Our kitchen cabinets were covered with fertility calendars. Vitamins lined the counter beside the coffee machine like tiny promises. Medical bills filled drawers I stopped opening because every envelope felt like proof that hope could become expensive enough to break you.
And then, suddenly, there it was.
Two pink lines.
Pregnant.
I stared at the test until my vision blurred. My hand flew over my mouth as laughter burst out of me — shaky, breathless, almost painful. Not because anything was funny, but because after years of drowning, I had finally touched solid ground again.
I imagined running downstairs barefoot to tell Caleb. I pictured him lifting me into his arms, crying into my hair, whispering that everything had finally been worth it.
Instead, I stepped out into silence.
The house felt wrong immediately. Too still. Too careful.
Usually, late evenings in our Seattle home were full of expensive little sounds — ice clinking in Caleb’s whiskey glass, financial news murmuring from his office, the dishwasher humming softly in the background.
That night, the silence felt rehearsed.
“Caleb?” I called.
No answer.
Then I heard his voice downstairs.
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Potato recipe book
News content creation
Conservative news feed
Soft.
Intimate.
The kind of voice he had not used with me in almost a year.
“I can’t keep living like this, Sarah.”
I froze on the staircase.
Sarah Bennett.
His development director.
Young, polished, ambitious Sarah who laughed too hard at his jokes and stayed too late after meetings. Sarah, who had sat in my kitchen drinking wine while asking me what kind of birthday gift Caleb would like.