He Came To Mock His Ex At The Hospital, Then Saw The Baby Label-heyily

The phone rang while my newborn daughter slept against my chest.

Her fist was curled around the rough edge of my hospital gown, so small and stubborn that I kept looking at it to remind myself she was real.

The room smelled like antiseptic, rainwater, and the burnt coffee someone had left cooling on the counter by the sink.

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Outside the window, the evening storm dragged silver lines down the glass.

Inside, every monitor beeped like it had been assigned to keep me from forgetting how fragile the morning had been.

I had given birth at 6:18 a.m.

By 7:30 that night, I was still pale, sore, and learning the shape of my daughter’s face.

The hospital wristband scraped my skin when I moved.

The birth certificate worksheet sat on the rolling tray beside the discharge packet, half-filled out in my careful handwriting because my hands still shook.

Then my phone lit up with a name I had deleted six months earlier.

Richard.

I stared at it long enough for the second ring to sound.

There are names that do not belong in your phone anymore but still know exactly where to hurt you.

His was one of them.

I answered before my better judgment could stop me.

“Charlotte,” he said, smooth and pleased with himself. “I hope this isn’t a bad time.”

I looked down at the baby tucked against me.

Her little hat had slid sideways, and one cheek was pressed warm against my skin.

“It is,” I said.

He laughed softly, the same way he used to laugh when he wanted me to feel unreasonable before I had even finished a sentence.

“Still so dramatic,” he said. “I won’t keep you. I’m getting married tomorrow afternoon.”

The room seemed to shrink around me.

Not because I still wanted him.

That part of my life had burned down slowly enough that I had watched every beam fall.

But there are announcements people make just to test whether they can still make you bleed.

Richard had always liked tests.

“Congratulations,” I said.

“To Jessica,” he added.

He let her name sit there like a polished knife.

Of course I remembered Jessica.

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