My wife, Sarah, had just crawled back from the brink of death after a catastrophic childbirth. The doctor’s orders were absolute: total bed rest. Her internal stitches were so fragile that any strain could be fatal. That is why I begged my mother, Evelyn, to stay with us. I thought a mother’s touch was what our shattered home needed. I was a fool.
“In my day, David,” she whispered, her tone brittle and sharp as she surveyed the messy house, “we didn’t let the home look like a triage ward just because we had a baby. Laziness is a habit that starts in the recovery room. If you let her play the invalid, she’ll never stop. A successful man needs a pristine home, not a messy triage ward and a wife who does nothing but moan.”
I brushed it off as generational friction. Until this morning, in a high-stakes boardroom on the 42nd floor overlooking Puget Sound, my phone buzzed. A motion alert from the nursery. Under the polished mahogany table, my heart skipped a beat. On the screen, Sarah was crawling across the floor, one hand clutching her bleeding incision, her face contorted in agony as she reached for baby Leo’s bassinet. Then Evelyn appeared. She didn’t help. She stood over her like a cold executioner.