
Replaced By His First Love: My Son Wants A New Mommy
Replaced By His First Love: My Son Wants A New Mommy Chapter 1
Emily
The clock on the wall ticks. I check my phone for the twentieth time. No texts. No replies to the messages I’d sent to Malcom hours ago. And even worse, no missed calls. My chest feels tight, a familiar ache that has become my constant companion since the day Jason was born.
I already called the hospital. The receptionist’s voice had been flat, dripping with the boredom of someone who hasn't spent their evening imagining their child in a ditch.
She told me no seven-year-old boy named Jason had been admitted. I should feel relieved, but the anxiety only shifts, twisting into a different kind of pain.
I know where he is. He’s with Malcom. But I still can’t shake the unease. Maybe it’s because a part of me knew that if Malcom was "out," Monica would be the one holding the map.
My son was spending time with his father's ex.
I release yet another sigh, the sound disappearing into the vast, empty silence of the house.
I catch my reflection in the darkened window of the kitchen. I look worn out. My hair is pulled back in a messy knot, stray strands framing a face that looks sallow and drained under the harsh fluorescent lights. I don't recognize the woman staring back at me. I look at my hands—unpolished.
This has become my look for the past few years. Tired. Gray. Invisible.
The dinner I spent two hours preparing sits on the table, cold and untouched. The steam has long since vanished, leaving the specialized broth—the one I brewed specifically for Jason’s sensitive stomach—looking like a stagnant, oily pool.
Where was my family?
Then, I hear it. The crunch of gravel in the driveway. The sound of high-pitched giggling followed by Malcom’s deep, effortless rumble of laughter.
They’re home.
I force a smile onto my face, trying to swallow the lump of resentment in my throat. I push the door open just as they walk in, the cool night air rushing past them like a breath of fresh life I wasn't invited to share.
"Finally. Jason," I say, my voice trembling slightly despite my best efforts to sound calm. "How are you? How’s your head? Do you feel dizzy?"
I reach out to brush the hair from his forehead, wanting to feel his skin, to check for the tell-tale heat of a recurring fever. Jason flinches away from my touch as if I’m something unpleasant.
"We had so much fun with Monica, Mom!" Jason beams, his eyes bright in a way they never are when he’s sitting across from me at the dinner table. "She took us to the park and she let me ride the big bike. We went on a mini hike and I even ate pizza..."
"Pizza?" The word feels like a lead to my stomach. "Jason, you know you can't eat that. Your stomach—the doctor said the inflammation—"
"I made dinner," I interrupt myself, gesturing toward the table with a hand that won't stop shaking. "I made the steamed vegetables and the broth. The one that helps your digestion, Jason. I spent all afternoon on it."
Jason groans, his small face twisting into an expression of pure, unadulterated exasperation.
"That stuff again? I'm not hungry. Monica’s food actually tasted good. The meat was a bit spicy, but she said I was big enough to handle it. I liked it."
Monica. Monica again. Not only did she have a permanent place in my husband's history, she had built a fortress in my son’s heart.
My heart lurches. I look past him to Malcom, who is leaning against the doorframe, watching me with an unreadable, stony expression. His eyes are cold, devoid of the warmth I just heard in his laughter seconds ago.
I had to just let this slide. As usual. If I fought, I was the villain.
Then, I see it. As Jason pulls off his backpack, the sleeve of his shirt shifts. A dark, purplish bruise is blooming on his forearm, stark against his pale skin.
"Did you get hurt?" I’m on my knees in an instant, my hands reaching for him. "Jason, let me see. Did you fall? Malcom, why didn't anyone call me?!" I demand, my gaze snapping up to my husband.
"Stop, Mom!" Jason shoves my hands away. The force of the rejection sends me back on my heels. "It’s fine. I’m fine. I really am. Monica already checked it and she said I was a brave boy. Ugh! You’re so annoying!"
He storms off toward his bedroom, his small footsteps thundering down the hallway like a rhythmic rejection of everything I am. I stay on the floor, stunned, the cold tile pressing into my knees through my leggings.
