After a Life-Threatening Childbirth, My Husband Wants to Kick Me and Our Baby Out Because of His Mother
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I always imagined that having a baby would bring my husband and me closer, that it would unite us in a deeper way. But I never could have predicted that the real threat to our relationship would come from someone else—his mother. Jessica, my mother-in-law, had a way of controlling everything around her, and unfortunately, my husband let her. I tried setting boundaries, but nothing prepared me for the crushing betrayal that ultimately left me standing at the door, holding my newborn in my arms—alone.
From the moment I discovered I was pregnant, I felt like the luckiest woman alive. Bill and I had dreamed of this moment for so long, imagining the day we would finally hold our little one. But soon, it became clear that I wasn’t the only one waiting eagerly for this child.
Jessica, Bill’s mother, had been anticipating the arrival of this baby too—though not in the way a grandmother should.
She had never liked me, nor had she ever pretended to. From the start, she made it clear that she didn’t think I was good enough for her son. “Bill deserves someone better,” she would mutter under her breath whenever I was around. And when I got pregnant, everything changed—but not in the way I had hoped.
It was as if the baby was more hers than mine. Jessica inserted herself into every aspect of my pregnancy, from the very beginning. She insisted on attending every doctor’s appointment, often taking over even the simplest decisions. “You need me to come with you,” she’d say, already grabbing her coat. “I know what’s best.”
The baby’s nursery? She picked the furniture. The baby gear? She dismissed my choices, and when we hadn’t even learned the baby’s gender yet, she declared, “The nursery should be blue. You’ll have a boy.”
Throughout the pregnancy, I suffered from constant nausea, barely able to keep food down. But Jessica didn’t care. She’d come over daily, filling our house with the smell of greasy food, while Bill happily indulged. Meanwhile, I was stuck in the bathroom, throwing up.
I repeatedly told Bill to stop telling her everything, to set some boundaries, but it never worked. One day, when we went in for the ultrasound to learn the baby’s gender, Jessica was already sitting in the waiting room. I was frozen in disbelief.
“How did she know?” I whispered to Bill.
When the doctor revealed that we were having a girl, I squeezed Bill’s hand, my heart racing with joy. This was the moment we had dreamed of—our little girl. I turned to Bill, expecting to see the same happiness reflected in his face.
But before we could even process the news, Jessica sneered, “You couldn’t even give my son a boy. He needed an heir.”
My stomach churned. “An heir to what? His video game collection?” I snapped, barely containing my anger. “And for your information, the father determines the baby’s gender, not the mother.”
Her eyes narrowed with fury. “That’s a lie. Your body is the problem. You were never right for my son.”
The doctor awkwardly cleared her throat, and the nurse exchanged a sympathetic look with me.
“Let’s go, Bill,” I said through clenched teeth, my heart sinking.
Once we were in the car, I turned to Bill. “How did she find out about the appointment?”
He hesitated, his voice low when he finally admitted, “I told her.”
Something inside me snapped.
“I asked you not to!” I shouted.
“She’s the grandmother,” he muttered, avoiding my gaze.
“And I’m your wife!” I replied, my voice trembling. “I’m carrying our daughter! Don’t you care how I feel?”
“Just ignore her,” he muttered again, dismissing my pain as if it didn’t matter.
It was easy for him to say. He wasn’t the one being attacked. He wasn’t the one feeling utterly alone.
The pain of labor hit me like a freight train. Contractions came on fast and furious, stealing my breath away. My body trembled, and my vision blurred. It was too early. I gripped Bill’s hand, gasping, “I can’t—”
“You’re doing great,” he said, though his own face was pale with fear.
But nothing could have prepared us for what happened next. The doctors rushed my daughter away the moment she was born. I reached out, desperate to hold her, to see her tiny face. But they didn’t let me.
“Please,” I begged, my voice weak. “Give her to me.”
“You’re losing too much blood!” a doctor shouted.
The world spun. And then—nothing.
When I woke up, everything felt hollow.
The doctor told me it was a miracle I had survived. I had lost too much blood, and they didn’t expect me to make it. The realization that I almost didn’t get to see my daughter’s face made me nauseous.
Then, the door burst open, and there stood Jessica, her face twisted in anger.
“You didn’t even tell me you were in labor!” she snapped.
Bill sighed. “It happened too fast.”
“That’s no excuse!” Jessica hissed, her voice laced with venom.
Just then, a nurse entered, holding my baby. My heart clenched, but before I could reach for her, Jessica stepped forward and snatched her from the nurse’s arms.
“What a beautiful girl,” she cooed.
I reached for my baby, but Jessica held her tightly.
“She needs to be fed,” the nurse said firmly.
Jessica barely glanced at her. “Then give her formula.”
I forced myself to sit up, pain shooting through my body. “I’m going to breastfeed her,” I said, my voice shaking.
Jessica’s lips pressed into a tight line. “But then you’ll always be taking her away from me! You won’t be able to leave her with me!” Her voice grew sharper, accusing.
Finally, Bill stepped in. He pried our daughter from Jessica’s grip and placed her in my arms. As soon as I held her, I broke down in tears.
She was mine. She was everything.
Two weeks passed, but Jessica never stopped showing up. One afternoon, she barged in, holding an envelope.
“Proof,” she said smugly, handing it to Bill.
“Proof of what?” he asked, confused.
“That Carol isn’t faithful,” she spat.
My heart dropped.
Bill’s hands shook as he opened the envelope, his face darkening. He turned to me, his jaw clenched. “You and the baby need to be out of here within the hour.”
I gasped in shock. “What?! What did you do?” I screamed at Jessica.
She smirked. “You were never worthy of my son.”
Tears blurred my vision. Bill hadn’t questioned her. He hadn’t even hesitated. He believed her, without a second thought.
I grabbed Eliza’s clothes, shaking with fear and grief. I packed her things, silent sobs wracking my body.
Before I left, I snatched Bill’s toothbrush.
The DNA Test That Changed Everything
Days later, my mother took us in, holding me as I cried.
Once I regained my strength, I knocked on Bill’s door. He opened it, his face unreadable.
I handed him an envelope.
“This is the real DNA test,” I said quietly.
He opened it, his breath catching as he read the results. “99.9%,” he whispered.
“Eliza is your daughter,” I told him, my voice steady.
His face fell. “Please… come back.”
I shook my head, stepping back.
“I’m filing for divorce. I want full custody.”
As I drove away, Eliza safe in the backseat, I knew—this was the end of one chapter and the beginning of a new, brighter one for us. We would be just fine.