When my husband Theo told me his mother had offered to watch our daughter for the day, I stared at him like he’d just suggested we leave our child with a stranger we’d met at the grocery store.
“Your mom offered?” I repeated slowly, making sure I’d heard him correctly. “Denise? Your mother Denise?”
Theo nodded without looking up from his phone, scrolling through something that apparently couldn’t wait. “Yeah. I think she wants to help out more. It’s just one day, Hilary.”
Just one day. Those words should have been my first warning.
My daughter Theresa had been up half the night with a fever and an upset stomach. She was eight years old, and her beautiful long golden hair—hair that usually cascaded down her back in waves—was matted to her forehead with sweat. She’d been miserable, asking for water and cold compresses, and I’d spent most of the night on her bedroom floor making sure she was okay.
I had already called out of work once this month. My boss had been understanding the first time, but I knew I was pushing my luck. Today wasn’t optional. I had a presentation that couldn’t be rescheduled and a client meeting that had been on the books for weeks.
“When did you tell your mom we needed a babysitter?” I asked, already knowing I wasn’t going to like the answer.
“When you were in the shower this morning,” Theo said, finally looking up. “She called asking if I could pick up a package for her from the post office. When I mentioned Theresa was sick and you had to work, she offered to come over and watch her. I said yes.”
He said it so casually, like it was the most normal thing in the world. Like his mother hadn’t spent the last eight years finding creative excuses to avoid spending time with our daughter.
For eight years, Denise had refused to babysit. Her reasons changed depending on the day: she had book club, she had a headache, she was redecorating, her garden needed attention. My personal favorite excuse was that her dog—a pampered Pomeranian named Buttons—got separation anxiety when she left the house for more than an hour.
But her dog? That was apparently fine today.
When a woman who has dodged every babysitting request for nearly a decade suddenly volunteers, you don’t celebrate. You get suspicious.
I should have trusted my gut right then and said no. I should have called in sick again, consequences be damned. I should have asked my own mother or hired a babysitter service or literally done anything else.
Instead, I kissed Theresa’s warm forehead, handed Denise a bottle of children’s fever reducer, and gave her a list of very clear, very specific instructions.
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