The $75,000 Offer That Could Not Buy Ava Monroe’s Unborn Baby-eirian

Ava Monroe first met Nathaniel Whitlock III in a campus lecture hall where nobody was supposed to notice who had money and who did not.

That was the fiction Franklin University sold well.

The old brick buildings in Providence looked democratic in the rain, as if everyone walking under the same gray sky carried the same weight.

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Ava knew better by October.

Some students wore hoodies because they were tired.

Some wore them because the radiator in their dorm had been broken for three weeks and they were waiting on a maintenance ticket that kept disappearing.

Nathan sat two rows ahead of her in Introduction to Political Theory, always with a leather notebook, always with coffee from a place Ava had never been able to afford.

He was beautiful in the careless way of boys who had never had to calculate the price of saying yes.

He turned around the first time because Ava corrected a professor’s quote under her breath, and he heard her.

After class, he caught up beside her outside the lecture hall and asked whether she always argued with dead philosophers.

Ava said only when they were wrong.

He laughed like that was the best thing anyone had said to him all week.

That was the beginning.

By November, he was meeting her after her work-study shifts at the library.

By December, he knew she liked her coffee burned and black because cream cost extra and because she had learned to prefer what she could afford.

By February, he had kissed her under the lights of Boston Harbor, his hands cold around hers, saying the sentence she would remember long after she should have stopped remembering it.

“I’m not my family.”

Then, softer, as if making a vow in church, “I choose you.”

Ava believed him because she wanted to, and because love is most dangerous when it sounds like escape.

Nathan told her about the Whitlocks the way people describe weather damage.

The expectations.

The foundation dinners.

The board seats that arrived before birthdays.

The mother who could turn a silence into a verdict.

Caroline Whitlock existed in Ava’s mind first as a rumor in a cream coat.

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