I was lying in a hospital bed, hooked up to monitors, when my mother-in-law struck me in front of my own parents and shouted, “You’ve brought nothing but shame to this family!”
My mother froze. I couldn’t even raise my hand to defend myself. But my father stepped forward with a look I had never seen before and said, “You touched my daughter once. Now you answer to me.”
What happened after that left everyone in the room stunned.
The hospital room smelled faintly of antiseptic and stale coffee. The harsh fluorescent lights made everything feel colder, sharper—especially Diane Mercer, my husband’s mother.
She didn’t need bad lighting to seem cruel. She walked in wearing a cream-colored coat, expensive perfume trailing behind her, and that same familiar expression—the one she always wore when she came to judge me.
My husband, Ryan, stood near the window, his hands shoved into his pockets. My mother sat beside my bed, gently rubbing my arm. My father, Daniel Brooks, stayed near the door, watching everything in silence.
I had been admitted the night before with severe abdominal pain and dehydration after complications from surgery. I was weak, exhausted, and barely able to sit up without help.
Ryan had told his mother not to come.
She came anyway.
Diane didn’t ask how I was feeling. She didn’t glance at the chart at the foot of my bed.
She looked straight at me and said, “So this is what you do now? Lie in a hospital bed and make everyone cater to you?”
My mother stiffened beside me.
“She just had surgery,” she said carefully.