I hadn’t expected to see Ethan again—certainly not in the waiting room of Dr. Monroe’s fertility clinic on a gray Tuesday morning. I was flipping through a magazine, pretending not to notice the anxious couples around me, when the automatic door slid open, and there he was—Ethan James, my ex-boyfriend of seven years ago, walking in hand-in-hand with a woman who could’ve stepped straight out of a maternity ad.
“Laura?” His voice was startled but laced with that old arrogance, as if my presence had interrupted his perfect life.
“Ethan,” I managed, my tone neutral.
His wife—clearly pregnant, maybe six months along—smiled politely. “You two know each other?”
“Oh, we used to date,” Ethan said before I could answer. “Years ago. She, uh, never wanted kids.”
The words sliced through the air like a blade. Heads turned. My throat tightened, but I forced a calm smile.
“That’s not exactly true,” I said evenly. “But I did want to wait until I had a partner who didn’t measure a woman’s worth by her womb.”
A nurse called my name just then, and I stood. Ethan looked as if he’d swallowed a stone. His wife blinked between us, confused.
As I walked toward the consultation room, I could feel his stare burning into my back. I wanted to disappear, but part of me savored the irony. Ethan had once left me because I wanted to focus on my career before starting a family. He said I’d regret it.
Now, years later, I was here—not for infertility, but to freeze my eggs before an upcoming overseas project. Life had its twists.
When my appointment ended, I saw them again at the reception desk. His wife was filling out forms; Ethan hovered behind her, restless. Our eyes met.
He mouthed, Still alone?
I smiled sweetly. “Actually, no. Just selective.”
His wife turned to him, frowning. “What does she mean?”
Ethan stammered something about “old jokes,” but I caught the flicker of discomfort in his eyes. For the first time since we broke up, I didn’t feel lesser—I felt free.
And that was only the beginning.
Back then, Ethan and I were the golden couple of our circle. We met at Stanford, both ambitious, both dreaming big. He majored in architecture; I was pursuing journalism. For five years, we built a life together—late-night ramen, weekend road trips, whispered plans for the future.
But when I landed a position at The Chronicle in San Francisco, things changed. I was ecstatic. He wasn’t. Ethan had this quiet expectation that I’d eventually “settle down,” that my career would revolve around his. When I mentioned freezing my eggs to focus on reporting assignments abroad, he called it “unnatural.”
“I just want a normal life, Laura,” he’d said. “A house, kids, dinners at seven.”
“And I want that too—someday,” I’d replied. “But not as a checklist.”
