She Was Fresh Out of Surgery When Her Sister Abandoned the Baby – olive

When Vanessa came back from the airport shuttle and pushed open my bedroom door, the diaper bag slid off her shoulder before she could catch it.

It hit the carpet with a dull, heavy thud.

A uniformed police officer stood beside my dresser.

Image

A county social worker sat by the window with a yellow legal pad on her knees.

My mother, Denise, stood near the hallway door, one hand pressed over her mouth like she had been holding in the same breath for too long.

Oliver, Vanessa’s eight-month-old baby, slept in a portable crib near my bed.

I had dragged that crib across half the room with a cane and the last little bit of strength I had left.

And I was propped up on three pillows, still wearing my hospital bracelet, fresh stitches pulling tight across my abdomen every time I breathed.

Vanessa looked at the officer.

Then at the social worker.

Then at Oliver.

Then at me.

“What did you do?” she asked.

Her voice was not scared yet.

It was offended.

That was Vanessa’s gift.

She could walk into the wreckage she made and still sound like the injured party.

I kept my eyes on her.

“The only thing I could.”

Six hours earlier, I had not planned on changing the shape of my family.

I had planned on sleeping.

That was all.

I had come home from emergency abdominal surgery with discharge papers that were not gentle suggestions.

They were instructions.

No lifting.

Minimal walking.

Avoid stress.

Rest.

My doctor had stood near the foot of the hospital bed that morning and repeated the lifting restriction twice, because he said people often heard it as advice instead of medicine.

“Chloe,” he said, tapping the paper with one finger, “you cannot lift a child. Not groceries. Not laundry baskets. Nothing heavier than what this says.”

I nodded because even nodding hurt.

By the time the rideshare dropped me outside my apartment complex in Columbus, Ohio, the June light was too bright and the air felt too thick.

I remember the smell of hot pavement and cut grass outside the building.

I remember the scratchy pressure of the hospital bracelet against my wrist.

I remember thinking that if I could just get from the door to my bed, I would be okay.

Read More