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Stars Hang Low Over the Wide Open Plains Novel Cover

Stars Hang Low Over the Wide Open Plains

Five days after my C-section, my husband Jason was summoned away again—this time by a call from his childhood friend, Angela. I stared at his message—*You handle the baby first, thanks for all your hard work*—and a wave of nausea heaved inside me. Later, when I saw the large, angry burn on our daughter Michelle’s calf from scalding water, he called it an “accidental slip.” But on his unlocked phone, I found Angela’s text: *Let the baby get a little burn. Then she won’t have the energy to bother you.* Beneath it, his immediate reply: *Okay.* So that was it. The child I’d risked my life to bring into the world was, in his eyes, nothing more than a tool to teach me a lesson. *** Alone in bed, I listened to our five-day-old daughter wail herself hoarse in her crib. The last of the anesthesia was wearing off, leaving my incision throbbing as if a thousand ants were gnawing at it. A cold sweat broke over my skin. Every movement threatened to tear my stitches, leaving me helpless—unable to get up, unable to hold her. My phone still glowed, open to my chat with Jason. My last message read: *Michelle won't stop crying. When are you coming home?* His reply: *Angela's place lost power. She's scared alone. I'm heading over to check. You soothe the baby first, thanks for all your hard work, honey.* Followed by a kissing emoji. That little icon made me sick. How laughable. The man who once vowed, “Just focus on giving birth, honey, I’ll handle the baby,” was now at another woman’s apartment, fixing appliances that never stayed fixed, right when I needed him most. And our daughter and I? We’d been reduced to a casual *thanks for all your hard work.* Despair and pain washed over me together. Finally, a sob tore from my throat, and the tears came—hot, helpless, unstoppable. I hated him. I hated that I’d been so blind, marrying this selfish, spineless man. But I hated myself more. Why did it take until now to finally see clearly? Before the wedding, Jason had doted on my every whim. He was the ambitious small-town boy who’d made it in the city. I was the only daughter of a well-off urban family. My parents gifted us a fully paid-off apartment, a decent car, and a substantial trust fund in my name. Everyone said I was marrying beneath me, but I was blinded by his drive and his endless consideration. He remembered all my likes and dislikes, made me ginger tea for my cramps, and picked me up no matter how late I worked. His most frequent promise: “Debra, you are my whole world. I’ll never let you suffer a single grievance in this lifetime.” I believed him. Then I got pregnant. He began using work as an excuse to come home less and less. Then came the delivery. As I lay writhing in the labor room, he got a call from Angela. Hesitating, he turned to me. “Debra, Angela... she just went through a bad breakup. She’s really unstable. I’m worried she might hurt herself...” If my mother hadn’t slapped him right then, he might have actually left me—in the throes of childbirth—to go comfort his “poor, helpless little sister.” After Michelle was born, I thought he’d finally pull himself together. I was wrong. The first day postpartum: Angela’s light bulb was out. Jason went. The second day: her sink was clogged. Jason went again. The third day, the fourth day... the excuses never stopped. Fixing her computer, helping her carry packages, even just accompanying her to take out the trash. I went from quietly enduring, to questioning him, to the numb resignation I felt now. Jason always had his reasons. “Debra, don’t overthink it. What we have is just a sibling bond. She’s struggling alone in the big city. What’s wrong with me helping her out? You never used to be this petty.” Petty?
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Chapter 2

Pale and puffy-faced, I stared at my own reflection in the mirror, at the angry red scar across my belly—and all I tasted was a bitter irony.

I grabbed my phone, forcing my anger down long enough to type one last message: “Jason, if you don’t come home today, we’re done.”

This time, he replied instantly: “Stop being dramatic. I’m on my way.”

Half an hour later, he finally walked in, dust still clinging to his clothes. He didn’t look at me first. He didn’t check on our daughter. Instead, he went straight for the kitchen, poured himself a glass of water, drained it in one go, and let out a long, weary sigh. “Exhausted,” he muttered. “The main breaker at Angela’s place was a nightmare to fix.”

Michelle’s crying had turned hoarse, her little face flushed crimson.

I pointed toward the crib, my voice trembling. “She’s been crying for almost an hour. How could you not hear her?”

Only then did he walk over, clumsily scooping Michelle up. He bounced her a couple of times, impatience sharpening his tone. “Cry, cry, cry. Is that all you know? What’s your mother even doing?”

My temper snapped. “Jason! How dare you? I had a C-section six days ago! The incision still hurts! I can barely get out of bed—how am I supposed to ‘do’ anything? Where the hell have you been, playing father?”

My shout caught him off guard. Then his own anger flared. “Debra, be reasonable, will you? I’m out there working my ass off to support this family. I’m tired too. You’re at home all day, resting with the baby. What more do you want?”

Resting?

The word felt like a dull blade sawing through my heart.

The searing pain of torn stitches. The sharp ache of engorged milk. The cramping contractions, and the bone-deep exhaustion of caring for a newborn around the clock… and in his eyes, that was *resting*?

Shaking, I jabbed a finger toward the door. “Get out. I don’t want to see you.”

He turned, still holding Michelle, and headed for the kitchen. “Fine! I’m going! You’re impossible!”

The door slammed shut with a bang.

The noise startled Michelle, and her cries pitched higher, more desperate.

I couldn’t hold myself up any longer. Collapsing against the bedside, I sobbed until I could barely breathe.

That’s when I heard it—a crash from the kitchen, followed by a scream from Michelle so shrill and piercing it froze the blood in my veins.

My heart dropped. Ignoring the pain, I rolled off the bed and scrambled toward the kitchen on hands and knees.

The scene that greeted me stopped my heart.

Jason was frantically righting a toppled kettle. Scalding water pooled across the floor.

And on Michelle’s tiny calf, an angry red burn was already spreading.

“Michelle!” The scream tore from my throat. I lunged forward and snatched her up.

Jason panicked, his words tumbling over each other. “I—I was just trying to make her bottle, my hand slipped… I didn’t mean to…”

Looking at my daughter’s contorted little face, a knife twisted in my chest. Only one thought cut through the panic: *Hospital. Now.*

I clutched Michelle tight and made for the door, but Jason blocked my path. “Debra, wait, it’s not that bad. It’s just a little red. We can run it under cold water. The hospital’s too much trouble.”

“Move!” My eyes were wild, burning. A lioness defending her cub. “Jason, if anything happens to her, I swear to God, I will end you.”

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