The hospital lights were a blinding, clinical white the day my world ended. When the monitor flatlined and the room fell silent, my husband, David, didn’t even look at me. He just turned on his heel and walked out, leaving me to shatter completely alone.
The only anchor I had in that suffocating room was Dr. Aris. She held my trembling hand as I collapsed onto the linoleum floor. “Hang on,” she whispered fiercely into my ear. “Don’t let the pain win.”
I spent the next year trying to honor that promise. I moved into a smaller apartment, painting the walls in soft, light peach and lavender tones, finding a strange, quiet comfort in the subtle, barely-there floral patterns on my curtains. I tried to create a clean, minimal life where the grief couldn’t scream quite so loudly. I was healing, slowly.
Then, yesterday, I saw her.
Dr. Aris was sitting outside a quiet corner cafe. A wave of profound gratitude washed over me. I walked over, ready to throw my arms around the woman who had kept me tethered to the earth during the absolute worst moment of my life.
I wanted to hug her, but my blood ran cold when she turned her head.
She wasn’t alone. A man stepped out of the cafe, carrying two coffees, laughing at something she had just said. It was David. My ex-husband. He leaned down, kissed her softly on the lips, and handed her a cup. She reached up to touch his face, and a massive diamond ring caught the afternoon sunlight.
The doctor who had held my hand while my son died, the woman who told me to survive my husband’s abandonment… had been the reason he left in the first place.
