His Family Starved Her After Surgery. Then He Walked In Quietly.-Tien3004

I spent forty-eight hours in a surgical ward waiting for someone from my husband’s family to walk through the door.

Nobody came.

Not Agnes, my mother-in-law, who lived in my house and used my kitchen like it was hers.

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Not Chloe, my sister-in-law, who spent her afternoons stretched across our sofa with takeout containers balanced on her lap.

Not one message asking whether I was awake, whether the surgery went well, whether I needed clean clothes, a charger, a ride, or even a bottle of water from the machine outside my room.

The hospital smelled like bleach, old coffee, and rainwater tracked in on shoes.

The curtain rings scraped overhead every time a nurse came in to check my vitals.

My wristband stuck to my skin where sweat had dried under the plastic.

I had gone into emergency surgery because of a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, and the last clear thing I remembered before the operating room was a nurse asking me if I wanted them to call my husband.

I said yes.

Then I said his name.

Leo.

After that, the ceiling lights slid above me in strips, and the world went white.

When I woke up, my abdomen felt like it belonged to somebody else.

Every breath tugged.

Every small movement reminded me that something inside me had nearly ended my life before anyone in my home had bothered to bend down.

At 2:13 a.m. on Tuesday, I had collapsed on the kitchen floor.

I remember the cold tile under my cheek.

I remember the kettle clicking off.

I remember Agnes stepping over me.

She did not kneel.

She did not shout for help.

She did not even curse with fear.

She lifted one foot, stepped over my body, reached for her mug, and poured herself tea while I tried to form words through pain so sharp it turned my vision black at the edges.

“Maya, stop being dramatic,” she said.

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