Postpartum Mom Evicted in the Rain Freezes Her In-Laws’ $40M Merger-eirian

The room still smelled like blood, antiseptic, and warm linen when Beatrice Thornton decided one hour of motherhood was enough time for me to be destroyed.

I was in room 402 of St. Jude’s Medical Center with my newborn son asleep on my chest.

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Leo was tiny, furious, and perfect, wrapped in the blue-and-pink striped blanket every American hospital seems to issue from the same trembling supply closet.

One fist had escaped and rested near my wrist.

Rain dragged silver lines down the window.

The monitor beside me kept a steady beat.

My body was still shaking from fourteen hours of labor, and the blood between my legs had not even dried.

I looked toward the window, where my husband stood with one hand in his pocket.

“Isn’t he beautiful, Rick?” I whispered.

Richard did not answer.

He was wearing the navy Armani suit his mother had chosen for him, because Richard never dressed himself for important moments.

He wore approval better than he wore courage.

“Richard,” a voice said from the doorway.

Cold.

Sharp.

A blade wrapped in pearls.

Beatrice Thornton walked in wearing cream Chanel, pearl earrings, and the kind of expression rich women use when they believe cruelty is just efficiency with better posture.

She did not ask how I was.

She did not look at Leo.

She did not say congratulations.

She lifted a thick manila envelope.

“Look at me when I’m speaking to you, Evelyn.”

My arm tightened around my son.

“Beatrice,” I said. “I didn’t know you were here.”

“Obviously.”

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