
Chloe sat on the hard plastic chair in the hospital corridor, her fingers white-knuckling a diagnostic report. A few cold, clinical words jumped off the page, piercing her eyes like needles. "Primary Infertility." The doctor’s voice still echoed in her ears. "With your specific condition, natural conception is highly unlikely. Essentially... you cannot have children." Her boyfriend of five years, Mark Jenkins, sat right beside her. He hadn't said a word. From the moment she was handed the report, he had been completely silent. Chloe’s heart sank, inch by inch, as if she were plunging into a frozen lake. She reached out, wanting to hold his hand. Mark recoiled violently, snatching his hand away as if she had burned him. His eyes darted away, refusing to look at her. "Mark..." Chloe’s voice was dry and raspy. "I... I need some space." Mark stood up, dropped those words, and walked away without looking back. Watching his retreating figure, Chloe felt every ounce of strength drain from her body. For the next three days, Mark didn't call. He didn't text. Chloe locked herself in her apartment, feeling like a ghost abandoned by the entire world. Five years. From their college campus to entering the workforce, they had survived being broke together and built dreams for their future together. They had even put a deposit down on a wedding dress and were planning to go to the courthouse to get their marriage license next month. But a single piece of paper had shattered everything. On the fourth day, the doorbell rang. Chloe thought it was Mark. She forced her exhausted body up to open the door. Standing on the porch was Mark’s mother, Susan Jenkins. Her face was made of ice. The way she looked at Chloe was like inspecting a defective piece of merchandise. "Mrs. Jenkins," Chloe said, her voice barely a whisper. Susan ignored her, marched straight into the living room, and slapped a cashier's check down on the coffee table. "There's ten thousand dollars here." "My Mark cannot marry a hen that won't lay eggs." A loud ringing filled Chloe’s head. Everything went blank. "Mrs. Jenkins, Mark and I have been together for five years..." "Can five years of feelings put food on the table? Can feelings give the Jenkins family a grandson?" Susan’s voice was shrill and biting. "Chloe, I suggest you look in the mirror and know your place. Stop holding my son back." "The Jenkins family line has been passed down from father to son for three generations. It is not ending with him!" Looking at Susan’s face, twisted with agitation, the last sliver of hope in Chloe’s heart died. She smiled, but it looked worse than crying. "So, this is what Mark wants?" Susan let out a huff, essentially confirming it. "He's a man, he feels bad saying it to your face. As his mother, I have to be the bad guy." "The engagement is off." "Don't ever contact Mark again." Having completed her mission, Susan turned on her heel to leave. At the door, she paused and looked back at Chloe. Her eyes were filled with a sickening mix of pity and absolute disdain. "Oh, by the way. My son is getting married next month. The bride is the daughter of the City Planning Director. She’s already pregnant." The door slammed shut. Chloe stood rooted to the spot, paralyzed. So, he didn't "need some space." He was using his silence to force her to let go. He was using her diagnosis as a convenient, righteous excuse to seamlessly transition to his new, wealthy, pregnant fiancée. Five years. It was all just a sick joke. Chloe slowly sank to the floor, buried her face in her knees, and finally broke down, sobbing uncontrollably. Six months is enough time for a city to change its skyline. It’s also enough time for a person’s heart to turn to ash. Chloe chopped off her long hair, transferred to a different department at work, and tried her hardest to look nothing like her past self. But the gaping hole in her chest refused to close. She still heard about Mark’s wedding through office gossip. Word was, it was an incredibly lavish affair. The bride had a visible baby bump and looked radiant. When Chloe heard this, she just kept typing at her keyboard, expressionless, as if listening to a story about strangers. Only she knew that she drank an entire bottle of Cabernet that night. Life became stagnant, like a dead pool of water—no ripples, no expectations. Until the newly appointed Department Director, Barbara Hayes, sought her out. Barbara was a woman in her late fifties, sharp, capable, and rarely smiled. Yet, that afternoon, she did something unprecedented. She called Chloe into her office and personally poured her a cup of