Three months after our breakup, I learnt how long three seconds could be.
It was long enough for hope to turn cold in my hand.
It was long enough for the bright hospital corridor to narrow until all I could see was the phone screen against my ear.

It was long enough for Gu Yan to decide that my baby did not belong to him.
My belly was still flat then, hidden under a loose jumper and a coat damp from the drizzle outside.
I had stood in the queue alone, signed my name where other women had husbands beside them, and waited for a nurse to hand me a folded result with a small, polite smile.
Pregnant.
The word looked so simple on paper.
It did not show the way my knees weakened, or the way my first thought was still his name.
We had been apart for three months.
Three months after three years together.
Three months since he had accepted the breakup with a calmness that hurt more than shouting would have done.
Back then, I told myself he was proud.
I told myself some men did not plead because they did not know how.
I told myself silence did not always mean indifference.
Standing in that corridor, with people moving past me and the smell of disinfectant in the air, I rang him.
He picked up after three rings.
There was no hello.
No surprise.
Only a faint pause, as if he were already irritated by my existence.
“I’m pregnant,” I said.
The words came out thinner than I meant them to.
“This baby… do you want it?”
The line went quiet.
Not soft quiet.
Not shocked quiet.
It was the sort of silence that arrives before someone closes a door and makes sure you are still on the other side of it.
Then he laughed.
“Chen Xi, that joke isn’t funny.”
“I’m not joking.”
“You’re telling me this three months after we broke up?”
I pressed the paper against my stomach without meaning to.
“Gu Yan, we were together for three years.”
His voice sharpened.
“Whose child is it?”
The corridor seemed to blur around the edges.
A woman walked past with a toddler on her hip.
A man in a work jacket carried two paper cups of tea and whispered something kind to his wife.
Someone’s plastic folder slipped from a chair and scattered papers across the floor.
Every small, ordinary thing in the world carried on.
I stayed where I was, holding the phone like it could still become a hand.
“You tell me,” I said.
He laughed again, lower this time.
“Have you forgotten the check-up before we talked about marriage?”
For a moment, I did not understand.
Then the memory rose like a bruise.
His family had been pressing him about a wedding.
He had told me a health check would make everyone feel easier.
I had gone with him because I trusted him.
I remembered the clean waiting room, the forms, the sealed envelope, the way he opened the result first.
I remembered his face going still.
When I asked what was wrong, he said there were minor issues.
Nothing serious.
Nothing to worry about.
He had folded the papers away before I could read them properly, and I had believed him because love makes ordinary caution feel like an insult.
“The doctor said I can’t have children,” he said.
I did not breathe.
“I can’t have biological children in this life.”
My fingers went numb around the result in my hand.
“So tell me,” he continued, every word clipped and cold, “whose illegitimate child are you carrying?”
There are words that hurt because they are loud.
There are others that hurt because they are spoken neatly, with control, like a signature at the bottom of a letter.
Illegitimate.
He made my baby sound like a crime.
He made three years of love sound like evidence against me.
“Gu Yan,” I whispered, but my voice had almost gone.
“For the sake of what we had,” he said, “deal with it quickly.”
Deal with it.
As if my child were a bill.
As if my body were an inconvenience.
As if the life inside me had already been weighed, dismissed, and put in the bin.
“Don’t call me again.”
The call ended.
The beeping tone went on and on.
I kept the phone at my ear long after he was gone.
When I finally lowered it, my hand was shaking so hard I could barely unlock the screen.
His profile picture still showed the two of us at the beach.
We were smiling in that photo.
The sea was bright behind us, and my hair was in my eyes, and his arm was around my shoulder as if he would never let go.
I opened the chat.
I typed his name.
Before I could write another word, the red warning appeared.
Message rejected.
He had blocked me.
Not only on the phone.
On the messaging app.
On every small route by which a person might try to explain, plead, rage, or ask one last question.
He had erased me as efficiently as clearing rubbish from a table.
I lowered myself onto the hard plastic chair beside the wall.
Then I slid further down until I was almost crouched, my coat brushing the floor, the test result crushed in one hand.
