She Hid Her Pregnancy After Divorce Until Her Ex Entered Delivery-rosocute

The first thing Chloe remembered about the night she went into labor was not pain.

It was the sound of her keys hitting the kitchen floor.

She had been reaching for the hospital bag by the front door when the first serious contraction folded her forward so sharply that her hand opened on its own.

Image

For a few seconds she stood in the hallway of her small Hartford apartment, one palm braced against the wall, the other pressed under the curve of her belly, breathing through her teeth while rain tapped the window behind her.

The bag sat waiting beside her shoes.

It had been waiting for three weeks.

There were two newborn sleepers inside, one cream and one pale yellow, because she had refused to let herself buy pink until the baby was safely in her arms.

There was a folded birth plan, a phone charger, an extra hair tie, and a copy of her Hartford Memorial preregistration packet with every line completed except one.

Father.

Chloe had stared at that blank for almost ten minutes the day she filled it out.

Then she had moved on.

That was the habit divorce taught her.

Do not stare too long at the place where a person used to be.

She called a rideshare because there was no husband to wake and no mother-in-law to call and no family group chat waiting with balloons and bad advice.

There was only Chloe, the bag, the rain, and the baby who had started moving like she had finally decided the world could not be avoided forever.

By the time she reached Hartford Memorial, the contractions were five minutes apart.

By midnight, they were closer.

By 3:42 a.m., after nineteen hours of labor that had begun in whispers and risen to something close to fire, Chloe had stopped pretending she was calm.

The labor and delivery room smelled like antiseptic, latex, and warmed cotton.

The air was too clean.

The lights were too bright.

The fetal monitor beside her bed made a sound she had learned to worship one beep at a time, because every little mark on that paper strip meant her child was still there.

Linda Kowalski, RN, stood at her shoulder with the patient gentleness of someone who had seen women become warriors and children in the same hour.

“Breathe, Chloe,” Linda said.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *