He Forced His Laboring Wife To Sign Away Her Estate. Then Her Left Hand Moved-kieutrinh

My water broke on the hardwood floor at 2:13 a.m., and the sound was smaller than I expected.

Not dramatic.

Not like the movies.

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Just a soft splash, a sharp inhale, and then the kind of silence that makes a house feel like it has been waiting for you to fall.

I was standing near the staircase with one hand on the banister and the other curved around my belly.

The air was cool against my damp skin.

The foyer smelled like lemon cleaner, old wood, and the expensive candle Evelyn had insisted made the house feel more welcoming.

Nothing about that house felt welcoming anymore.

“Daniel,” I whispered. “Call an ambulance.”

My husband appeared at the end of the hallway in his silk robe, his phone in one hand and a manila folder in the other.

For half a second, I thought the folder was something my brain had invented because the pain was coming too fast.

Then I saw the yellow tabs sticking out from the edge.

Behind him stood his mother.

Evelyn was not wearing panic on her face.

She was wearing satisfaction.

Her silver hair was brushed back perfectly even at that hour, and her robe was tied with a neat little knot at the waist.

She looked less like a woman startled awake by a medical emergency and more like someone who had been waiting for the curtain to rise.

“No ambulance,” Daniel said.

I blinked at him.

The baby shifted low and hard, and my breath snagged in my throat.

“The baby is coming,” I said.

“Then you need to hurry.”

He set the folder on the side table beside the ceramic key bowl.

The little bowl was shaped like a rose, something my father had bought at a roadside craft fair when I was fourteen.

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