The Night He Chose Her
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om pregnancy, was empty. The ghost of a kick, a phantom flutter, was all that remained
t was all a cruel joke. Every tender touch, every whispered promise, ev
mly, deliberately, pulled my hand away. The gesture was small, but
small café where you proposed? You knelt, a single red rose, promisi
with a hint of discomfort. "Eli
Engraved with 'A & E, Always.' You said our love was eternal, unb
dropping to his hands. "I me
leed, alone, while our baby died? You meant it when you chose her, again and again, over me, over our child
in his eyes. He opened his mouth, then closed it. "Bri
ver me. "Our baby didn' t? I don't recognize you anymore,
anger. "Get out, Aaron. Get out of my sight.
. He walked out of the room, leaving me alone with my
sorrow and barely concealed fury at Aaron's absence. He didn't come. He sent flowers, a sterile white
. The sky was gray, mirroring the landscape of my soul. I knelt, tracin
red, my voice raw. "Mommy's her
apped around my shoulders. "He's in a
even myself. "Maybe he's spared a life with a father who couldn'
eyes filled with a new kin
looking impeccably sad. He walked towards the grave, his gaze fixed on the s
looked at me, his eyes filled with a performative sorrow. "Elinor
. "You want to pay respects to the child
g. But you're being unreasonable. I'm here
at right the moment you walked out of that delivery room, Aaron. You a
n't say that. You're emotional
clear. "And what I'm thinking is that your sorrow is a performance. Yo
sing. "I loved you, Elinor! I still do! This is g
. "There is no 'us,' Aaron. Only you and your promise
s. But then, a flicker of his old arrogance returned. "Elinor, I'm trying to be und
firm. "Not as a husband. Not as a father. And
oised to argue, to defend himself, to continue his charade. But before he could,
as B