She Ran From the Clinic, But the Man From the Wedding Found Her-kieutrinh

The clinic lights buzzed over Vivien Cole like they were tired of watching women make impossible choices.

Everything in the waiting room felt too bright.

The white walls.

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The polished floor.

The laminated clipboard in her lap.

Even the clock above the intake desk looked cruel, its second hand jumping forward as if her life were something it could hurry along.

The room smelled like antiseptic, burnt coffee, rain-damp coats, and the faint rubbery scent of gloves from the exam rooms down the hall.

Vivien sat with both palms flat against her stomach, even though there was nothing to feel yet.

Six weeks.

No curve beneath her sweater.

No flutter.

No proof she could hold in her hands except a missed period, a drugstore test with two pink lines, and the appointment reminder still glowing on her phone.

8:40 a.m.

Clinic intake.

Vivien Cole.

She stared at her name until it looked like it belonged to someone else.

The woman across from her rubbed her thumb along the edge of a paper cup.

Another woman kept her face buried in her phone, scrolling without reading.

A couple sat near the hallway and whispered so quietly their words were less like language than weather.

No one looked at anyone too long.

There are places where judgment is so heavy that people stop needing to speak it.

Vivien had learned that young.

She had learned it at checkout counters when her card declined.

She had learned it in her sister Madison’s house, where every towel matched and every kindness came folded inside a reminder.

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