coffee. "Chloe, you've been in this department for almost six months now. How are you settling in?" "It's going well. Thank you for asking, Director," Chloe replied respectfully. Barbara nodded, her eyes assessing Chloe, calculating something. "And... your personal life? Have you given that any thought?" Chloe’s chest tightened. Why was she suddenly asking about this? "I... haven't really thought about it." Barbara smiled, her tone suddenly turning conspiratorial. "I’ve heard about your situation." All the color drained from Chloe’s face. Her infertility was a brand of shame. She never spoke of it to anyone. "Director..." "Don't panic." Barbara waved a hand, leaning forward slightly, lowering her voice. "Actually, the reason I called you in is because I want to set you up with someone." Chloe was stunned. "My son, Arthur." For the first time, a look of helplessness and embarrassment crossed Barbara’s usually stoic face. "He... he’s a great guy, really. It’s just... physically, he has a minor issue." She paused, seemingly weighing her words. "Just like you, he can't have children." Chloe felt like a sledgehammer had slammed into her chest. She stared at Barbara, completely unsure how to react. "I know this reality is cruel for you young folks." "But life has to go on, doesn't it?" "You two are in the same unique boat. You understand each other's pain. Neither of you has any right to judge the other." "Just make do. Partner up and build a life together. It’s better than growing old alone." Make do. Partner up. Those words stung Chloe’s nerves like needles. Had her life really been reduced to a state where she just had to "make do"? She wanted to refuse. But looking at Barbara’s eyes, filled with expectation and a hint of pleading, the word "no" got stuck in her throat. Maybe Barbara was right. What right did a barren woman have to demand romance or look forward to the future? Finding another defective person, forming a broken family, keeping each other warm, and licking each other’s wounds. Perhaps, this was the best ending she could hope for. "Director," Chloe looked up, her eyes dead. "I... I'm willing to meet him." Barbara let out a long sigh of relief, a heavy weight lifting from her shoulders. "Good, good girl. I knew you were sensible." A week later, Chloe and Arthur met at a local coffee shop. He was taller and leaner than in his photo, wearing a crisp white button-down and jeans. He had a clean, sharp look. But there was an unshakable melancholy between his brows. Throughout the meeting, he barely spoke. Chloe did most of the talking; he just listened. At the very end, he looked at Chloe and asked one serious question. "Are you absolutely sure about this?" Chloe offered a self-deprecating smile. "Do people like us really have a choice?" Arthur fell silent. After a long moment, he nodded. "Alright. Then let's... get married." No proposal. No ring. Not even an "I like you." From the very beginning, their union was nothing more than an unspoken agreement to "make do." A month later, they went to the courthouse. The reception was painfully simple—just a dinner at a restaurant with close relatives from both sides. At the dinner table, Chloe spotted Susan Jenkins. Susan had tagged along with a distant relative of Arthur's, staring at Chloe with undisguised schadenfreude. "Well, if it isn't Chloe! Married again so soon? I hear this one... is firing blanks too? Oh my, you two really are a match made in heaven!" Her shrill, vicious words plunged the entire table into a suffocating, awkward silence. Chloe’s hand, gripping her fork, trembled violently. Just then, a large, warm hand covered hers. It was Arthur. He looked calmly at Susan, his tone flat. "Whether we can have kids or not is none of your concern." "Instead of worrying about us, you should spend that energy figuring out if the baby in your daughter-in-law's belly actually belongs to the Jenkins family." Susan’s face instantly turned the color of bruised plum. Married life was as placid as still water. Arthur was a quiet man. When he was home, he was either reading or tending to his houseplants. He didn't say much, but he was incredibly considerate. He remembered that Chloe hated cilantro. He quietly handled all the household chores. When she worked late, he always left a porch light on and a bowl of hot soup on the stove. They lived like polite roommates—respectful, courteous, but emotionally distant. Neither dared to touch the other's deepest scar. The word "child" was never spoken. Barbara, however, visited frequently, always bringing expensive vitamins and supplements. "Chloe, you need to