He Found His Ex-Wife Alone at the Hospital, Then Saw the Referral-Tien3004

Two months after my divorce, I found my ex-wife sitting by herself in a hospital corridor, and the moment I recognized her, something inside me shattered.

The hospital smelled like disinfectant, burnt coffee, and rainwater drying on coats.

It was the kind of place where everybody looked like they were trying not to fall apart in public.

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I had gone there to visit my best friend Jason after his surgery.

I had not gone there to find Emily.

But there she was.

She sat near the end of the internal medicine hallway in a pale-blue hospital gown, her body folded into a chair like she was trying to take up as little space as possible.

Her long brown hair was gone.

That was the first thing my mind noticed, and I hated myself for it.

Emily used to have the kind of hair she clipped up when she was cooking, then forgot about until a strand fell loose against her cheek.

Now it was cut short, uneven, and thin at the ends.

Her face had changed too.

Not in a dramatic way that strangers would gasp at, but in the quiet way illness changes a person before anyone says the word out loud.

Her cheeks were hollow.

Her lips were pale.

There were dark half-moons under her eyes.

An IV stand waited beside her chair.

A hospital intake bracelet circled her wrist.

A folded discharge packet sat on her lap.

People passed her without stopping.

Nurses moved around carts.

A janitor pushed a yellow mop bucket past the wall.

A family whispered near the vending machines.

Everyone kept moving because that is what hospitals teach people to do.

Keep walking unless the disaster has your name on it.

That night, mine did.

My name is Michael Carter.

I was thirty-four, divorced, and pretending I was adjusting well.

That was the story I had been telling myself for two months.

I had a rented one-bedroom apartment with blinds that never hung straight.

I had a microwave that sparked if you put the wrong bowl inside.

I had a couch I bought from a coworker and a refrigerator full of takeout containers I kept meaning to throw away.

I had silence.

Lots of it.

At first, I thought silence would feel peaceful after the slow ache of the final year of my marriage.

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