He Asked About His Mistress’s Baby. His Wife Was Already at Court-paupau

David Coleman believed the room belonged to him because most rooms had been trained to act that way around him.

The private clinic was quiet, clean, and expensive enough that even the chairs seemed to whisper instead of scrape.

The air smelled faintly of lemon disinfectant, warm paper from the printer, and the coffee his sister Megan had brought in and forgotten on the counter.

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Allison lay on the exam bed with one hand resting on her stomach and the other tucked carefully beneath her hair.

She had dressed for that appointment like it was a family photo, not a medical visit.

Soft sweater.

Glossed mouth.

Bright, careful smile.

David stood beside her as if he were the one being honored.

His mother stood near the wall with her hands clasped, trembling with the kind of joy she had never shown at any school concert for my daughters.

His father watched in silence, chin lifted, proud before anyone had given him a reason to be.

Megan kept her phone ready, already framing the moment.

The Coleman family had always loved a performance, especially when someone else paid for the stage.

David leaned toward the ultrasound monitor.

“Well?” he said. “Doctor, say it. My son is healthy, right?”

His son.

That was the word that cut through everything.

Not our children.

Not Emma, nine years old, who had learned to stop waiting at the front window because disappointment has a schedule in some houses.

Not Rose, six years old, who still slept with a stuffed rabbit tucked under her chin because stuffed animals did not miss birthdays, forget dinner, or smell like another woman’s perfume.

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