My Husband Left Me In Labor Because His Mother Wanted The Mall-Lian

“THE MALL COMES BEFORE YOUR LABOR, ELARA. GET IN THE CAR OR GET ON THE FLOOR.”

Martha Thorne said it from the foyer of our house with her purse already tucked under her arm and her coat buttoned to the throat, as if my body had chosen a rude time to inconvenience her.

The house smelled like lemon floor cleaner, expensive perfume, and the burnt edge of the toast Travis had left in the kitchen without a second thought.

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Outside, a lawn mower growled down the block, and the late-morning sun was sitting bright on the driveway, the kind of normal suburban Saturday that made what was happening inside feel even more impossible.

I was on the hardwood floor in my husband’s foyer, thirty-eight weeks pregnant with twins, one hand under my belly and the other pressed flat against the cold boards so I would not fall sideways.

The contraction came in waves, but not soft ones.

It felt like something deep and ancient had wrapped both hands around my spine and pulled.

“Martha,” I said, and my voice sounded so thin I barely recognized it. “Please. They’re three minutes apart. I need the hospital.”

She looked at me the way she looked at delivery boxes left too long on the porch.

Annoyed.

Embarrassed.

Certain someone else should have handled it before she had to see it.

“The Designer Sale at The Galleria starts at 10 a.m.,” she said, lifting her wrist so the gold watch caught the light.

That watch had been my gift to her, bought the first Christmas after Travis told me his mother valued effort more than money, which meant I had spent three afternoons choosing it and another week pretending not to hear her call it “acceptable.”

“Sienna needs a winter coat,” Martha continued. “And I refuse to pay for a taxi or one of those app drivers when my son has a perfectly good car.”

Sienna stood halfway behind her mother near the staircase, holding a paper coffee cup and looking at me over the rim.

She was not cruel in a loud way.

She was worse.

She watched people get hurt and kept her hands clean.

Another contraction broke through me, and I folded forward so fast my forehead nearly touched the floor.

My palm slid over the polished wood.

There was blood on my shirt now, not a lot, but enough.

Enough that any ordinary person would have stopped talking about the mall.

“Martha,” I said again. “The babies.”

She made a sharp little sound with her tongue.

“Elara, you have been making this pregnancy the center of every room for nine months.”

The front door opened wider, and cold air touched the sweat on the back of my neck.

Then Travis walked in from the garage hallway, adjusting his tie in the mirror beside the coat closet.

He had always cared how he looked before he cared what he was looking at.

There had been a time, early in our marriage, when I mistook his neatness for steadiness.

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