A Woman Hid Her Pregnancy After Divorce—Then Her Ex Walked Into Delivery-rosocute

The contraction hit so hard it felt like my entire body split in half.

One second, I was gripping the rails of the hospital bed inside St. Mary’s Medical Center in Boston while fluorescent lights buzzed overhead and freezing January rain tapped against the windows.

The next, pain exploded through every nerve in my body.

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“Breathe, Ava. Slow breaths,” the nurse coached gently while adjusting the monitor strapped across my stomach.

Her badge read Jennifer Collins, RN.

I tried to focus on her voice.

I tried to remember the breathing exercises from the birthing class videos I watched alone in my apartment at two in the morning while eating crackers because nausea kept waking me up.

But nineteen hours of labor had turned my brain into static.

My hair stuck to my face with sweat.

My hospital gown clung damply against my back.

Every muscle in my body shook beneath the thin blanket.

Outside my room, I could hear rolling carts squeaking against tile floors and muffled announcements over the intercom.

Time no longer felt real.

Pain does that to people.

It strips life down to seconds.

To breathing.

To survival.

Then the delivery room door opened.

And my entire world stopped.

The doctor stepped inside while pulling down his surgical mask.

Dark eyes.

Sharp jawline.

The faint scar beneath his chin I used to kiss during lazy movie nights when we still believed forever was something ordinary people actually got to keep.

For one horrifying second, I thought exhaustion had finally made me hallucinate.

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