His Mother Blamed His Ex For No Children Until A Doctor Spoke-maimoc

For five years, Eleanor Sterling made sure I understood what she thought I had failed to become.

Not a wife.

Not a partner.

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A vessel that had not performed.

That was how she treated me, even when she dressed it up in good manners, family tradition, and all those sweet little smiles women like her practice in mirrors.

The first time she asked me about babies in front of the entire family, we were sitting in her dining room on a rainy Sunday evening.

The windows were fogged around the edges.

The pot roast had gone a little dry because Eleanor liked making everyone wait until Adrian’s father finished talking about business.

The room smelled like rosemary, lemon polish, and expensive candles that burned too clean to feel warm.

I remember the sound of her fork touching her plate.

A tiny scrape.

A warning bell, though I did not know it yet.

“So, Natalie,” she said, smiling at me from the head of the table, “when are you finally going to give this family a grandchild?”

Nobody laughed.

Nobody rescued me either.

My husband, Adrian, sat beside me in a navy sweater, his shoulders perfectly relaxed, his eyes down on his plate.

He heard her.

Of course he heard her.

Everyone did.

His father cleared his throat and reached for his water glass.

His sister suddenly became fascinated by the butter dish.

I felt heat climb into my neck, that awful hot flush that makes you feel exposed even when you are fully dressed.

“We’re hoping,” I said.

It was the softest answer I could give.

Eleanor tilted her head.

“Hoping is lovely,” she said, “but at some point a woman has to know whether she can actually do what marriage asks of her.”

That was the first open cut.

There would be many more.

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At Christmas, she gave me a baby blanket “for motivation.”

At Easter, she told one of her friends that some women simply were not built for motherhood, then touched my arm like she was consoling me instead of humiliating me.

At a Fourth of July cookout, while kids ran through sprinklers in the backyard and a small American flag hung from the porch, she asked Adrian if he had ever considered “medical options that did not depend entirely on Natalie.”

Adrian said nothing.

He never said nothing by accident.

His silence was always a choice.

For a long time, I told myself he was embarrassed.

I told myself he did not want to disrespect his mother.

I told myself men were awkward about these things.

A wife can build a whole house out of excuses if she is lonely enough inside her marriage.

I built mine room by room.

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