The Doctor In The Delivery Room Was The Ex Who Never Asked-habe

The contraction came like weather breaking open inside my body.

For a second, Hartford Memorial disappeared.

The clean white ceiling, the buzzing fluorescent lights, the cold plastic rails under my fingers, the nurse telling me to breathe, all of it fell away until there was only pain and the wild animal sound coming out of my own mouth.

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I had been in labor for nineteen hours.

By then, time had stopped behaving like time.

There was 1:12 a.m., when the first nurse told me I was making progress.

There was 3:47 a.m., when I signed the last hospital intake form with a shaking hand and wrote “none” on the emergency contact line because I could not bring myself to lie.

There was 6:03 a.m., when a nurse named Linda Kowalski squeezed my shoulder and told me the baby’s heart rate still looked good.

Everything else was breathing, sweating, waiting, and trying not to think about the empty chair beside my bed.

I had not imagined childbirth this way.

Back when Ethan and I were still married, before the divorce papers and the cold kitchen and his mother’s voice filling every room we owned, I had imagined him beside me.

I imagined him holding crushed ice chips to my mouth.

I imagined him making the nurses laugh because he did that when he was nervous.

I imagined him crying at the first sound of our baby’s voice and pretending later that he had not.

But that was before his mother decided my marriage needed her permission to function.

That was before I asked for one simple boundary.

No unannounced visits.

No key to our house.

No walking into our bedroom because she “forgot” I might be changing.

It did not sound cruel to me.

It sounded like adulthood.

Ethan had heard it as an attack.

Or maybe he had heard his mother call it one, and that had been enough.

The divorce papers came at 7:18 p.m. on a Thursday.

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