After 11 Years, He Chose His Pregnant Mistress Over Me-Teptep

After 11 years of blaming me for our infertility, my husband kicked me out for his pregnant mistress, and his mother told me not to make a scene because they needed an heir.

They believed I had nothing left in me.

They believed years of grief had made me small enough to fold away, like an old coat shoved into the cupboard beneath the stairs.

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They believed I would disappear politely.

For a long time, I nearly did.

That morning began with drizzle tapping softly against the surgery window and my hands clenched around the strap of my handbag.

I remember the smell of antiseptic, the dull hum of the lights above me, and the folded appointment card sitting on my knee like a dare.

I had stopped expecting miracles.

After eleven years, expectation becomes dangerous.

Hope becomes something you touch with gloves on.

Ethan and I had once spoken about babies as if they were a certainty, the same way couples talk about repainting the kitchen or choosing curtains for a spare room.

We had names written on the back of an old receipt.

We had once paused outside a shop window because there was a tiny knitted cardigan on display, pale yellow, with wooden buttons.

Ethan had squeezed my hand and said, “One day.”

I had believed him.

Then came the tests.

Then the treatments.

Then the needles, the calendars, the tablets in little plastic organisers, and the phone calls that always seemed to arrive when I was standing in a supermarket queue or stirring tea I no longer wanted.

There were five miscarriages.

People say the word as if it is one event, a sad entry on a medical form.

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