The explosion came quickly after that. She called Lily manipulative. Ungrateful. Weak. She said I was abandoning the woman who raised me for a wife who “couldn’t even handle motherhood without collapsing.” Noah woke up and began crying. My mother reached out automatically, as if the baby still belonged to the version of the house she controlled.
Lily recoiled.
That instinct alone was enough.
“Do not come near him,” I said.
My mother froze. Then she looked at me in a way I hadn’t seen since I was a teenager and first disagreed with her publicly—like I was no longer her son, only an obstacle. “You’ll regret humiliating me for her.”
“No,” I said. “I regret not seeing it sooner.”
I called my sister, Rachel, because she had always kept just enough distance from our mother to survive. She arrived within the hour, walked into the nursery, took one look at Lily’s face, and turned to me with grim recognition.
“She did this to you too?” I asked.
Rachel exhaled slowly. “Not with a baby in the room. But yes. Different target, same method.”
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