Six months after my divorce, my ex-husband called and said, “I want to invite you to my wedding.” I looked at the newborn and whispered, “I just gave birth. I’m not going anywhere.” Then his voice changed: “…What did you say?” Thirty minutes later, he burst into my hospital room, stared at the baby, and asked, “Claire…is that my daughter?” I thought the worst was over. I was wrong.

Six months after my divorce, my ex-husband called and said, “I want to invite you to my wedding.” I looked at the newborn and whispered, “I just gave birth. I’m not going anywhere.” Then his voice changed: “…What did you say?” Thirty minutes later, he burst into my hospital room, stared at the baby, and asked, “Claire…is that my daughter?” I thought the worst was over. I was wrong.

Six months after my divorce, I was lying in a hospital bed in Columbus, Ohio, staring at the crib next to me when a message popped up on my phone with a name I had learned not to respond to: Ethan Blake .

My ex-husband.

For a moment, I thought it must be a mistake. Ethan hadn’t called me once since signing the papers. We’d handled everything by email, through lawyers, in silence. But his name kept flashing, and with a newborn sleeping a meter away, I answered before I could talk myself out of it.

“Claire,” he said in that elegant voice he used when he wanted something. “I know this is unexpected for you, but I wanted to personally invite you to my wedding next Saturday.”

I almost laughed.

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