Three Days After Her C-Section, He Made Her Serve His Boss Dinner-hothiyenvy_5

My hospital bracelet was still on my wrist when Mark’s mother told me to stir the soup.

The plastic tag scratched against the handle of the spoon every time I moved, a small sound under the bigger sounds of that house: the oven fan humming, the patio door sliding open and shut, wine glasses touching like everyone outside was celebrating something.

No one inside that kitchen was celebrating me.

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Three days earlier, I had been on an operating table under lights so bright they seemed to erase the ceiling.

A nurse kept saying my name.

Another nurse kept watching a monitor.

Someone said the baby’s heart rate was dropping, and Mark’s hand went slack inside mine like he had already stepped out of the room.

I remembered the pull of the surgery more than the pain.

I remembered the fear in the voices around me, even when everyone tried to sound calm.

I remembered waking up with my throat dry, my body split open, and a nurse leaning close to tell me that both the baby and I had made it.

Made it.

Those were the words she used, and I held onto them because they meant what happened to me had been serious.

Mark held onto a different version.

By the time I came home, he had started talking about the C-section like it was a shortcut.

His mother had started saying it out loud before my hospital bag was even unpacked.

“You didn’t push,” she said once, as if labor counted only if it looked the way she wanted it to look.

At first, I thought Mark would correct her.

He did not.

He stood near the laundry room door with our newborn’s blanket over one shoulder and looked away like he had suddenly found the baseboards interesting.

That was the first small crack.

There had been others before it, but that one made a sound I could not ignore.

Mark had not always been cruel.

That is the part people who have never lived inside a marriage like mine struggle to understand.

When we were dating, he brought me chicken noodle soup when I had the flu, changed a tire for me in the rain, and rubbed my back in the grocery store checkout line when the wait was long.

He used to leave little notes on the dashboard of my car.

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