Her Best Friend Came To Her Door, And Her Husband Turned Pale-thuyhien

For months, Emily blamed herself for not getting pregnant.

She blamed her body.

She blamed her age.

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She blamed stress, work, timing, sugar, caffeine, sleep, and every other little thing people tell women to control when life refuses to give them the one thing they want most.

She did not blame Michael.

That was the part that hurt later.

Michael had been her husband for seven years, the person who sat beside her in clinic waiting rooms and squeezed her hand when nurses called her name.

He was the one who told her, every month, that another negative test did not make her less of a woman.

He was the one who rubbed her back while she cried on the bathroom floor.

He was the one who said, “We’ll keep trying.”

Emily believed him because she wanted to.

Their house was an ordinary little suburban house with a short driveway, a mailbox that leaned slightly after a delivery truck clipped it one winter, and a small American flag Michael had clipped to the porch rail the previous Fourth of July and never taken down.

They had two rescued dogs, a kitchen table with one wobbly chair, and a calendar on the fridge with appointments circled in blue pen.

Bloodwork.

Follow-up.

Consultation.

Every circle looked like hope until it did not.

Jessica knew all of it.

Jessica was Emily’s best friend, though “best friend” sounded too small for what she had been allowed to become.

She knew the back-door code.

She knew which coffee mug Emily reached for when she was upset.

She had driven Emily to the hospital when Emily’s father needed emergency surgery.

She had stood beside Emily in a pale dress on her wedding day and cried harder than some relatives did.

Every Sunday, she came over like family, kicked off her shoes near the laundry room, scratched the dogs behind their ears, and sat at the kitchen table as if the chair had always belonged to her.

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