When Jason left for his vacation, he kissed my forehead and promised he’d “make it up to me when he got back.” I stood at the window with our newborn, thinking, he chose the beach over us.
That week was agony. My C-section scar throbbed, Emma cried nonstop, and when she spiked a fever, I called his mother in desperation. Meanwhile, Jason sent photos of beers, seafood, and sunsets.
When he returned, tanned and carefree, another car was waiting. His mother, Margaret, stood firm with a suitcase. “You’re not stepping foot in this house until we have a serious conversation,” she said.
She confronted him: “You left your wife, four weeks post-surgery, with a newborn—alone—for a vacation… And you call that being a father?” Jason muttered, “I deserved a break,” but Margaret’s fury cut through: “Your wife deserved a partner. Your child deserved a father. I raised you better. Your father would be ashamed.”
I added, “One week showed me exactly what kind of man you are. You don’t stay. You run.” Defeated, Jason called another Uber and left.
Margaret hugged me and whispered, “You’re not alone anymore. Not ever again.” For the first time, I believed it.