If someone had told me a year earlier that the people most likely to put my life at risk would be my own mother and sister, I would’ve called it an exaggeration. Cruel, even. But cruelty doesn’t always arrive loudly. Sometimes it settles quietly into a home, growing layer by layer until one day it no longer needs to pretend.
I was staying with my mother, Margaret, while my husband, Michael, worked out of town. It was supposed to be temporary—just a few weeks until he came back and our daughter was born. My three-year-old son, Ryan, was with me. We thought being around family would mean safety.
We were wrong.
The contractions started while I was chopping carrots in the kitchen. At first, I ignored them. Late pregnancy had already taught me how to live with discomfort. But the second one hit harder, sharp enough to make me grab the counter.
“Mom,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady, “something’s wrong.”For a second, I laughed. Not because it was funny—but because the alternative was to believe her.
“I’m serious,” I said.
Jessica leaned against the doorway, arms crossed, that familiar smile playing on her lips—the one she wore when someone else was hurting.