Pregnant At The Clinic, She Saw Her CEO Husband Marry On Live TV-kieutrinh

The first time my twins heard their father’s voice, it came through a television bolted to the wall of a maternity clinic.

Not in a nursery.

Not beside my bed.

Image

Not with his hand trembling over my stomach because the sound of two heartbeats had finally made him understand what kind of life we were bringing into the world.

It came through a live broadcast from Palm Beach while I sat five months pregnant in a clinic chair on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

The Harrington Women’s Center smelled like lavender disinfectant, expensive hand soap, and the kind of coffee nobody poured for themselves.

Everything in that waiting room had been chosen to keep rich women calm.

Velvet chairs.

Soft lighting.

Fresh white orchids on the reception desk.

A small American flag in a silver holder near the check-in clipboard, so small and polished it looked more like decor than a symbol.

My appointment was at 3:00 p.m.

That mattered later.

At the time, it was just a number printed on my intake form, beside my name, Anna Sterling, and beside the line that said spouse or emergency contact: Julian Sterling.

I remember staring at his name while I waited.

I remember thinking it looked solid on paper.

Names can look like anchors when they are really doors.

Julian had promised he would come.

His assistant had called the night before at 7:48 p.m., her voice smooth enough to make a lie sound like customer service.

“Mrs. Sterling, Mr. Sterling has cleared time on his calendar. He will meet you at the clinic.”

I thanked her.

I hated myself for thanking her.

For five months, Julian had missed every meaningful appointment with a better excuse than the last.

A board call ran long.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *