Nine Months Pregnant In The Rain, She Saw His Smile Collapse-kieutrinh

The first thing Evelyn Carter tasted was mud.

The second was blood.

Freezing rain came down sideways against the little stretch of lawn below the front porch, cold enough to make the whole night feel sharp.

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She lay in the puddle at the bottom of the steps with one hand locked around her belly and the other pressed into the ground, trying to keep herself from sliding deeper into the sludge.

Nine months pregnant did not feel like a number anymore.

It felt like weight, fear, breath, and the slow heavy roll of her daughter beneath her palm.

Above her, Daniel Carter stood under the porch light and adjusted his tie.

He had shoved her hard enough that the railing had blurred past her shoulder and the steps had vanished beneath her feet, but now he looked like a man annoyed by bad weather.

His silk tie was dark blue.

His shoes were polished.

His hair was still neat because he had stayed under the overhang while she hit the mud.

“Daniel,” Evelyn whispered.

Her voice came out thinner than she wanted.

He smiled down at her with the same expression he used at fundraisers and supplier lunches, the same clean practiced face that made strangers lean forward and believe him.

“Don’t say my name like that, Evelyn,” he said.

Rain tapped hard against the porch roof.

“It makes you sound pathetic.”

For a second, she did not move.

She just stared at him through rainwater and dirt, trying to connect this man to the man who once stood beside her in a county clerk’s hallway, holding her hand while they waited for their marriage license.

Back then, Daniel had been nervous.

He had squeezed her fingers three times, their private little signal for I am still here.

She had believed him.

She had believed that nerves meant humility.

She had believed that charm meant warmth.

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