She Gave Birth Alone, Then Her Past Walked Into The Room With A Secret Offer-nhu9999 - Chainityai

She Gave Birth Alone, Then Her Past Walked Into The Room With A Secret Offer-nhu9999

The rain was hitting the hospital window so hard that I could not tell where the storm ended and my fear began.

I was thirty-six weeks pregnant, alone, and gripping the bed rail at Boston Memorial like it was the last solid thing left in my life.

The chair beside my bed was empty, and every contraction made me look at it.

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Eight months earlier, he had been kissing my belly and telling me our baby would have my stubborn chin.

Three weeks later, I found his note on the kitchen counter.

“I can’t do this. I’m sorry.”

Seven words had ended an engagement, a home, and the last version of myself that believed love made people stay.

My sister Penny was trying to get to Boston from Chicago, but the same storm that rattled my window had shut down flights all over the East Coast.

So I labored with a nurse named Rita, a voicemail full of Penny’s apologies, and a baby who seemed determined to arrive before either of us was ready.

Rita checked my blood pressure and frowned.

“Your doctor was pulled into an emergency,” she said gently. “The on-call obstetrician is coming now.”

I nodded because nodding was easier than crying.

Then she said his name.

Dr. Reed.

The room seemed to tilt.

Boston was a big city, I told myself.

There had to be other doctors named Reed.

Then the door opened.

He came in wearing navy scrubs, reading my chart as he walked.

“Miss Harper, I’m Dr. Reed,” he began.

Then he looked up.

The words died between us.

Ethan Reed stood at the foot of my bed, older than the medical student I had left behind, steadier, sharper, and still so familiar that pain moved through my chest before the next contraction could.

“Megan,” he said.

That was all.

My name in his mouth turned the hospital room into a place crowded with old ghosts.

I saw late-night anatomy books, cheap coffee, and the future we had planned before I decided New York and music mattered more.

I had loved him.

I had left him.

Now I was on my back, sweating through a hospital gown, abandoned by another man, and too far into labor to hide from any of it.

The contraction took me before I could answer.

Ethan moved at once.

Whatever shock had crossed his face disappeared behind the calm of a doctor who knew how to work inside emergencies.

“Breathe with me,” he said.

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