
He Comforted Her While I Lost Our Baby
Chapter 3
My phone buzzed against the nightstand. I reached for it without looking, expecting another email from work. Instead, a notification from my medical app glowed on the screen: *Pregnancy Reminder: 40 Weeks Today.*
The words hit me like ice water. My finger hovered over the screen, not quite touching it. Forty weeks. The due date. The day that would have been.
I set the phone down and stared at the ceiling. The water stain in the corner seemed to have grown since yesterday. Or maybe it was just darker in this light.
The memory came rushing back, and there was no stopping it.
I had told him on a Tuesday morning. I remember the sunlight was good that day, streaming through the kitchen windows while I made coffee. I was nervous but also happy. Underneath all the complications of our life together, I thought a baby might be... something. A reset button, maybe. A reason for him to choose us.
"Vin," I had said, my voice bright and careful. "I have something to tell you. I'm pregnant."
He had been checking his email on his phone. He looked up slowly, and I watched his face change. Not with joy. Not with surprise. Something else. Something that made my chest tighten.
"Are you sure?" he had asked, his voice flat.
"Yes. I took the test twice."
He had set his phone down and rubbed his temples. "This is... this is really bad timing, Clare."
"Bad timing?" I had repeated, not understanding. "Vin, we're having a baby."
"I know what we're having," he had snapped, then caught himself. He took a deep breath. "I just mean, there's a lot going on right now. With work, with Delaney's situation. This isn't... this isn't convenient."
"Convenient? Our baby?" My voice had cracked. "What about Delaney has anything to do with this?"
He hadn't answered. Just looked at me with that expression I had come to know so well — the one that said I was being dramatic, unreasonable, making problems where there didn't need to be any.
"You should handle it," he had said finally. "Figure out what you want to do."
"What I want to do?" I had whispered. "Vin, this is our baby."
He had picked up his jacket. "I have a meeting. We'll talk about this later."
The door had closed. I had stood in the kitchen, one hand on my stomach, and felt something inside me start to crack.
Weeks passed. Cold weeks. Distant weeks. He came home later. Spoke less. When he did look at me, it was with irritation, like I had created a problem he couldn't solve.
The night it happened, I was alone. It was 2 AM, and the cramping had started. I stumbled to the bathroom, bleeding, scared, calling his cell phone over and over. He didn't answer. He was at Delaney's apartment, helping her move furniture for the nursery.
I sat on the bathroom floor and cried silently, watching the life inside me slip away with every wave of pain. In the morning, he came home to find me pale and empty-eyed. He asked what happened, and I told him. He said he was sorry he missed my calls. He never asked if I was okay.
But that wasn't the worst part.
Three weeks later, I stood in Delaney's living room doorway and watched him hand-pick baby shower gifts. He was holding a tiny mobile, turning it over in his hands, beaming with pride. "This will look perfect over the crib," he said to Delaney, who smiled up at him like he was the sun itself.
He had never held anything of mine with that kind of reverence. Never looked at me the way he was looking at her. My body was still tender, still healing from what I had lost. He hadn't noticed. He hadn't asked.
I backed away from the doorway and walked out of Delaney's apartment without saying goodbye. In the car, I sat for a long time, hands on the steering wheel, staring straight ahead. And I knew.
There was no coming back from that. No forgiveness. No second chance.
I was already gone.
Now, sitting on the edge of our bed, I picked up my phone and deleted the app notification. Then I opened my laptop.
My savings were fully transferred to my personal account. My resignation had been submitted. My apartment had been reduced to a single suitcase that I kept packed under the bed.
I clicked on my design portfolio folder. The midnight blue coat was there, waiting. I opened a new file and began to sketch.
The pencil moved across the digital canvas with purpose. Clean lines. Sharp angles. A woman's silhouette emerging from the void.
I sketched until dawn, and for the first time in years, I felt nothing but peace.
Peace, and the quiet certainty that when I walked away, I would not be walking empty-handed.
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