Her Ex Walked Into the Delivery Room and Saw the Truth Too Late-hihehu

The contraction hit so hard Chloe Parker thought the room had split open.

One second she was gripping the plastic rails of a hospital bed in Hartford Memorial’s labor and delivery unit, sweat cooling beneath the thin cotton of her gown.

The next second, the whole world narrowed to pain, white ceiling panels, the sharp smell of antiseptic, and the frantic little rhythm of the fetal monitor beside her.

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“Breathe, Chloe,” the nurse said. “Slow. In through your nose.”

Chloe tried.

Her body had other plans.

The nurse’s badge said Linda Kowalski, RN, and Chloe had been staring at that badge for so many hours that she could have drawn it from memory.

Linda had a calm voice, sturdy hands, and the kind of face that made you believe she had seen women survive worse.

That should have helped.

It did, a little.

But Chloe was nineteen hours into labor, alone, and too tired to pretend that courage felt graceful.

Her hospital intake form had been signed at 11:43 p.m. the night before.

The emergency contact line was blank.

Her insurance card had been slid into a plastic sleeve with her driver’s license.

Her admission bracelet had first printed with her married name, then been corrected when she quietly told the intake desk she did not use that name anymore.

The clerk had apologized and reprinted it.

Chloe had said it was fine.

It was not fine.

Some corrections are small enough to fit on a wristband and still heavy enough to press on your whole life.

The old name belonged to a woman who used to believe marriage was a home you built with somebody else.

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