He Found His Ex-Wife Alone in a Hospital Hallway and Froze-QuynhTranJP

The first thing Arjun noticed was the smell.

Not blood, not medicine, not anything dramatic enough to warn him that his life was about to split open.

It was disinfectant, stale coffee, and wet coats drying badly in a crowded hospital corridor.

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Semmelweis Clinic in Budapest was busy that morning, full of people who had brought their pain in folders, envelopes, wheelchairs, and plastic bags.

Arjun had not come there for Maya.

He had come to visit his best friend Rohit after surgery.

He was thirty-four, an ordinary office employee with a tired face, an overused phone, and the kind of loneliness he had learned to disguise as routine.

Two months after his divorce, he still woke some mornings and turned his head toward the side of the bed where Maya used to sleep.

Then he remembered.

The apartment stayed quiet.

The silence was not peaceful.

It had weight.

Maya had been his wife for five years.

To outsiders, they had looked stable in the quiet way married couples often look stable when nobody is close enough to see the cracks.

She had been soft-spoken, gentle, and almost painfully careful with other people’s moods.

She remembered how Arjun took his tea.

She put his keys in the same bowl every night so he would not lose them in the morning.

She asked, “Have you eaten?” even when she was the one who looked too tired to stand.

For a long time, Arjun mistook that gentleness for proof that everything was fine.

It was not fine.

They had wanted what so many couples want at the beginning.

A home of their own.

Children.

A small family loud enough to fill every room.

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