
Betrayal and Rebirth: My Divorce Choice
Chapter 2
I sat in the car for four minutes before I trusted my hands on the wheel. Long enough for Joey to go back inside. Long enough to decide what I actually needed from that house.
Clothes. The folder of letters in the bottom drawer. My old diving certificate. Three photographs my mother had taken before she died.
That was all.
I pulled into the garage at 4:14. By 4:20 I was on the second floor, suitcase open on the bed, folding sweaters with hands that worked the way an old piano works — keys still hitting, tone gone.
Then I heard it.
The sound came through the wall behind the headboard. Master bedroom shared that wall. A low groan, Joey's, then a higher sound that climbed and broke and climbed again. Amy's voice. I had never heard Amy's voice do that.
The bed frame began to knock against the plaster. First slow. Then not slow.
My fingers closed around a wool sweater. The fibers prickled my palm. I pressed the bundle to my chest and stood very still in the middle of the room I had decorated four summers ago — the cream curtains I had argued with the salesman about, the framed print Joey had pretended to like.
He had not even waited for the front door to close.
The wall thumped again. A small surprised laugh from Amy, the kind of laugh a woman makes when she is being told she is special.
Something inside my chest folded in on itself, the way paper folds when it is too wet to hold its own weight.
I sank onto the carpet beside the suitcase and pressed both hands over my mouth.
Five years ago. The Carlton Estate gardens. My first adult gala. I was twenty-three, in a navy dress my aunt had picked, holding a champagne flute I had not sipped because the bubbles made me nervous.
A scream from the south lawn. *Someone's in the pond — someone fell in!*
The water had been black with November cold. I had not thought. I had not changed shoes. I had pulled my heels off and dove from the stone edge, the way my coach had taught me at fourteen, hands first, elbows locked. I had found him at the bottom corner where the lilies sat thick. A man in a dinner jacket, dark hair fanned around his face. I had hooked an arm under his jaw and kicked up.
On the grass his lips had been blue. I had pushed the heel of my palm into his sternum until he coughed up half the pond. Then I had pulled the silk scarf from my own neck — the one with the small embroidered birds, the only thing I owned that had been my mother's — and laid it over his shaking chest.
The paramedics had come running across the wet grass. I had stood. I had walked away barefoot in a soaked dress because I did not want a thank-you. I had not even asked his name.
Two months later, in a coffee shop, a tall man had said, *I think you saved my life.*
That was Joey.
That was how we started.
The bed thumped again on the other side of the wall.
"Amy was the one who pulled me out," he had announced last week at his mother's birthday dinner, his palm resting on Amy's shoulder, twenty relatives watching. "I had it wrong all these years. The shock, the cold. Nina took the credit because she wanted a way in."
I had set my fork down. I had not been able to pick it up again.
One tear slid off my jaw and landed on the wool. I rubbed it into the fabric with my thumb until the wet spot disappeared.
I closed the suitcase.
Down the stairs. Past the wedding photo I did not look at. Out the door, which I let click shut a second time. The suitcase wheels rattled on the slate path.
I drove to the hospital with the radio off.
---
Dr. Maren had a soft voice and a hard mouth. Her nameplate sat crooked on her desk, as if someone had bumped it that morning and she had not bothered to straighten it.
"Mrs. Halloran—"
"Nina is fine."
"Nina." She set the chart down. "I'll be direct with you. We can't keep delaying. The biopsy from last week confirmed what the imaging showed. Stage three. If you start treatment this week, your odds are reasonable. Every month we wait, those odds drop."
I kept my eyes on the corner of her crooked nameplate. The angle was bothering me more than the words.
"And the pregnancy?" I asked.
"The pregnancy complicates everything. You know this."
"Doctor." I worked to flatten my voice. "I don't want treatment."
Her pen stopped above the chart. "Nina."
"I have nothing to stay for." My throat closed on the sentence. I had to force it back open. "My husband filed for divorce this afternoon. The baby is a problem he wants someone else to solve. There is no one else."
She leaned back. The leather of her chair gave a long sigh. Outside the office, a cart rolled past on a bad wheel.
"Your family?"
"My mother died when I was nineteen. My father remarried in Singapore. We don't speak."
Dr. Maren took a breath. She was not a woman who had been trained to plead, and I appreciated that she did not start now.
"Take the weekend," she said. "Come back Monday. If the answer is still no, I'll respect it. But Nina — you are thirty-one. There is more life on the other side of this than you can see from where you are sitting."
I stood. My knees did the thing they had been doing all day, the small soft drop, and I caught the edge of her desk.
"Thank you for being kind." My voice came out thinner than I wanted. "It hasn't been a kind day."
---
The apartment smelled of dust and the lavender sachet I had left in the linen closet six years ago. My old life sat under a thin gray film. Same kettle on the stove. Same chip in the counter where I had dropped a frozen lasagna in 2018.
I left the suitcase by the door.
I walked through every room without turning on the lights. The couch where my mother had napped during her last visit. The window where I had watched the snow the night Joey first said *I love you*, his coat still on, one hand on the small of my back.
I sat on the edge of the bed.
Then the cramp hit.
It came low and deep, a fist closing under my hipbones, and I doubled forward over my knees. Heat ran down the inside of my thigh. I knew before I looked. I knew the way an animal knows the wind has changed.
I made it to the bathroom on my hands and knees.
The tile was cold against my palms. I pulled myself up onto the closed toilet lid, then slid off onto the floor because my legs would not hold me. The bleeding came slow and then not slow. It soaked through the linen of my dress and pooled dark on the white grout.
I was making a sound I had never heard myself make. Something low and unbroken, more animal than human.
"No." I pressed both palms hard against my belly. "No, no. Please. Please, not you too."
The cramp tightened. The room dimmed at the edges, then sharpened, then dimmed again.
"Stay." I folded forward until my forehead touched my knees. "Stay with me. I'll fix it. I'll fix everything. Just — stay."
The baby did not stay.
I don't know how long I sat there. The light from the small bathroom window went from white to gold to a flat dirty gray. My phone had fallen near the bath mat and my fingers found it and gripped it and did not lift it, because there was no one to call who had not already chosen Amy.
The grief came in waves I could not count. My ribs hurt from holding it.
When I could finally lift my head, my reflection in the side of the chrome trash can was a stranger — pale cheek, mouth open, hair stuck to wet skin. A woman who had been a wife and a mother for the length of one afternoon, and was now neither.
The pregnancy I had cried over for two years. The pregnancy Joey had kissed my forehead for and said *good*.
Gone in the time it took for a sun to slide across a tile floor.
I closed my eyes.
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