At forty-five, I was pregnant for the first time in my life. During the ultrasound, my doctor’s expression changed. She lowered her voice, asked me to come closer, and stopped me before I could call my husband. Panic hit me instantly. “Is the baby okay?” I asked. She told me the baby was healthy. Then she turned the screen toward me and showed me something that ended my marriage before I even left the room.

The room was dark except for the pale glow of the monitor.

Meline Mercer lay back on the exam table with her fingers twisted in the fabric of her blouse, cold gel on her stomach, listening to the sound she had fought three years to hear.

A heartbeat.

Fast. Clear. Real.

She was forty-five years old, and she had spent thirty-six months pouring money, hormones, hope, and pieces of herself into the chance to reach this exact moment. Needles. Failed cycles. Quiet breakdowns in bathroom stalls. Tears wiped away before the next appointment. Through all of it, Garrett had stood beside her with steady hands, a steady voice, and the face of a man she believed she could trust. She had mistaken consistency for loyalty.

Dr. Petrova held the wand in place and smiled at the screen. “Eight weeks,” she said. “Strong heartbeat. Everything looks perfect.”

Meline started crying immediately. She didn’t try to hide it. “Garrett is going to lose his mind,” she said, breathless with joy. “I can’t wait to tell him.”

But the doctor didn’t answer.

Meline turned her head and saw that Dr. Petrova had gone completely still.

“Meline,” she said quietly, “I’m about to do something that could cost me my license.”

Every muscle in Meline’s body locked. “What’s wrong with the baby?”

“The baby is fine.”

Those words should have calmed her. They didn’t.

Dr. Petrova turned the screen, exited Meline’s chart, and opened another file.

Tanya Wells. Twenty-six. High-risk pregnancy. Six months along.

Meline frowned. “Why are you showing me this?”

The doctor scrolled down to the emergency contact and billing section.

And Meline stopped breathing.

Garrett Mercer. Relationship: Partner/Father.

The room fell silent.

The heartbeat still echoed through the speaker, but it no longer belonged to her happiness. It sounded distant now, detached, like it belonged to another woman’s life.

“He brought her in last month,” Dr. Petrova said softly. “I recognized him.”