“Sorry, Mom… I’m not hungry,” she’d say, night after night. Her plate always remained untouched. My husband simply shrugged and said, “She’ll get used to it.” But one night, while he was away on a business trip, she came to me and said, “Mom… I need to tell you something.” The moment those words left her lips, I dropped the phone and called the police immediately.
In a Seattle residential neighborhood where autumn winds caressed her cheeks, Rachel Harrison was desperately trying to adapt to her new life. Married life was vastly different from what she had imagined; everything had become complicated with the presence of five-year-old Emma, her stepdaughter. Rachel’s life changed last spring when she met Michael Harrison, a pharmaceutical company sales manager.
She learned that Michael was a single man who had recently lost his wife to illness and was raising a young daughter alone. Their courtship was brief. Michael said, “Emma needs a mother,” and Rachel felt that even though she couldn’t have children, she might be able to become Emma’s mother.
Three months after the marriage, Rachel couldn’t hide her confusion. Emma was an angel-like little girl, but she always seemed to keep her distance. “Good morning, Emma,” Rachel called out cheerfully at the breakfast table.
Emma only replied with a small “good morning” and wouldn’t make eye contact. She didn’t touch the pancakes Rachel had made. “Emma, eat a little more,” Michael said, his voice containing a harshness that made Emma shrink even further.
“It’s okay, Emma. You don’t have to force yourself,” Rachel smiled gently, but Emma shook her head and left her seat. Michael sighed.
“I’m sorry, Rachel. Emma still hasn’t gotten used to the change. She was accustomed to the food my previous wife made, so she might be confused by the new flavors.” Michael didn’t like to talk much about his former wife, other than explaining that she died suddenly from illness.
Rachel thought it wouldn’t be good to bring up painful memories, so she didn’t probe deeper. Emma’s food refusal became more serious with each passing day. The daycare reported that she left most of her lunch untouched.
“She hasn’t eaten properly for over a week now,” Rachel told Michael one night. “She’ll make herself sick at this rate.”
Michael remained seated on the sofa, not taking his eyes off the television. “You’re being too neurotic, Rachel.
Children are like that. When she gets hungry, she’ll naturally start eating.”
The next day, Rachel left work early and took Emma to a pediatrician. The examination revealed no physical abnormalities.
“It might be stress from adapting to a new environment,” the doctor explained. “A mother’s death is a major trauma for a child. There might be unconscious resistance to accepting a new mother.”
That night, Emma refused dinner again.
“Emma, please try just one bite,” Rachel pleaded. Emma shook her head with tears in her eyes. “Sorry, Mama.
I’m really not hungry.”
At that moment, Michael suddenly raised his voice. “Enough, Emma! Rachel made this especially for you!”
Emma clung to her chair in fear.
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