He Mocked His Ex For Being Barren. Then She Entered His Wedding-kieutrinh

Eight months after the divorce, my phone buzzed with his name while I was still in a hospital bed.

The room smelled like antiseptic, warm milk, and the weak coffee a nurse had left cooling near the window.

My body ached in places I had never known could ache.

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My daughter slept beside me in a clear plastic bassinet, bundled so tight that only one small fist had escaped the blanket.

When Adrian’s name flashed on my screen, I almost did not answer.

Then I remembered every time I had let him speak first and regretted it later.

“Come to my wedding,” he said.

No hello.

No hesitation.

Just the same smooth, satisfied voice he used whenever he believed he had found a clean way to hurt me.

I stared at the ceiling tile above my bed and felt the sheet scrape against my fingers.

“Your wedding,” I said.

“You heard me,” Adrian replied. “Celeste is pregnant. Unlike you.”

My daughter made a tiny sound in her sleep.

It was not even a cry.

It was just a soft breath, a reminder that the life he had mocked was lying ten inches from my hand.

For three seconds, I could not speak.

Adrian took my silence as victory.

He always did.

“Don’t be dramatic, Mia,” he said. “Eight months is enough time to get over a divorce. Besides, you always said you wanted a family. I thought you might like watching me finally have one.”

Seven years of marriage can train a woman’s body before her mind catches up.

My throat tightened before I felt angry.

My fingers curled before I decided to defend myself.

My heart went cold before I understood why.

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