When Nina’s mother-in-law insists on alone time with her daughter, she agrees — reluctantly. But when Naomi comes home quieter, different, and clutching secrets, Nina’s gut tells her something is off. As subtle shifts build into something deeper, Nina is forced to ask: who’s really being protected?
I used to think grief was quiet. Something you carried alone.
But when my daughter Naomi was born, my mother-in-law, Denise, started telling people she’d been given a second chance.
She meant it sweetly, I think — she said it with tears in her eyes at the hospital, one hand over her chest, the other gently tracing Naomi’s cheek.I was still groggy from the epidural, but I remember watching her face — reverent, trembling, almost like she was praying.
But Denise has always had a way of making offers sound like decisions.
“You look tired, Nina,” she said, already reaching for Naomi’s coat. “Let me take her off your hands for a while.”
She smiled when she said it. That’s the thing about Denise — she always smiles, like everything she says is for your own good.Finn, my husband, calls it helpful.
I call it nothing but a performance.The first time she asked for alone time with Naomi, I said yes. I shouldn’t have. Not because I thought something bad would happen, but because I didn’t know what it would… change.
But I also knew that I couldn’t hesitate; Denise would take offense, and Finn would probably be in a mood about it.”Don’t you trust me, Nina? I’m her grandmother! I just want to spoil her and let her know that I’ll always be around.”
I’ll admit that it was annoying, but honestly, I thought it was harmless.
“Don’t you trust me, Nina? I’m her grandmother! I just want to spoil her and let her know that I’ll always be around.”
I’ll admit that it was annoying, but honestly, I thought it was harmless.