A nurse paused near me.
“Are you all right, love?”
I nodded.
It was a lie so obvious that she looked as though she might kneel down.
But she did not.
People learn to respect a lie when it is the only thing holding someone upright.
I said, “I’m fine.”
The nurse hesitated, then moved on.
I did not cry.
My whole body trembled instead, from my jaw to my knees, as if grief had become cold rather than wet.
That was the day I understood something.
A person can abandon you in one sentence, but you may spend years climbing out of it.
I went home alone.
The flat was small, with a narrow hallway and a kettle that clicked too loudly in the kitchen.
I made tea I did not drink.
I set the pregnancy result on the table.
Beside it, my phone lay black and silent.
For a long time, I stared at both.
One had given me a child.
The other had taken away the last illusion I had about the man I loved.
Near midnight, I placed my palm over my still-flat stomach.
“Don’t be afraid,” I whispered.
I did not know whether a baby that small could hear anything.
Perhaps I was speaking to myself.
“If no one else wants you, I do.”
It was not a grand promise.
There was no music, no witness, no warm hand over mine.
Only a cold mug of tea, rain tapping against the window, and a woman too frightened to sleep.
But some promises do not need ceremony.
They only need to be kept.
The months that followed were harder than I had imagined and lonelier than I can describe without sounding dramatic.
I went to appointments alone.
I sat in waiting rooms beside couples who whispered over scan pictures and argued gently about names.
I learnt to keep my eyes on my own paperwork.
I learnt to carry a bottle of water, a folded snack, spare coins, tissues, and every document in a plastic wallet because there was no one coming behind me with the forgotten thing.
When I was sick, I cleaned the bathroom myself.
When my back ached, I still went to work.
When people asked about the father, I smiled with the careful politeness women use when the truth would make everyone uncomfortable.
“He’s not around,” I would say.
Most people stopped there.
Some did not.
I learnt to survive their pity, too.
The surgery consent form was the worst.
By then I was huge, exhausted, and so swollen that my shoes marked my feet.
The nurse handed me the paper and pointed to the space for a family member.
I stared at the blank line.
There are empty spaces that accuse you more than words ever could.
I wrote my own name.
The nurse saw it.
Her face softened.
I smiled before she could say anything kind, because kindness was dangerous then.
If someone was gentle with me, I might fall apart.
During labour, pain made the world white.
I bit my lip until I tasted blood.
I remember a ceiling light.
I remember someone telling me to breathe.
I remember thinking that Gu Yan had once held my hand crossing a busy road, and now he did not even know whether I was alive.
Then a cry split the room.
Sharp.
Furious.
Wonderful.
My son entered the world angry, red-faced, and impossibly small.
The moment they placed him near me, everything inside me rearranged itself.
I did not become fearless.
That is a lie people tell about mothers.
I was terrified.
But fear no longer had the final say.
I named him Tran Nac.
Nac, because a promise should be worth more than gold.
He was my promise given a heartbeat.
Six years passed in small acts.
A bottle warmed at midnight.
A blanket tucked under a chin.
A fever watched until dawn.
A rent payment made two days before it was due.
A cheap pair of shoes bought slightly too big so they would last through winter.
A birthday cake with uneven icing.
A school form signed in blue ink because I could never find the black pen when I needed it.
People sometimes speak of hardship as if it is one dramatic scene.
Most of the time, it is a hundred quiet calculations before breakfast.
Can I pay this bill now?
Can I stretch this until Friday?
Can I say no to myself without letting him notice?
Can I be both mother and father without turning bitter?
There were nights when I sat in the kitchen after Nac fell asleep, both hands wrapped around a mug gone cold, and allowed myself exactly five minutes of feeling sorry.
Then I washed the cup, packed his lunch, checked his jumper for stains, and went to bed.
He grew.
He had serious eyes and a laugh that arrived suddenly, as if it had escaped from somewhere private.
He hated carrots unless they were cut into stars.
He liked lining up his toy cars by colour.
When he was nervous, he held the strap of his bag with both hands.
