A Doctor Cried After Her Baby Was Born, Then Her Ex Walked In-mdue - Chainityai

A Doctor Cried After Her Baby Was Born, Then Her Ex Walked In-mdue

I delivered my son alone because my ex-husband told me I was not his responsibility anymore.

Ten minutes after my baby was born, the doctor holding him looked at his tiny face and started to cry.

At first, I thought something was wrong with the baby.

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That is the kind of fear that moves through a mother before language can catch it.

My body was still shaking from labor, my hair was wet against my neck, and the room smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and the faint metal edge of blood under clean sheets.

The fluorescent lights buzzed above me.

A monitor beeped beside the bed with a steady little sound that somehow made everything feel less real.

I tried to lift my head, but the room tilted.

The nurse near my shoulder pressed one hand gently against the blanket.

“Easy,” she said.

But there was nothing easy about the way the doctor was looking at my newborn son.

He was holding him in both arms, wrapped tight in the blue-and-white hospital blanket, and his face had gone pale.

Then tears gathered in his eyes.

“This… this shouldn’t be possible,” he whispered.

Three months earlier, I had still been married to Julian Vance.

That sentence sounds simple if you do not know what kind of man Julian was.

Julian was smooth in the way expensive watches are smooth.

Quiet click, polished face, hidden machinery.

People trusted him because he knew how to lower his voice at the right time.

He remembered birthdays in public.

He sent flowers where other people could see them.

He opened doors, kissed cheeks, and knew exactly how to make cruelty look like disappointment.

His mother, Eleanor, had taught him well.

The day he gave me divorce papers, we were sitting at our dining room table under the soft yellow light Eleanor had chosen when she redecorated our house without asking me.

I remember the smell of lemon cleaner on the wood.

I remember the sound of the envelope sliding across the table.

I remember thinking the paper looked too white for something that ugly.

“I’m pregnant,” I said.

Julian did not look surprised.

He only adjusted the silver watch on his wrist.

“That is very bad timing,” he said.

Eleanor stood behind him in a cream blouse and pearl earrings, her purse tucked neatly under one arm.

She looked less like a mother and more like a woman waiting for a contract to be signed.

“Don’t act so tragic, Vivian,” she said. “Men like my son do not stay chained to women who get pregnant just to lock down money.”

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