Terrified of reopening wounds we’d spent years trying to stitch together.
Jake and I had been married for seven years. Seven years of love, laughter, and quiet companionship—and seven years of negative tests, doctor visits, polite sympathy, and whispered apologies in the dark.
When the doctors told Jake he was infertile, something in him broke. He never said it outright, but I saw it in the way his shoulders slumped, in how he avoided conversations about children, in how he apologized for things that were never his fault.
“I’m sorry,” he’d say, over and over. “I know you wanted to be a mom.”
But I hadn’t given up. Not on him. Not on us. And not on the possibility—however small—that the doctors could be wrong.
I didn’t even remember leaving the office. I only knew that the next moment, I was gripping the steering wheel, my knuckles white, tears blurring the road as I drove home.
Jake’s car was already in the driveway.
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