Ex-Wife Hid His Baby Until Labour Exposed The Doctor-heuh

After our divorce, I carried his child in secret until the day I went into labour and the doctor lowered his mask.

The first contraction that morning had felt almost polite.

A tightening across my stomach, a pause in the middle of brushing my teeth, a hand placed against the sink while I waited for it to pass.

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By the time I reached the labour ward, there was nothing polite left about it.

Pain came in waves so strong it made the walls seem too close.

The hospital room was bright in that washed-out way hospitals are, all pale curtains, plastic rails, wipe-clean chairs, and the steady beeping of a monitor that made my fear sound official.

My hair was damp at the back of my neck.

My hospital gown had twisted under me.

My fingers were locked round the side rail as if holding on hard enough might keep me from splitting apart.

“Breathe, Chloe,” the nurse said.

Her voice was calm, practised, kind without being soft.

“Slowly. In through your nose if you can. Out again. Good.”

I tried.

I truly did.

But after nineteen hours, a body stops caring about dignity.

I had once imagined this moment differently.

I had imagined a hand in mine, a bag packed too early by the door, someone fussing over the car seat, someone asking if I wanted ice chips or water or music.

I had imagined Ethan.

I hated myself for that, even then.

The nurse adjusted the monitor band across my belly and looked at the screen.

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