I Found My Ex-Wife Alone In A Hospital Hallway After Our Divorce-hothiyenvy_5

Two months after my divorce, I found my ex-wife sitting alone in a hospital corridor, and the moment I recognized her, the whole life I had tried to walk away from came back with a force that nearly knocked me to the floor.

The hallway smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and wet pavement from the rain people kept tracking in through the front doors.

The fluorescent lights made everything look too pale.

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The floor was so polished I could see the blurred shape of my shoes under me, but all I could really hear was the steady beep of a monitor somewhere behind a half-closed door.

I had only come to the hospital to visit Daniel after his surgery.

He had texted me that morning that it was nothing serious, just one of those procedures people call minor only when it is not happening to them.

I left work, grabbed a paper coffee cup I barely drank from, and drove through a gray afternoon with my visitor sticker already folded in my pocket because I had stopped at the front desk on my way in.

I was not looking for Sarah.

I was not prepared to see the woman I had once promised to love forever sitting by herself in a corner of the internal medicine wing.

But there she was.

At first, my mind refused to understand what my eyes were seeing.

A woman in a pale blue hospital gown sat with her shoulders curled inward, her hands in her lap, and her head bowed like she was trying to take up less space than the chair allowed.

Her hair was cut short.

Not styled short.

Cut short in a way that made my throat tighten before I even knew why.

Sarah used to have long brown hair that fell down her back when she stood at the kitchen sink.

I used to find it on my pillow, stuck to my black work shirts, gathered in soft little curls around the bathroom drain.

I used to complain about it, half-joking, and she would roll her eyes and tell me that if I wanted to be married to a woman, I had to accept evidence that she lived there.

That memory hit me so hard I almost stopped breathing.

Then she lifted her face.

The woman in the corner was Sarah.

My ex-wife.

The woman I had divorced two months earlier.

Her face had thinned until her cheekbones looked sharp under her skin.

The shadows under her eyes were deep and bruised-looking, though there was no mark there, only exhaustion.

She looked older than thirty, and more alone than anyone should ever look in a public hallway full of people.

For one second, the entire corridor seemed to tilt.

A nurse pushed a cart past me.

Someone laughed softly near the elevators.

A man in a ball cap walked by with a vending machine soda in his hand.

The world kept moving, ordinary and careless, while mine stopped right there beside a row of plastic chairs.

My name is Ethan Miller.

I am thirty-four years old, and until that day, I would have told you I was a practical man.

Not cruel.

Not dramatic.

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