Her Ex Walked Into the Delivery Room and Finally Saw the Truth-paupau

The contraction hit so hard that Chloe Miller stopped being able to tell where her body ended and the hospital room began.

One second she was gripping the plastic rail of the labor bed at Hartford Memorial.

The next, pain opened through her with such force that the fluorescent lights blurred into one long white streak above her face.

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The room smelled like sanitizer, warm plastic tubing, and the faint coffee breath of exhausted people who had been awake too long.

A monitor kept beeping near her belly.

A nurse kept saying, “Baby’s heart rate looks good.”

Chloe heard the words, but they seemed to come from far away, as if someone had dropped them down a hallway.

Her palm slid on the bed rail.

Her hair clung to her forehead.

Her throat was raw from trying not to scream until she had no choice but to scream.

“Breathe, Chloe,” the nurse said. “Slow. Slow. You’re doing great.”

The nurse’s badge read Linda Kowalski, RN.

Chloe had noticed it between contractions because her mind kept grabbing tiny details as proof she was still in the room.

Linda’s badge.

The blue edge of the hospital blanket.

The clock above the door.

The curled strip of paper sliding from the fetal monitor.

The intake form clipped to the foot of the bed that said emergency admission, 2:17 a.m., patient arrived alone.

Alone had become a fact so ordinary that Chloe almost stopped feeling the bruise of it.

She had driven herself to the hospital after the first wave of pain made her drop a mug in the kitchen.

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