He Delivered His Ex-Wife’s Baby, Then His Mother Walked In-eirian

The first time Harper Lane understood how alone a person could feel in a room full of trained professionals, she was lying in a hospital bed at St. Catherine Women’s Hospital outside Providence, Rhode Island, with freezing rain ticking against the glass.

It was just after midnight.

Her admission bracelet said HARPER LANE, ADMITTED 12:08 A.M., and the ink had already begun to smudge where sweat and tears had collected near her wrist.

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She had been in labor for eighteen hours.

For the first twelve, she had told herself she was fine.

For the next four, she had told herself she was strong.

By the eighteenth, strength had become less of a feeling and more of a decision she had to keep making every time another contraction arrived.

The room smelled of antiseptic, warm cotton blankets, and the faint plastic scent of tubing.

The lights were too bright.

The ceiling tiles were too white.

The fetal monitor kept beating out her daughter’s existence in a rhythm that felt both comforting and cruel.

Every beep said the baby was still there.

Every contraction reminded Harper that she was doing this without the man who should have been holding her hand.

Mason Avery had once promised he would be there for everything.

He had promised it in a tiny kitchen with old linoleum under their bare feet and rain coming through a cracked window frame because they were too broke to fix it that month.

He had promised it at two in the morning over pancakes in a diner near the hospital after one of his residency shifts.

He had promised it with his forehead pressed to hers after they lost their first apartment deposit and had to borrow folding chairs from a neighbor for their wedding reception.

Harper had believed him because Mason was not cruel.

That was the difficult part.

Cruel men are easier to leave in memory.

Weak men are harder, because you keep remembering the moments when they almost became brave.

For three years, Harper had shared a life with Mason that was not perfect but felt real.

She knew the scar near his eyebrow came from a skiing accident he had laughed about for months.

She knew he hated black coffee but drank it anyway during night shifts.

She knew he rubbed the back of his neck when he was hiding stress.

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