She Found Two Pink Lines, Then Heard Her Husband Choose Another Woman-kieutrinh

The bathroom smelled like eucalyptus soap, warm plastic, and the kind of fear that has nowhere to go.

I sat barefoot on the cold marble tile of our Seattle townhouse, staring at a pregnancy test under vanity lights that made every flaw in the room too visible.

The fan buzzed above me.

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My fingers trembled so badly that the test clicked against the counter when I set it down.

Then the second line appeared.

It was faint at first, the kind of pale pink that three years of disappointment had trained me not to trust.

I leaned closer.

The line darkened.

I pressed one hand over my mouth because the sound coming out of me was half laugh and half sob, and for a moment I was afraid that if I made too much noise, the miracle would change its mind.

I was pregnant.

After three years of fertility appointments, timed shots, clinic portals, medication alarms, and doctors who had learned to speak gently around our odds, I was finally pregnant.

Caleb Whitmore and I had built our marriage around that missing child.

We had built routines around absence.

On Mondays, I called the clinic if my chart had not updated.

On Wednesdays, Caleb picked up prescriptions from the pharmacy on his way home from the architecture firm.

On Fridays, we tried to pretend we were still a couple and not two exhausted people orbiting a medical calendar.

The guest room at the end of the hall stayed empty because decorating it felt like tempting fate.

The crib catalog stayed in my nightstand drawer because I could not bring myself to throw it away.

There were months when Caleb held my hand so tightly in the waiting room that my fingers ached.

There were other months when he sat beside me scrolling through emails while I watched women come out of ultrasound rooms with red eyes and folded paperwork.

I told myself grief changed people.

I told myself exhaustion explained distance.

I told myself a lot of things because marriage teaches you to defend someone even from your own instincts.

At 7:18 p.m. on a Thursday, every defense I had ever built for him was still standing.

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