You’re alone. You deploy in six months. You don’t have a husband, a stable home, and honestly, Mara, you’ve always been… intense.”
“Intense,” I repeated.
Mom’s tone sharpened instantly. “Your sister deserves a baby. After all she’s been through.”
My hold tightened around my son. “She deserves my child?”
Celeste’s expression collapsed perfectly on cue. “You know I can’t carry a baby. You know what infertility has done to me.”
Yes. I knew.
I knew because I had drained my savings account for her.