Pregnant And Thrown Out, Then A Solicitor Named The £77 Million Condition-heuh

My husband found out I was pregnant at breakfast, and before the kettle had even gone cold, he had decided the child could not be his.

The pregnancy test turned positive at 6:13 on a Tuesday morning.

I remember the time because I kept staring at the little clock on my phone, trying to make the moment real.

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For three years, I had seen only one line.

One line after careful counting, one line after hopeful symptoms, one line after another doctor telling me not to lose heart.

Then, on a grey morning with rain tapping at the bathroom window, the second blue line appeared.

I was sitting on the floor in my dressing gown, feet tucked beneath me because the tiles were freezing.

Downstairs, the kettle clicked off.

A lorry hissed along the wet road outside.

The house smelt of washing powder, old tea, and the damp coats we always forgot to hang properly.

It was so ordinary that the miracle felt almost frightening.

My name is Mira Bellamy Greer, and I had imagined telling Nolan many times.

In every version, he smiled before I finished speaking.

In every version, he crossed the kitchen, took the test from my shaking hand, and pulled me close as if the years of waiting had finally been forgiven.

I had imagined laughter.

I had imagined relief.

I had even imagined him crying, just a little, because men like Nolan only allowed tears for things that could be called practical.

Instead, when I stood in the kitchen doorway and said, “I’m pregnant,” he looked at me as if I had brought him an accusation.

He sat at the table in his work shirt, phone beside his coffee, one cuff still unbuttoned.

A tea mug stood between us, untouched.

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