
The streets of Silverfield District in Eastbay City were already wet from the morning drizzle when I returned home, my heart heavy from a twelve-hour shift. Inside our apartment, the cries of my newborn son, Kai, pierced through the quiet air, relentless and shrill.
Anna Li, my wife, slumped against the corner of the dining table, her shoulders trembling, hair sticking to her damp forehead. “Mark… I… I tried feeding him… nothing comes out,” she whispered, her voice breaking.
I set down my bag, exhaustion and frustration mounting. “Anna, why isn’t he eating? How can he cry like this and you can’t help him?”
She shook her head, tears sliding down her pale cheeks. “I… I’ve eaten, I’ve tried everything, but nothing… I can’t produce enough milk. I feel so weak.”
My chest tightened. “Weak? Anna, you’ve just had a baby. You’re supposed to be recovering. You can’t keep letting him starve!”
At that moment, I heard the faint scraping of a chair from the kitchen. I froze. Something was off. I walked slowly toward the kitchen doorway and stopped dead.
Anna was crouched over a large bowl, hastily spooning cold rice into her mouth. Her hands shook, her movements furtive, as if she were afraid I’d see her.
“Anna… what are you doing?” I demanded, my voice harsher than I intended.
She jumped, nearly dropping the spoon. “Mark… I… I just… I was hungry… I didn’t want to bother you…”
I stepped closer, grabbed the bowl, and lifted it. The stench hit me immediately. The rice was clumped and cold, floating in a thin, cloudy broth with pale scraps of fish fat and small, gnawed bones. My stomach churned.
“What is this?” I hissed.
Anna’s face crumpled. “Mom… Mom said I had to eat leftovers. She said our family needs to save money. She… she told me that the fresh food goes to my sister because she’s pregnant. I… I tried eating, but it hurts my stomach. I didn’t know what else to do.”
I stared at her, disbelief and fury mixing in my veins. “She made you eat this? While Kai hasn’t had enough milk? And I gave her money every month to feed you properly!”
Anna shook her head violently. “I couldn’t… I didn’t want to tell you… She said if I said anything, she would send me back to my parents’ house…”
The bowl slipped from my hands and shattered against the tile. Pieces of cold rice and spoiled fat spread across the floor. I looked up just as the familiar hum of a motorcycle approached. Darlene Tan, my mother, stepped inside, humming, carrying a bag of groceries.

“Mark! Back early again? Did Anna break the dishes while being clumsy?” she said, her tone light as if nothing were wrong.
“Mom,” I said, my voice low and trembling, “look at what you’ve been feeding my wife and my son.”
She looked down, eyes narrowing. “I… I just wanted to save money. That’s all…”
“Save money? Or kill your grandson by giving him a mother who can’t feed him and a wife who is starving herself to produce milk?” I shouted, stepping closer. “Do you still call yourself a human being?”
She stepped back, shaking. “I… I didn’t… I just wanted to… you’re overreacting!”
I turned to Anna, lifting her gently. “We’re leaving. Pack what we need. We’re done staying here.”
Anna’s eyes were wide, her body trembling. “Mark… are you sure?”
“Yes,” I said firmly. “We’ll find a place where you and Kai are safe. Where you can eat properly, rest, and recover.”
I packed our things quickly. Darlene’s protests were drowned out by my resolve. As I guided Anna and Kai toward the taxi, she clutched her baby tightly, tears spilling freely. “I’m sorry… I didn’t mean to make him suffer,” she whispered.
I kissed the top of her head, my own tears burning. “It’s not your fault. I should have seen this sooner. I won’t let anyone hurt you or Kai again.”
Inside the cab, Kai stirred and wailed, but this time, I felt a strange calm. I pulled Anna close. “We’ll make it right. You’ll eat. He’ll feed. We’ll sleep. We’ll be safe.”
The rain eased as we left Silverfield District behind. My mother’s face and the spoiled meals replayed in my mind, a bitter memory, but I knew we were moving toward something better.
At our new apartment, I made sure Anna had fresh, nourishing food. Kai was fed with both her milk and supplemental formula. That night, as I watched Anna drift into an exhausted but peaceful sleep, I whispered again, “No one will control or harm you here. Not ever.”
Weeks passed. Anna’s strength returned. Kai’s cries became soft, satisfied, and he began gaining weight. Each evening, as I held them close, I marveled at how fragile yet resilient life could be.

One afternoon, as Anna rocked Kai in the sunlight streaming through the window, she said softly, “Mark… I can eat now without fear. I can finally feed him.”
I smiled, squeezing her hand. “You’ve earned this. We’ve earned this. No one will ever take it from us again.”
Outside, the city moved on, indifferent to the suffering it had witnessed in our apartment. But inside, we had found a quiet revolution: a home where trust and care replaced cruelty and neglect. A home where our family could finally heal.
And I knew, with certainty, that no matter what my mother or the past tried to take, I would never again let someone else’s greed or indifference harm the people I loved most.