Divorced Woman Gives Birth as Her Ex-Husband Walks in as the Doctor-eirian

After Our Divorce, I Secretly Carried His Child Until the Day I Went Into Labor and the Doctor Lowered His Mask

The contraction did not build slowly.

It hit like a door slammed from the inside.

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One second I was lying in a narrow hospital bed at Hartford Memorial, trying to obey the nurse who kept telling me to breathe through my nose and out through my mouth.

The next second I was clawing at the plastic rails and making a sound I did not recognize as my own.

The room smelled like antiseptic, warmed blankets, and the crushed paper cup of ice chips on the rolling tray beside me.

Fluorescent light buzzed overhead with a steady cruelty.

The fetal monitor kept printing its little black hills and valleys onto a strip of paper that curled toward the floor.

Every few seconds, the machine filled the room with the galloping proof that my baby was still there.

That sound was the only thing keeping me from disappearing into panic.

“Breathe, Chloe,” Linda Kowalski said beside me.

Her badge said Linda Kowalski, RN, and by then I had memorized it because she had been the only steady thing in the room for hours.

“Slow, slow,” she said.

I tried.

I truly did.

But after nineteen hours of labor, my body did not feel like my body anymore.

It felt like a house with every light on and every door being forced open at once.

There was an intake bracelet around my wrist with my name printed in black.

There was a consent form clipped to the chart at the foot of the bed.

There was a fetal monitor strip recording every rise and dip as if pain could become evidence if someone fed enough paper through a machine.

Those things mattered to me.

They were proof I had arrived alone, signed alone, labored alone, and kept breathing anyway.

I had done many things alone since the divorce.

Labor was only the loudest one.

“Baby’s heart rate still looks good,” another nurse said.

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