Pregnant and Barefoot in the Rain, She Faced a Locked Door Alone-eirian

The rain had been falling for so long that the whole house seemed to be breathing water.

It ran from the gutters in silver ropes, slapped against the porch roof, and gathered on the wooden steps until every board shone under the yellow porch lamp.

Emma stood in the middle of it with her bare feet pressed to the cold boards and one hand over her pregnant belly.

Image

She had not planned to be outside.

She had not even planned to argue.

Ten minutes earlier, she had been standing in the kitchen in thin home clothes, tired from the day, trying to explain to Michael that shouting at her did not become less cruel just because he lowered his voice afterward.

He had stared at her like her words were an inconvenience.

Then he had walked toward the front door.

At first, she thought he was leaving.

Instead, he opened it, pointed out into the storm, and told her to step outside if she wanted to keep arguing.

Emma had laughed once because she thought he was being dramatic.

That laugh had died as soon as she saw his face.

There was no anger in it.

There was something calmer and colder, the kind of calm a person gets when they believe they have all the power in the room.

“Michael,” she had said, “I’m pregnant.”

He had looked at her belly, then back at her eyes.

“If you want to argue, stay outside. Maybe you’ll learn some respect.”

He said it as if respect was something he could lock behind a door.

Then he pushed the door shut.

The deadbolt clicked.

For a few seconds, Emma just stood there on the porch with rain blowing sideways against her face, waiting for him to open it again.

It had to be a scare tactic.

It had to be one of those awful moments people regret immediately.

He would open the door, mutter something ugly, and pretend the whole thing had been her fault for making him mad.

But the door stayed closed.

Read More