She Went Into Labour At 3 A.M.—Then His Mistress Answered-ngyen

At 3:08 in the morning, Cecilia Monroe stood barefoot in the nursery and listened to the rain hitting the windows like thrown gravel.

The house was too large for one terrified woman.

It had always been large, of course, with its polished floors, high ceilings, and rooms that seemed designed for guests rather than living, but that night every inch of it felt empty.

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One hand held her stomach.

The other held her phone.

Her waters had broken minutes earlier.

Her daughter was coming.

Samuel was not answering.

The nursery smelt faintly of fresh paint and clean cotton.

Cecilia had painted the lower wall herself in soft cream because Samuel had said decorators made him feel as if the house were a hotel.

She had laughed then.

She had thought he meant he wanted their child’s room to feel personal.

Now the careful little touches seemed to look back at her with accusation.

The white cot waited beneath a turning mobile of silver stars.

A packet of newborn nappies sat unopened beside a stack of folded vests.

On the rocking chair lay the blanket she had sewn by hand in the last weeks of pregnancy, while the house was quiet and Samuel was supposedly in late meetings.

In the corner of it, she had stitched one word.

Hope.

Cecilia called him again.

The line rang and rang.

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