He Came To Fight His Ex-Wife, But Left Holding Two Newborns-Teptep

I walked into the hospital with rain running from the hem of my coat and a fight already prepared in my mouth.

By the time I walked out, I was no longer the man who had entered.

The call had come half an hour earlier, while I was still at my desk, surrounded by contracts that mattered less with every passing second.

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My private phone rang, the one hardly anyone had.

I nearly ignored it.

Then I saw the blocked number and, for some reason I could not explain, answered.

A woman spoke quickly.

“Sylvie Vexley was admitted two hours ago. Room 203. You need to come now.”

The line went dead before I could ask who she was.

For several seconds, I simply stared at the phone.

Sylvie.

My ex-wife.

Seven months divorced.

Seven months since we had sat across from each other in a room that smelt of expensive coffee and solicitor’s paper, pretending signatures could tidy away years of love, damage, pride, and exhaustion.

Seven months since I had heard her voice without a lawyer’s email attached to it.

I told myself I was angry because anger was tidy.

It gave me somewhere to put the fear.

I had spent fifteen years building Vexley Pharmaceuticals into a company people spoke about carefully in boardrooms.

I had been praised, sued, envied, investigated, flattered, and threatened.

I had learnt how to keep my expression still while other men tried to take apart what I had built.

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