Bear weight

The garden chair sat unfolded in the eye of the mid-morning sun.

It longed to bear someone’s weight. The youngest, limbs tucked in, podgy fists pattering against its arm. Or the older one, sprawling, giggling, impossible to contain. Or the dad, settling with the weekend paper. Or the mum, back curved gently, coffee in hand. Decaf. She was expecting again.

But they were all still inside.

The chair was forgotten—for now.

A small robin landed on its arm and tilted its head, as if to say, I know how you feel.

Inside, coffee brewed. The mum and dad stood side by side, peering at the family wall planner for a blank square. The months ahead looked full and yet also unreadable. Their pencilled notes stacked across it like scaffolding: scans, school trips, plays, swimming lessons. Life added itself in shorthand squiggles and smudges.

She moved to make toast. It was a wonder there was still space left—on the calendar, in the house, in herself—for another baby.

The toast scent drifted out the open patio door with the breeze. The chair held it close. It had learned to hold many things—laughter, comfort, crumbs of celebration and the imprint of a lost presence. A gift once given, now a memory that settled deep in the fabric. Faithful as ever. Ready to hold whatever needed holding next.

Well-being

“Move along, Sally instructed silently, teeth clenched. Her drenched maternity trousers stuck to her like clingfilm, her huge belly tightening and expanding over the elasticated waistband. Her hair starting to mat itself to her perspiring forehead. She pictured herself as the enormous turnip from the children’s tale, needing to be heaved by medical staff to move her from this spot, and wished she could hide behind the well until this was all over.”

Sally is heavily pregnant and overdue when her daily walk by an ancient well, storied to have healing waters, takes an unexpected twist.

Published by Every Day Fiction, click here to read.