Pregnant With Twins, He Left Me—Then The Doorbell Changed Everything-heuh

When I was pregnant with twins and going through terrible labour pains, I asked my husband to take me to the hospital.

Blake was in the kitchen when I said it, standing beside the kettle as if the ordinary sound of it cooling on the worktop could hold the whole afternoon together.

My hand was flat against the counter, my fingers spread so hard the knuckles looked white.

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The pain had moved beyond cramping.

It was low, sharp, and frighteningly organised, as if my body had stopped warning me and had started making decisions without permission.

“Blake,” I said, and even to my own ears my voice sounded wrong.

He looked up from the keys he had just taken from the hook.

I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant with twins, so big and tired that climbing the stairs had become something I planned like a journey.

Every cushion in the sitting room had been arranged around me for weeks.

Every appointment had ended with someone reminding me that twin labour could move quickly and that delays were not something to play with.

That word, delays, had lodged itself in my head.

It sat there now while another contraction gripped me from inside and bent me forward over the counter.

“The twins are coming,” I told him.

For one second, he did exactly what a husband should do.

He grabbed his coat, swept up the car keys, and moved towards the little pile by the front door: my hospital bag, the blue folder, the cardigan I had left ready because British weather never seemed to care about anyone’s plans.

That one second was enough for hope to slip in.

I thought, absurdly, that later we might laugh about how frightened we had both looked.

I thought he would help me into the car, drive too carefully, apologise at every speed bump, and keep one hand on mine at the maternity unit until somebody else took over.

Then Diane appeared in the hallway.

She was Blake’s mother, and she had a way of entering a room as if the room had been waiting for permission to exist.

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