Again. When she tried to change and noticed something strange instead of the light pink clothes she wore last night, she was wearing white.
She was sure she wore it pink. And when Margaret arrived, Emily asked her, “Did you change Olivia at night?” Margaret simply replied yes, she was dirty. I threw up a little and changed it in clean clothes.
Emily looked in the laundry basket and she couldn’t find the pink clothes. I asked where the dirty clothes were? Margaret said efficiently put her in the washing machine. Emily was worried, but she considered questioning the kindness of her mother-in-law an inappropriate act, as children get their clothes dirty a lot.
On her way to the office, Emily contacted her colleague Jessica, who has a two-year-old child. Emily worried about Olivia’s recently a freak. She cries violently in the morning, and my husband says my upbringing is bad. Jessica tried to console her through the birth period, but her crying in the morning alone is unusual. They usually cry at any time. She added that she might respond to a specific trigger.
That evening, Emily came home early. Margaret had left, and Olivia was in her bed. Michael hasn’t come back yet. Emily carried Olivia, and noticed something strange that was quiet. There was no intense morning cry. It seemed relieved.
Emily said to her daughter, “Why are you crying so much in the morning alone?” Olivia caught her mother’s finger with her little hand and stared at her.
That night, when Michael came back, Olivia’s behavior changed again. As he approached, her body gradually began to harden. When he tried to carry her, she started crying violently. Michael said upset crying again that’s really annoying.
Emily carefully monitored her husband’s reaction. Olivia tended to cry when Michael approached. Is it a coincidence or a meaning?
Before bed, Emily was thinking about threatening Olivia, there’s a clear pattern. Michael’s presence in the morning, her time with Margaret in the daytime, and the family time in the evening. Of all that, Olivia seemed more comfortable when she was alone with Emily. But Emily hasn’t understood what that means yet.
The waiting room at the children’s clinic was receiving a quiet morning light. Emily was carrying Olivia and waiting for Michael to arrive. He had promised to come after a meeting, but he hasn’t arrived yet.
Nurse Carol called her a smile, Mrs. Hartwell, sorry to wait. Dr. Johnson is ready.
They entered the examination room, and Dr. Johnson warmly welcomed. He was a well-known doctor in the area with more than thirty years of experience. He asked how Olivia was doing? He’s going through the file.
Emily said hesitantly, there’s something that’s been worrying me lately. She cries violently in the morning, and my husband says my upbringing is bad.
The doctor only lifted his eyebrows in the morning? Crying at specific times is remarkable.
At that moment the door was opened and Michael rushed in, and he was dying. Sorry I was late. The meeting went on. The doctor smiled. It’s okay. We’re just starting.
The examination began with a weight measurement. Olivia was growing well within normal rates. Then the doctor said as he lifted the doctor’s stethoscope, let me listen to her heart. Father, can you carry Olivia?
As soon as he took Michael Olivia from Emily, the atmosphere changed. Olivia began to scream very hard, screaming with obvious fear. Michael tried to calm her down, confused, but her body was completely stiff.
The doctor kept watching quietly to watch for a moment.
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