never told my mother-in-law I was a judge. To her, I was just a kept woman on unemployment. Hours after my C-section, she burst into my room with adoption papers, mocking me: “You don’t deserve a VIP room. Give one of the twins to my infertile daughter; you can’t handle two.” I hugged my babies and pressed the panic button. When the police arrived, she screamed that I was crazy. They proceeded to restrain me… until the chief recognized me…I never told my mother-in-law I was a judge. To her, I was just a kept woman on unemployment. Hours after my C-section, she burst into my room with adoption papers, mocking me: “You don’t deserve a VIP room. Give one of the twins to my infertile daughter; you can’t handle two.” I hugged my babies and pressed the panic button. When the police arrived, she screamed that I was crazy. They proceeded to restrain me… until the chief recognized me…
The recovery suite at St. Jude Medical Center felt more like a five-star hotel than a hospital. At my request, they had put away the expensive orchid arrangements sent by the District Attorney’s Office and the Supreme Court; I needed to keep up the charade of the “unemployed wife” in front of my husband’s family. I had just survived a grueling C-section to deliver my twins, Leo and Luna, and seeing them sleeping peacefully made the pain worthwhile.Suddenly, the door burst open. Mrs. Sterling, my mother-in-law, marched in, reeking of expensive perfume and furs. She scanned the luxurious room and smiled contemptuously.
“A VIP suite?” she mocked, kicking the leg of my bed and making me wince. “My son works himself to death so you can waste money on silk pillows and room service? You really are a useless freeloader.”
He threw a crumpled document on the table. “Sign this. It’s a waiver of parental rights. Karen, your sister-in-law, is infertile. She needs a son to carry on the legacy. Besides, you can’t handle two babies. Give Leo to Karen; you can keep the girl.”
I froze. “What on earth are you talking about? These are my children!”