She Had a Baby Alone, Then Her Mother Asked for iPhone Money-olive

After I gave birth to my child alone, my mother wrote, “I need $2,600 for new iPhones for your sister’s kids. Christmas is important for them.”

I was sitting on the edge of my bed when the message came in, with my newborn daughter curled against my chest and the apartment so quiet I could hear the heater clicking behind the wall.

Her cheek was warm through my T-shirt.

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Her little hand kept opening and closing against my collarbone like she was testing the world one finger at a time.

On the nightstand beside me sat a half-finished bottle, a cold paper cup of coffee, and the stack of hospital papers I had been avoiding since we came home.

The apartment smelled like formula, detergent, and the stale fear that seems to hang around after a hard birth.

Outside, somebody slammed a car door in the parking lot.

Lily startled in her sleep.

I put my palm over her back and stared at my phone until the words blurred.

“I need $2,600 for new iPhones for your sister’s kids. Christmas is important for them.”

I read it once.

Then again.

Then a third time, because part of me thought I must have missed the line where she asked whether I was okay.

There was no line like that.

My name is Maya.

I was 20 years old, and two weeks before that text, I had given birth completely alone.

No mother in the hospital waiting room.

No father pacing by the vending machines.

No sister checking her phone and asking nurses for updates.

No boyfriend holding my hand.

Just me, a night nurse named Patricia, and the sound of monitors beeping while I tried not to fall apart.

At 3:00 a.m., when the contractions got sharp enough to steal the air out of my lungs, I called my mother 17 times.

I called my father twice.

I called my sister Lauren once.

My mother never answered.

My father’s phone went straight to voicemail.

Lauren sent one text.

“Can’t talk. Kids have school tomorrow.”

So I called an Uber.

I put a towel under me, locked my apartment door with one shaking hand, and held the door handle the whole ride like gripping plastic could keep me from being scared.

The driver kept glancing back at me.

Two blocks from the emergency entrance, the light turned red.

He muttered, “Hold on,” and drove through it.

At hospital intake, they printed 3:42 a.m. on my admission bracelet.

I remember the exact time because I stared at it while a nurse asked who my emergency contact was.

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