At eight months pregnant, I thought I had finally reached a point where my life felt steady, almost like the delicate balance I’d been dreaming of for years. The house smelled faintly of lavender from the diffuser I kept running in the corner, the soft yellow curtains in the nursery swayed lightly whenever the fan turned, and I’d fold and refold the tiny onesies that I had washed in special baby detergent, holding them to my face as if their cotton softness already carried my child’s scent. It was everything I had worked toward: a home, a loving marriage, and now the start of a family.
Or so I thought. My husband, Jacob, had always been close to his mother. Maybe “close” wasn’t even the right word—it was more like she had him wrapped around her finger in ways I didn’t quite understand.
When we first started dating, I brushed it off as the kind of bond a single mother and only child might share. He’d grown up with just her, and she often reminded people of the sacrifices she had made to give him “the best.” At times, it felt endearing. Other times, suffocating.
Still, I told myself that when he became a father, he would learn to set boundaries. Parenthood changes people, after all. And I thought the nursery, our sanctuary for the baby, was a symbol of that shift.
I had poured myself into it, choosing a theme of soft forest animals, hand-painting tiny foxes and owls on the wall even when my back ached, imagining the moment we’d bring our child home. But that afternoon, everything shattered. I had just come back from my weekly prenatal appointment, tired but relieved that everything was progressing normally.
I walked through the front door and froze. The sound of furniture scraping across hardwood filled the house, followed by Jacob’s voice giving directions. When I stepped into the hallway, my heart sank.
The crib was gone. The rocking chair was being carried out by two deliverymen. The mural I had worked so hard on was hidden behind stacks of moving boxes.
And in the center of it all stood Jacob, sweaty, smiling awkwardly, and holding a roll of packing tape. “What’s happening?” My voice cracked. He rubbed the back of his neck, eyes darting anywhere but me.
“I should’ve told you earlier. Mom’s been feeling really down lately. Lonely.
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