
My mother forced me to hide my pregnancy because my sister “had to be first.”
My due date was earlier, but Mom warned me coldly, “You’re not giving birth before her.” When labor began, she locked me in the basement. I delivered my baby alone.
My name is Nadia Volkov. I moved from Odessa to Valencia eight years ago with a nursing degree and the hope of starting over. Instead, I ended up supporting my mother, Irina, and my younger sister, Alina. According to Mom, “family comes first,” which meant I worked double shifts while Alina was treated like royalty.
When I became pregnant with Marco’s baby, I tried to keep it quiet. But at twelve weeks, my sickness exposed me. My mother cornered me and said I wasn’t allowed to “steal the spotlight” from Alina’s wedding. Alina had to be the first to give our mother grandchildren. And since my due date came before hers, Mom’s warning wasn’t symbolic—it was literal.
I didn’t believe she meant it.
The night my contractions started, Marco was working. A storm rattled the windows. When my mother saw me in pain, she didn’t call for help. She dragged me down to the basement and locked the door.
The air smelled of mold and old detergent. I screamed. I begged for the hospital. She ignored me.
Alina came down once, dressed in silk, looked at me in disgust, and spat near my face. “Pathetic,” she said, before locking the door again.
The pain became unbearable. I lost consciousness.
When I came to, labor had progressed. My phone had barely any battery and almost no signal. Upstairs, I heard laughter—guests in the house—while I was bleeding on the basement floor.
I realized no one was coming.
I was a nurse. I had seen births before. I found an old T-shirt, zip ties, a rusty box cutter, and alcohol. Leaning against the washing machine, I delivered my daughter myself.
She didn’t cry at first.
That silence nearly destroyed me.
Then she let out a weak, fierce cry and I cried too.
I tied and cut the cord with shaking hands. I held her against my chest, calling her Vera in my mind. When my sister returned, she threatened to call police and accuse me of being on drugs if I made noise.
With 2% battery, I climbed onto boxes and lifted my phone toward the vent. A sliver of signal appeared. I texted Marco: “Locked in basement. Baby born. I’m bleeding. Call 911.” The message sent. The phone died.
Time blurred.
Then I heard pounding on the metal door.
“Nadia!” Marco shouted.
He forced the door open. When he saw me and the baby, he went pale. My mother tried to claim I was hysterical, exaggerating. But the paramedics saw the blood, the restraints, the locked door.
Police followed.
What my mother called “family discipline” became a criminal investigation.
At the hospital, they treated my bleeding. Vera was stable. I gave a full statement from my hospital bed. The charges were clear: unlawful confinement, coercion, and endangerment.
My mother and sister were arrested that night.
Weeks later, in a small apartment near the Turia River, Marco and I started over with our daughter. I changed the locks. Filed restraining orders. Cut contact.
Sometimes I still dream of the basement.
But when I hold Vera and step onto the balcony, breathing in the scent of orange blossoms, I remember something stronger than fear:
No one decides when my life begins except me.