I found out I was pregnant alone, sitting on the bathroom floor at seven in the morning, staring at two pink lines I had spent three years hoping to see. When I told Ethan that night, he reacted like a movie scene—lifting me up, laughing, promising we had finally made it. For twelve weeks, we lived carefully but happily, planning a future we had almost stopped believing was possible.
Then everything collapsed in a single day. I woke up with cramps, then bleeding, and by evening I was in the hospital hearing the word no one is ever ready for: miscarriage. I stayed for complications, drifting through pain and medication, while Ethan came briefly and then drifted away through texts and silence that I tried to excuse as grief.
When I came home, I expected comfort. Instead, I found his mother sitting at my kitchen table telling me I had “ruined his birthday.” She blamed me for everything—my loss, his pain, the timing—like grief was something I had chosen. Before I could even process it, Ethan walked in and the truth finally broke open between us.
For the first time, he didn’t stay silent. He defended me, not gently but fiercely, and told his mother to leave after calling out her cruelty. When the door closed, the house finally went still. He came to me, held me like I might disappear, and in that silence—after everything had already been lost—I finally allowed myself to fall apart.