Lying on top of my suitcase were the house keys.
My husband of eleven years, Ryan Montgomery, had left them there as if he were returning a life that no longer had any value.
Laughter drifted from inside the house.
Not nervous laughter.
Not surprised laughter.
The comfortable, cruel kind that comes from people who believe they’ve already won.
I looked through the open doorway and saw Ryan sitting on the leather sofa I had picked out years earlier.
Beside him sat Vanessa Carter, younger, flawless, wearing a red dress and holding a glass of wine.
Behind them stood my mother-in-law, Rebecca Montgomery, elegant as always in her pearl necklace.
The same woman who had spent years telling me at every family gathering:
“A house without children feels empty, sweetheart. And a woman who can’t become a mother is always missing something.”
I swallowed those words the way people swallow broken glass.
Silently.
Trying not to bleed in front of anyone.
For eleven years I endured fertility treatments, specialists, hormone injections, expensive clinics, prayers whispered in the dark, and pitying looks from strangers.
Every negative test felt like a tiny funeral.
And every time I emerged from a bathroom with swollen eyes, Ryan held me a little less.
Until eventually he stopped holding me at all.
What none of them knew was that seven weeks earlier, Dr. Daniel Harrison had discovered something dozens of doctors had missed for years.
Severe endometriosis.
Misdiagnosed.
Untreated.
The infertility had never been my fault.
Not once.
After surgery and proper treatment, something happened that every specialist had told me was impossible.
That very morning, I had learned I was pregnant.