Two weeks after my C-section, I was nursing my newborn at my in-laws’ house when my MIL walked up behind me with kitchen scissors and cut off the hair I’d spent years growing in memory of my late mother. Then my FIL walked in, saw what she’d done, and pulled out something that made her go pale.
The afternoon light fell soft and yellow across my in-laws’ living room. I sat on the edge of the couch with my newborn in my arms, every muscle below my ribs still screaming from the C-section two weeks earlier.
My free hand drifted, without thinking, to the long rope of hair falling past my waist, the one feature I shared with my late mother.
Daniel had kissed my forehead at five that morning before his three-day work trip.
“You sure you’ll be okay here, baby?”
“I’ll be fine,” I told him.
He had hesitated in the doorway. “Mom’s been… try not to take her personally, okay?”
I smiled. “I never do.”
That was a lie, but it was the kind of lie that kept marriages soft.
Coraline walked through the room about an hour after he left. She glanced at me, then at the trailing end of my hair on the cushion, and her mouth pulled tight.
“That rat’s nest is everywhere again.”
“I’m sorry,” I said quietly. “I’ll braid it after he eats.”
She sniffed, moved my water glass three inches to the left for no reason I could see, and walked away.
At the time, I thought it was just another cruel comment. I had no idea that afternoon was about to change everything.
Robert came in then and looked at his wife for a long second before stepping outside.
I had noticed that about him over the past year. Every time Coraline sharpened her voice, Robert found somewhere else to be.
My son stirred against my chest, rooting, hungry again. I shifted him carefully into position.
My hair slid forward over my shoulder. I gathered it up and laid it gently over the arm of the couch so it would not catch on the baby’s blanket.
He latched, and I let out the smallest sigh of relief I had felt all day.
Behind me, in the hallway, I heard Coraline’s footsteps. Slow. Steady. Coming closer.
If I’d known what was coming, I never would have turned my back on her.
I did not turn around to look.
The snip came before the sound made sense.
A cold, metallic bite at the back of my neck. Then a strange lightness, like someone had lifted a heavy curtain off my spine.
What happened next changed everything… continues on the next page.
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