
Wife's Suicide, Husband's Awakening
Chapter 2
I sat on my bathroom floor until dawn, surrounded by the shattered remains of Mateo's grandmother's teacup. Each fragment caught the morning light like tiny mirrors, reflecting back the pieces of my broken heart. My phone lay beside me, London's number glowing on the screen. I'd dialed it a dozen times but couldn't bring myself to press call.
Finally, as the sun painted the marble walls gold, I found my voice.
"London?" My words came out as a croak.
"Esme? Honey, what's wrong? It's six in the morning."
The concern in her voice broke what little composure I had left. "I'm pregnant," I whispered, the words tumbling out like a confession. "And Mateo... he said I'm unworthy of bearing his child. He doesn't even know, but he already rejects us."
Silence stretched between us, heavy with understanding. London had witnessed the slow erosion of my marriage, had held me through countless nights when Mateo's coldness left me hollow.
"Oh, sweetheart," she breathed. "Where are you now?"
"Home. He's already left for the office." I pressed my free hand to my stomach, where hope and despair warred beneath my palm. "I don't know what to do, London. I wanted this baby so much, but how can I bring a child into this?"
"Listen to me," London's voice took on the gentle authority she used in her work as a soul companion. "You have options. You always have options. But first, you need to see a doctor. Make sure everything is okay with the pregnancy."
I nodded, though she couldn't see me. "My cardiologist. Dr. Martinez. She's been monitoring my condition since college."
"Your heart condition?" London's voice sharpened with concern. "Esme, have you discussed pregnancy risks with her?"
The question hung in the air like a sword. I'd been so focused on the emotional impossibility of this pregnancy that I'd pushed aside the medical reality I'd been avoiding for years.
"No," I admitted. "I've been too afraid to ask."
"Then that's where we start," London said firmly. "Knowledge is power, honey. Whatever we're facing, we face it with facts."
After hanging up, I swept the broken china into a dustpan, each piece a small goodbye to the woman I'd been yesterday—the one who still believed in miracles.
* * *
Dr. Elena Martinez's office smelled of antiseptic and false hope. I sat across from her mahogany desk, my hands folded in my lap to hide their trembling as she reviewed my latest test results with the gravity of a judge pronouncing sentence.
"Esme," she said finally, removing her reading glasses with deliberate care. "I need to ask you something, and I want you to be completely honest with me. Are you pregnant?"
My throat constricted. "Yes."
She nodded slowly, as if confirming a suspicion she'd hoped was wrong. "How far along?"
"About six weeks, I think."
Dr. Martinez leaned back in her chair, her dark eyes filled with compassion and professional concern. "I'm going to be direct with you because you deserve the truth. Your hereditary cardiomyopathy has progressed since your last visit. The strain of pregnancy on your heart... Esme, it could kill you."
The words hit me like physical blows. "My mother," I whispered. "She died giving birth to me."
"I've reviewed her medical records," Dr. Martinez confirmed gently. "She had the same condition. The pregnancy put too much stress on her already weakened heart. She went into cardiac arrest during delivery."
I stared at the diplomas on her wall, their gold frames blurring through my tears. "So if I continue this pregnancy..."
"There's a very real chance you won't survive. And even if you do, the baby might not. The reduced blood flow, the medications we'd need to keep you stable—it's not a viable situation for either of you."
The irony wasn't lost on me. Mateo had declared me unworthy of bearing his child, never knowing that my body had already made that choice for us both. The child I'd secretly named Hope—the child I'd imagined would heal our broken marriage—was as impossible as the love I'd been chasing for seven years.
"What are my options?" I asked, though we both knew there was really only one.
"Termination. As soon as possible. Every day we wait increases the risk to your heart."
I closed my eyes, feeling the weight of the decision settle over me like a shroud. In the darkness behind my lids, I could see Hope's face—a perfect blend of Mateo and me, with his dark hair and my gentle eyes. A child who would never draw breath, never feel sunlight, never know love.
"I'll need some time," I said.
"You don't have much," Dr. Martinez warned. "A few days at most."
I nodded, already knowing what I would choose. The decision had been made the moment Mateo spoke those cruel words, sealed by the medical reality that made love impossible and survival paramount.
As I left her office, I pulled out my phone and scheduled the appointment that would end Hope's brief existence and perhaps save my own—though I wondered if a life without love was worth saving at all.
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