A Mother Needed Surgery. Her Parents Chose a Concert Instead.-eirian

By the time I understood how badly I was hurt, I had already wasted seven seconds worrying about whether the twins had eaten dinner.

That is what motherhood does to the order of fear.

Pain should have come first.

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The blood should have come first.

The crushed door, the sirens, the stranger telling me not to move, the cold night air sliding through the broken window of my car should have come first.

But all I could think was that Lily hated peas unless they were mixed into macaroni, and Lucas would refuse his dinosaur pajamas if the green ones were still in the dryer.

They were three years old.

They had matching dimples, different tempers, and the same habit of pressing their foreheads to my knees when they were tired.

Lily sang when she was nervous.

Lucas sorted crackers by shape before he ate them.

Their babysitter, Hannah, was seventeen, responsible, sweet, and firm about her parents’ rule that she had to be home by 8:30 on school nights.

She always left my house at eight.

That had never been a problem before.

My parents lived twenty-two minutes away.

They had keys.

They knew the alarm code.

They had known that code since the twins were newborns, back when my mother stood in my kitchen holding Lucas and said, “You should not have to do this alone.”

I believed her then.

I was exhausted enough to believe almost anything kind.

My name is Myra, and for most of my adult life, my family called me strong in a way that never sounded like praise.

Strong meant I could take extra shifts.

Strong meant I could listen while my sister Vanessa cried about problems she had created and still send money afterward.

Strong meant I could drive my mother to appointments, pay for prescriptions my father forgot to pick up, and host holidays because everyone agreed my house was easier.

Strong meant nobody had to worry about me.

It also meant nobody had to choose me.

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