The real fracture happened after my first miscarriage, when I lay on a narrow bed at Bayview Public Hospital with pain twisting through my body and grief pressing against my chest. Zachary arrived late that day, his tie still on and his phone buzzing in his pocket, while his mother did not come at all and sent only a short message that said she was busy.
That evening, when I was discharged and weak, Patricia looked at me across the living room and said in a voice that carried no warmth, “Our family does not keep a woman who cannot give us a child.”
Zachary stood beside her and said nothing, and in that silence something inside me broke quietly beyond repair. I carried that invisible wound for months, and when we finally sat in a lawyer’s office to sign divorce papers, there were no dramatic arguments and no desperate pleas to stay.
We signed our names in black ink, shook hands stiffly, and walked out in opposite directions as if ending a business contract instead of a marriage.