A New Mom Came Home to Police Tape and Marcus’s Terrifying Warning-luna

I buckled my three-day-old daughter into her car seat with hands that did not feel like they belonged to me anymore.

My fingers looked pale and clumsy around the straps.

The nurse leaned over, checked the buckle, tugged gently at the chest clip, and smiled like she had done this a thousand times for women who were terrified of being trusted with something so small.

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“You’re doing great,” she said.

I wanted to believe her.

I wanted to believe that the hardest part was behind me.

The hospital hallway smelled like bleach, warm formula, and coffee that had sat too long in a paper cup.

Somewhere down the hall, a monitor beeped in a steady rhythm.

Eliza made a tiny sound from inside her blanket, barely more than a squeak, and my whole body turned toward her before I even thought to move.

That was motherhood, I was learning.

Your body answered before your mind caught up.

My stitches burned when I bent.

My milk had come in overnight, and my chest ached so badly even the soft cotton of my shirt felt rough against me.

I had slept maybe forty minutes in three days.

Still, when the nurse rolled the wheelchair toward the exit and the glass doors opened to the afternoon sun, I felt something loosen in my throat.

Home.

That was the word I kept repeating to myself.

Home meant our bedroom with the bassinet on my side.

Home meant Marcus pretending not to cry when he carried Eliza through the front door.

Home meant the pale yellow blanket his mother had knitted folded across the rocking chair.

Home meant I could finally stop being brave in public.

Marcus Hale had texted me that morning while I was signing the discharge paperwork.

Everything’s ready. I cleaned the house. Take your time. I can’t wait to see you both.

I read that message three times before I answered.

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