My mother-in-law kicked me while I was 32 weeks pregnant—then my husband made the one call she never thought he had the courage to make.-tete

The officer pulled the curtain halfway closed and looked at Daniel, not at Margaret.

He had already heard her version.

She said I lunged at her.

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She said I was unstable.

She said pregnancy had made me emotional and that Daniel knew how difficult I had become.

I lay in the hospital bed with monitors strapped around me, one hand gripping Daniel’s sleeve.

The pain had changed from sharp to deep and heavy.

Doctors moved quickly around us, speaking in careful voices that scared me more than yelling would have.

Margaret stood outside the curtain with Daniel’s father, Charles.

She was crying loudly enough for everyone to hear.

But the officer’s question cut through all of it.

“Daniel,” he said, “did your mother make physical contact with your wife?”

Daniel looked down at me.

His face was gray.

For most of our marriage, that look would have meant he was about to soften the truth.

He would say his mother was overwhelmed.

He would say she didn’t mean it that way.

He would ask me to give her time.

But this time, Daniel did not look away.

“Yes,” he said.

Margaret stopped crying.

The hallway went quiet in that strange way hospitals do before bad news arrives.

The officer asked, “How?”

Daniel swallowed hard.

“She kicked Emily below her stomach,” he said. “My wife was standing up from the table. My mother stepped toward her and kicked her.”

Margaret gasped like he had betrayed her.

“Daniel,” she whispered.

He did not turn around.

The officer wrote it down.

Then he asked, “Did she say anything afterward?”

Daniel’s hand tightened around mine.

“Yes,” he said. “She said Emily made her do it.”

That was when Margaret stopped pretending to sob.

Her mouth opened, but no words came.

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