The evening had been ordinary, or at least it should have been. I was eight months pregnant, my body heavy and aching, every step reminding me of the life growing inside me. When we returned from the market, I asked my husband to carry the grocery bags.
It wasn’t a demand, just a simple request—one that felt reasonable given my condition. But before he could even respond, my mother-in-law’s sharp voice cut through the air like a blade. “The world doesn’t spin around your belly,” she snapped, her eyes narrowing with disdain.
“Pregnancy isn’t sickness.”
Her words stung. I stood there, stunned, waiting for my husband to defend me, to say something—anything—that would acknowledge the effort I was making. But he only nodded, as if her cruelty were truth carved in stone.
And so, with my swollen belly and trembling arms, I dragged the bags inside alone. Each step felt heavier than the last, not because of the groceries, but because of the silence that followed. My husband’s silence.
His mother’s scorn. My own loneliness. That night, I lay awake, staring at the ceiling.
The baby shifted inside me, a reminder of the future I was carrying, of the strength I had no choice but to summon. I wondered if anyone saw it—if anyone understood the quiet battles women fought every day. My husband slept beside me, oblivious, while I wrestled with the weight of disappointment.
The next morning shattered the fragile routine of our lives. A violent knock rattled the door, so loud it seemed to echo through the walls. My husband stumbled to answer it, his face pale as he pulled it open.
Standing outside were his father and his two brothers—men we rarely saw, men whose presence usually meant conflict rather than comfort. Their early-morning visit screamed of urgency, of something unusual, something heavy. My father-in-law stepped forward, his presence commanding, his eyes sharp with purpose.
Without hesitation, he moved my husband aside as though he were nothing more than a shadow blocking the light. Then he turned to me, his gaze steady, unwavering. “I came to apologize,” he said, his voice deep and deliberate.
“For raising a lazy, ignorant man who doesn’t appreciate his wife or unborn child.”
The words struck like thunder. My husband froze, his mouth opening but no sound escaping. His brothers shifted uncomfortably, their eyes darting between us, unsure of where to look.
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