“A VIP suite?” he scoffed, his voice squeaking. He kicked the leg of my bed as he passed, making me flinch as the movement rattled the incision. “Who do you think you are, Elena? The Queen of England? My son works himself to death at that firm, and this is how you spend his money? On silk pillows and room service?”
I took a shallow breath, clutching the edge of the bed. “Mom, Mark didn’t pay for this room. My insurance covered it.”
Mrs. Sterling let out a dry laugh. It was a harsh, ugly sound. She tossed her designer handbag onto the plush sofa, right on top of a stack of legal documents I’d been reviewing before the labor started.
“Are you sure?” she spat scornfully. “What insurance? Unemployment insurance? Don’t make me laugh, darling. A freeloader like you doesn’t get premium coverage. You barely contribute a penny to the household. You sit at home all day ‘advising’ on your laptop while Mark pays the mortgage, the bills, and now this monstrous hospital bill.”
“It’s fully covered,” I repeated, my voice strained. “You don’t need to worry about the cost.”
“I worry about everything!” she snapped. “Because it’s clear you have no concept of value. You think money grows on trees just because you married a lawyer. But let me tell you something, Elena. Mark’s patience is running out. And so is mine.”
Finally, he turned to look at the cribs. He didn’t coo. He didn’t smile. He observed them with a calculating, cold expression, like a butcher evaluating a cut of meat.
“Anyway,” she said, waving a manicured hand dismissively. “We’ll talk about your spending habits later. I’m here for something more important. The twins. You’re not planning on keeping both of them, are you?”
Chapter 2: The adoption papers
The air in the room seemed to disappear. I stared at her, thinking the painkillers were making me hallucinate.
“Excuse me?” I whispered.
Mrs. Sterling opened her bag and took out a thick, folded document. She slammed it on the nightstand, right next to my water pitcher.
“Sign here,” she said, tapping the paper with a long, red fingernail. “It’s a Parental Rights Waiver form. I asked my neighbor to write it up; he’s a notary, so it’s official.”
I looked at the paper. It was badly formatted, full of mistakes, and legally, a joke. But the intention was terrifyingly clear.
“What are you talking about?” My voice trembled. Not from fear, but from a burning rage that felt like lava in my veins. “These are my children. Both of them.”
“Don’t be selfish, Elena,” Mrs. Sterling spat. “You know Karen’s been crying all week. She’s been trying for five years. She’s infertile. It’s a tragedy. And here you are, giving birth to twins like a rabbit. It’s just not fair.”
Karen was Mark’s older sister. A woman who never liked me, mainly because I refused to kiss her ring. A woman who had married for money, but couldn’t buy a pregnancy.
“So you want me to… give you one?” I asked, incredulous. “Like it’s a spare kidney?”
“Specifically, the boy,” Mrs. Sterling said, walking toward Leo’s crib. “Karen always wanted a son. Her husband has a legacy to carry on. And let’s be honest, Elena. You’re unemployed. You’re lazy. How are you going to raise two newborns? You’ll be drowning in diapers and crying within a week. Karen already has a nanny lined up. She has a nursery that puts this one to shame. She can give him a real life. You should thank her for taking the weight off your shoulders.”
“A peso?” I sat up, ignoring the tearing sensation in my abdomen. “My son isn’t a peso. He’s my son. And Karen isn’t going to take him away. Get that paper out of my sight.”
Mrs. Sterling’s face hardened. The mask of “concerned grandmother” slipped away, revealing the tyrant beneath.
“Listen here, you little gold digger,” he hissed. “Mark is okay with this. He knows it’s for the best. He knows you can’t handle this. If you don’t sign it willingly, we’ll file for custody on the grounds of incapacity. We’ll tell the court you’re mentally unstable. We’ll say you’re unfit. And with Mark being a lawyer, who do you think they’re going to believe? The successful lawyer or the couch potato?”
“Did Mark accept this?” I asked, with deadly calm.
“Of course,” he lied… or maybe he wasn’t lying. At that moment, I no longer knew who my husband was. “He wants his sister to be happy. He knows that sacrifice is part of family duty. He knows that you are… limited.”
She reached into the crib. Her fingers, laden with heavy gold rings, moved toward Leo.
“I’ll take him now,” she said matter-of-factly. “Karen’s waiting in the car. It’s better to do it quickly, like ripping off a Band-Aid. You still get to keep the baby. Luna, right? Girls are easier anyway. You can dress her.”
Chapter 3: The Slap and the Button
“Get your hands off my son!” I yelled.
The raw volume of my voice startled her. I lunged forward and grabbed her wrist just as she lifted Leo from the mattress. The sudden movement sent a sharp pain through my gut that nearly made me faint.
“Let him go!” I yelled, digging my nails into his arm.
Mrs. Sterling shrieked. “You crazy bitch! You scratched me!”
With his free hand—the one that wasn’t holding my crying newborn—, he hit.
SMACK!
His palm slammed into my cheek. My head fell back against the pillows. The room spun. The taste of copper filled my mouth where I’d bitten my tongue.
“You insolent brat!” she roared, her face twisted and ugly. “I’m her grandmother! I have the right to decide where she goes! You’re nothing but an incubator! You should be grateful we’re letting you keep one!”
She pulled Leo harder. He was screaming now, a high-pitched, terrified cry that broke my heart. The IV lines connected to my arm tightened, threatening to tear out of my vein.
Leave a Reply