Sometimes, when he slept, I would see Gu Yan in the angle of his brow or the shape of his mouth, and the old pain would flicker like a light in a draught.
But Nac was not a wound.
He was not proof of betrayal.
He was not an illegitimate child.
He was my son.
By the time his first proper school day arrived, I believed I had buried Gu Yan so deep he could no longer reach us.
That morning, the sky was low and grey.
Rain had passed through before dawn and left the pavement shining.
Nac stood in our hallway wearing his new school jumper, his hair still sticking up at the crown no matter how much water I pressed onto it.
His schoolbag looked too large for him.
His shoes looked too stiff.
His face looked solemn enough for a court appearance.
“Mum,” he said, “do I look all right?”
I crouched and fixed his collar.
“You look very smart.”
He frowned.
“Do I look brave?”
The question went straight through me.
I touched his cheek.
“You look like you.”
That seemed to satisfy him.
At the school gate, the morning was a muddle of umbrellas, lunch bags, small shoes splashing through puddles, and parents trying to sound cheerful.
A teacher stood near the entrance with a register.
Children clung, wriggled, cried, or ran ahead without looking back.
Nac stayed close to me.
His hand was warm in mine.
I was just about to tell him that I would be waiting later, right by the same gate, when the noise around us shifted.
It did not stop.
It thinned.
People moved aside with that instinctive caution strangers have when they sense a scene beginning.
I looked up.
A man stood beyond the gate in a dark suit.
His hair was neater than I remembered.
His face was older.
His shoes were polished despite the wet pavement.
For a second, my mind refused to put a name to him.
Then it did.
Gu Yan.
Six years had passed, and still my body recognised danger before my thoughts did.
My hand tightened around Nac’s.
Gu Yan did not look at me first.
That was the worst part.
His eyes went straight to my son.
At first there was only curiosity.
Then confusion.
Then something like fear.
He stared at Nac’s face as if he were reading a letter he had burnt years ago and found whole again in his hand.
The same brow.
The same eyes.
The same mouth.
The resemblance was not gentle.
It was devastating.
Nac leaned closer to me.
“Mum,” he whispered, “who is that man?”
I could not answer.
Gu Yan took one step forward.
A parent nearby pretended to adjust an umbrella but did not move away.
The teacher looked up from her register.
The whole gate seemed to hold its breath with British politeness, everyone looking without quite admitting they were looking.
Gu Yan’s lips parted.
For the first time since I had known him, he looked uncertain.
Not cold.
Not controlled.
Not superior.
Just afraid.
“Chen Xi,” he said.
My name in his mouth did not hurt the way I expected.
Perhaps scars can become numb after enough years.
I moved Nac slightly behind me.
“You shouldn’t be here.”
He barely heard me.
His gaze remained fixed on the child.
Nac clutched the strap of his schoolbag with both hands, his new jumper damp at the shoulder from the drizzle.
Gu Yan swallowed.
His voice trembled.
“This child…”
The words came slowly, as though each one cost him something.
“How old is he this year?”
The question landed between us like a dropped glass.
Six years of hospital corridors, consent forms, unpaid bills, nursery fevers, birthday candles, school notes, and nights with cold tea seemed to gather in that one wet patch of pavement.
I could have said anything.
I could have told him to leave.
I could have told him he had no right to ask.
I could have reminded him of the word illegitimate and asked whether he remembered how easily he had thrown it at a woman carrying his child.
But before I could speak, Nac looked up from behind my coat.
He looked at the stranger in the suit.
Then he looked at me, confused by the silence of all the adults around him.
The school gate creaked open.
The teacher stepped towards us with the register in her hand.
Gu Yan reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a folded piece of paper.
My breath stopped.
It was creased, yellowing at the edge, and stamped with the same kind of hospital marking I remembered from six years ago.
He stared at it as if it had just accused him.
“I found the original report,” he said.
The rain ticked softly on the railings.
My son’s fingers tightened around my coat.
Gu Yan lifted his eyes to mine, and everything I had survived came rushing back.
Then he said, in front of the school gate and everyone watching, “Chen Xi… I think I made a mistake.”