The Photographer's Deceptive Lens
y Wal
u're crying." The voice on the other end o
," I lied, my voice cracking. "Just... a lit
s completely normal. Just breathe.
The brutal irony of it all. A stranger on a phone, offerin
osts. The internet was a vast, unforgiving archive, spewing forth every detail of Austen's passionate past with Isolde. Every glowing rev
he was a man capable of profound, all-consuming devotion. A devotion I had never witnessed, never experienced. He'd made me believe he wa
And now, he was probably pouring it all out again, rushing to her side, fixing her proble
n my chest. By morning, the tears had dried, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. I had to let go. I had to kill
iting room, acutely aware of the couples around me. They held hands, whispered reas
r hair, murmuring something I couldn't quite hear, but the tenderness in his gaze was unmistakab
nwavering support. That shared journey. Austen had laughed off my morning sickness as "just a bug," my fatigue as "
egnant. How could he? I hadn't told him. I'd wanted to surprise him, to wrap it up with a
urse called my nam
ing strangely heavy, my
c indicates you're a little further along than you thought. There's also a genetic marker that suggests... a higher risk for complications." She paused, her gaze gentle but s
ldn't control. Family. Partner.
g. I pulled it out, my heart jumpin
honey? Your dad and I can't
one that was now a ghost. How could I tell them? How could I tell them a
. Should I pause? Should I go home, gather my parents, try to talk to Aust
ame flashed on the screen, a jarring interruption to