The Doctor in Her Delivery Room Was the Ex Who Never Knew-yumihong

The contraction hit Chloe Bennett so hard that the room seemed to split in two.

One second she was gripping the plastic rails of the hospital bed at Hartford Memorial, her palms slick against the ridged surface, the air sharp with antiseptic and warm sweat under fluorescent lights.

The next, every muscle in her body locked down around pain so bright she could barely hear her own voice.

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The fetal monitor kept tapping beside her, small and steady, like a tiny fist knocking from the other side of the world.

Linda Kowalski, RN, kept one hand braced on Chloe’s shoulder.

“Breathe,” Linda said. “Slow, Chloe. Slow. You’re doing it.”

Chloe wanted to believe her.

After nineteen hours of labor, belief was not a feeling anymore.

It was work.

It was choosing one breath, then another, while the hospital gown stuck to her back and the strap across her belly tugged every time she shifted.

The room smelled like latex gloves, alcohol wipes, and fear.

Somewhere near the wall, a machine printed a strip of paper that curled down in a white ribbon.

Somewhere over her head, the clock moved toward 3:42 AM.

Chloe had walked into the hospital alone because she had spent months teaching herself how to do hard things without reaching for the one person who had made himself unavailable.

She had filled out the intake form at the front desk with shaking hands.

Name: Chloe Bennett.

Emergency contact: blank.

She had stared at that empty line longer than the nurse expected.

Then she had slid the clipboard back across the counter and said, “That’s all.”

There are empty spaces a woman leaves on purpose.

Not because she has no one.

Because the wrong name can be worse than silence.

The door opened during the next wave of pain.

Chloe barely noticed at first.

She was folded into the contraction, forehead damp, fingers locked around the rails, her breath coming out in broken pieces.

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