"What happened?" I ask, turning to Malcom. My voice is thick. "How did he get hurt?"
"I should be asking you that," Malcom says. His voice is a low, dangerous drawl that makes my skin crawl. "You just had to ruin a perfect evening with your exaggeration. You can't even let him through the door without suffocating him."
I blink, the sting of his words hitting harder than the shove from my son.
"Exaggeration? Malcom, you took our son after school and didn't tell me where you were going. I was left in the dark for hours. He has school tomorrow. He needs his medication. He needs to rest properly, not be out eating spicy food and getting bruised."
"Our son," Malcom corrects, his jaw tightening until a muscle leaps in his cheek. ".. was with me. He was safe."
" Yes, with you and your company," I bite back helplessly. "And he’s hurt. Again!"
"You’re doing it again." Malcom sighs, a sound full of deep weariness and visceral disgust.
"Excuse me?" I mutter, blinking back the hot prickle of tears that I refuse to let fall.
"This, Emily! This! This nagging. This constant, hovering presence. It’s wearing me out. It’s bothersome. He’s fine, Emily. For goodness sake, let him breathe a little. He's not dying, no matter how much you want to pretend he is."
"Malcom?" I whisper. My voice sounds small, pathetic, even to my own ears.
"Have a good night," he says, turning his back on me.
He walks away, leaving me alone in the kitchen with a meal no one wants and a heart that is cracking open in the silence.
I stand there for what feels like an eternity. Finally, I drag the apron off my shoulder. The broth had taken four hours to simmer. It was meant to keep him out of the hospital. But it was no big deal. Nothing I did mattered unless it was "bothersome."
I walk toward Jason's bedroom to check on him one last time. The door is ajar. I stop when I hear their voices—the soft, intimate tone they never use with me anymore.
"Did Mom nag you too?" Jason asks his dad.
Malcom chuckles. It’s a dry, shared sound between men. "She did, didn’t she? It's alright, Champ."
"I hate it when she does that," Jason’s voice is loud, clear, and dripping with a disdain that no seven-year-old should feel for his mother.
"She’s always, always nagging. She’s not fun like Monica. Monica is pretty and she likes to do things. But Mom... she's just..." He pauses, searching for the word. "She's just... dull."
"Maybe she’s just upset we didn't bring her along," Malcom says. "I mean, we didn't tell her where we were going. I did that because you told me not to, remember?"
The floor feels like it’s shifting beneath me. My own son had told his father to hide their lives from me.
"No!" Jason says quickly. "It’s good she didn't know. You know how she is, Dad. She’s not sporty. If we brought her hiking, she’d just slow us down. She’d get worried about the flies. Get worried about the dirt and the germs and nag and dote on me until I wanted to scream. She's fat and boring."
I freeze. The words slice through the air, small and lethal.
*Fat. Boring. Slow.*
He doesn't know. He’s only seven. He doesn't know that I had a heart condition while I carried him. He doesn't know about the accident that left me shattered on the pavement, or the months of bedrest that ruined my metabolism, or the way my body literally broke itself just to make sure he arrived safely into this world.
I used to be on the runway. I used to be the woman people turned to look at in awe. Now, I am a nuisance to the person I gave my health, my beauty, and my career for.
"Your mom had you," Malcom says, his voice unusually soft. "She made sacrifices. Women go through changes bringing kids into the world, you know?"
For a second, a spark of hope flickers. For the first time, Malcom is speaking on my behalf.
"Whatever," Jason replies, his voice dismissive. "She’s not the first person to have a baby, is she? What about Mallory’s mom? She’s still beautiful and she has three kids. She doesn't act like she's eighty or nags all the time."
I turn away, unable to listen to any more.
I walk back to the kitchen and start scraping the cold food into the trash. The physical pain in my chest is so sharp I have to lean against the counter to keep from falling.
They’re right. I am different now. But as I look at the gray, sallow reflection in the window, I realize the biggest change isn't my body.
It's the woman I had to become because that was what my family needed.
Replaced By His First Love: My Son Wants A New Mommy of Contents
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