The sound that greeted me when I opened my front door was not the gentle cooing of infants or the peaceful hum of a happy home. It was a jagged, visceral wall of noise—the kind of crying that has crossed the line from hunger into sheer, breathless exhaustion. One of my twin girls, Jade, was wailing in a ragged rhythm that signaled she had been at it for hours, while her sister Amber let out angry, desperate squeaks between sobs. The scene in the living room was a portrait of total domestic collapse: formula powder dusted the granite counters like snow, a half-empty bottle lay abandoned on the sofa, and my husband, Brian, sat motionless with his elbows on his knees, staring into a middle distance that didn’t exist.
I dropped my purse and sprinted past him, my maternal instincts screaming. Jade’s face was a blotchy, inflamed red as I hoisted her from the crib, and Amber’s tiny fists were balled so tight her knuckles were white. I settled them against my shoulders, whispering the frantic, soothing nonsense that mothers use to anchor their children in a storm. When the screaming finally subsided into heavy, shuddering gasps, I looked at Brian. I expected an apology, or perhaps a panicked explanation about a missed nap or a stubborn diaper. Instead, he looked at me with eyes that were terrifyingly flat and said in a voice I didn’t recognize that we had to give them away.
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