My mother’s message arrived while the world inside my car still felt soft.
Maisie was asleep in the back seat, wrapped in a cream blanket with little yellow stars on it, her tiny lips parted, one fist tucked beneath her chin like she had chosen peace on purpose. The heater hummed low. Rain clung to the windshield in a silver mist. Traffic moved in long, patient streams around me as Interstate 5 carried us south toward Portland, toward my mother’s birthday dinner, toward the family I had spent my whole life trying to keep happy.
Then my phone lit up on the console.
Skip my birthday. We need a break from your kid.
That was it.
No hello. No apology. No explanation dressed up as concern. No “today might be too much” or “can we celebrate another time?” Just that sentence, hard and plain, like a door slammed in my face from four hours away.
For a second I actually thought I had read it wrong. My eyes flicked back to the road, then down again when I hit a red light. The words remained there, cold and ugly and entirely real.
We need a break from your kid.
Not baby.
Not Maisie.
Not your daughter.
Your kid.
As if she were a stain. As if she were noise. As if she were a burden so obvious it did not even need to be softened.
My fingers tightened around the steering wheel until my knuckles went white. Heat rose up my throat, sharp and bitter. I had left Seattle before dawn. I had packed bottles, diapers, extra onesies, a portable bassinet, pacifiers, wipes, a burp cloth draped over my shoulder, snacks for myself I hadn’t touched, and a birthday gift I had spent too much money on because that was what I always did. I had driven four hours with a three-month-old because family mattered to me.
Or maybe because I had spent twenty-seven years being trained to prove that it did.
Maisie stirred in the back seat and made a tiny sigh, the kind babies make when they are dreaming something better than real life. I glanced in the mirror and saw her cheeks flushed with sleep, her lashes resting against skin so soft it almost hurt to look at. She had no idea that my mother had just referred to her like an inconvenience. She had no idea the people she should have been able to trust had already decided she was too much.