A Laboring Wife Left In A Blizzard Found Proof In The Glove Box-olive

Claire Bennett knew something was wrong before the car died.

It was not only the blizzard pressing white against the windshield or the contractions coming close enough that she had stopped pretending she was calm.

It was Derek’s silence.

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The clinic had been ten minutes behind them, and she had asked him to turn around until her voice cracked.

“The clinic can deliver Ruby,” she said, one hand braced under her belly.

Derek kept driving.

“The hospital is better,” he said.

He did not look frightened.

He looked decided.

The mountains rose on both sides of the highway, and the road ahead had begun to vanish under snow.

Claire checked her phone again and saw no signal.

Another contraction pulled through her, low and brutal, and she gripped the dashboard hard enough to hurt her fingers.

“Pull over now,” she said.

The engine coughed before Derek answered.

It rolled once, twice, then died in the middle of all that white.

The heater went quiet.

The wipers froze halfway across the glass.

For a moment neither of them moved.

Then Derek turned the key, listened to the empty click, and slammed his palm against the steering wheel like the car had betrayed him.

Claire was watching his face.

He was not surprised.

He was waiting.

“I will walk for help,” he said.

He put his phone in the glove box, took the keys from the ignition, and zipped his coat.

“Leave me the keys,” Claire said.

“No,” he answered.

The word was so flat that it frightened her more than the wind.

He opened the door and the storm rushed into the car.

Before he stepped out, he bent close and said, “No one’s coming for you or that baby.”

Then he walked away.

Claire watched his shape dissolve into the snow.

Only after he was gone did she see the ring.

His wedding band sat on the dashboard beside the dead clock, neat and deliberate, as if he had placed it there for her to understand.

She picked it up.

It was still warm.

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