take care of your health. It’s pitiful enough that you can't have kids; you can't let your body break down on top of it." She muttered variations of this every time. Chloe just listened silently, her emotions a tangled mess. Sometimes, she thought this life wasn't so bad. No arguments, no expectations, which meant no crushing disappointments. Until that day. For several weeks, she had been feeling nauseous, incredibly lethargic, and completely drained of energy. At first, she thought she was just overworked and had caught a stomach bug. But when the smell of Arthur's cooking made her sprint to the bathroom to dry heave, an absurd, impossible thought popped into her head. Trembling, she drove to Walgreens and bought a pregnancy test. When she saw those two distinct pink lines, Chloe felt her entire world collapse. She didn't believe it. She drove to the hospital like a madwoman, demanded a walk-in appointment, and underwent a battery of tests. When the OB-GYN looked at the ultrasound and smiled, saying, "Congratulations, it’s twins. Looks like a boy and a girl," Chloe only heard a deafening roar in her ears. How was this possible? Wasn't she diagnosed with "Primary Infertility"? Wasn't she told she would never be a mother? Clutching the ultrasound printout, she stumbled back home in a daze. Arthur wasn't home from work yet. Barbara wasn't there either. The living room was empty. She was entirely alone. She sat on the sofa, her hands shaking violently. That thin piece of photo paper felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. Twins. A boy and a girl. For any normal family, this would be the greatest news in the world. But for her, it was the ultimate mockery. A massive, suffocating lie had trapped her in its net. The doctor told her she couldn't conceive. Barbara told her Arthur couldn't conceive. That was the only reason they had "made do" and gotten married. But now, she was pregnant. With Arthur's children. So, who exactly was lying? Did the original doctor misdiagnose her? Or was it... Barbara? Did she invent a lie about her son to make her "defective" daughter-in-law feel secure in the marriage? Or maybe... A far more terrifying thought slithered into Chloe’s mind like a venomous snake. Mark and Susan! Was it them? To cleanly break the engagement and latch onto the City Planner's wealthy daughter, did they bribe the doctor to forge that diagnostic report?! Once the thought surfaced, she couldn't suppress it. A bone-chilling cold started in Chloe’s fingertips and crept straight to her heart. If that were true... Then what was the point of the agony, humiliation, and despair she had suffered for the past six months? She had been discarded like garbage, treated as a running joke. Her entire life trajectory had been maliciously rewritten. Just then, the front door clicked open. Arthur was home. He saw Chloe sitting on the sofa, pale as a ghost, staring blankly ahead with a piece of paper clutched in her hand. "What's wrong?" he asked, walking over with genuine concern. Chloe slowly looked up and handed the ultrasound to him. "I'm pregnant." Her voice was as light as a feather, but in the quiet living room, it hit like a tidal wave. Arthur’s pupils contracted sharply. He stared at the ultrasound, his expression an incredibly complex mix of emotions. Shock. Confusion. And a tiny, barely perceptible flash of... joy. He was silent for a long time before he finally looked up at Chloe. "Is this real?" Chloe nodded, her eyes swimming in confusion and pain. "Arthur, tell me the truth. Did you know all along that you... that you could have kids?" That was the least horrifying scenario she could think of right now. Arthur looked at her, his gaze deep and searching. He shook his head. "I didn't know." His voice was quiet, but firm. "My mother always told me that a severe fever when I was a toddler caused permanent damage, making me sterile." "All these years, I believed her." Chloe’s heart plummeted again. If Arthur was telling the truth, there was only one possibility left. That original diagnostic report was a fake. "Where... which hospital did you get tested at originally?" Arthur asked, his tone turning analytical. "City General. The Head of Obstetrics, Dr. Wallace." Chloe spat out the name she would never forget as long as she lived. Arthur frowned. "Dr. Wallace?" "You know him?" Chloe asked instantly. Arthur nodded. "He was the mentor to a senior colleague of mine at the law firm. He has a stellar reputation in the medical community. It doesn't seem like something he would do." "But the proof is right here!" Chloe’s voice rose, bordering on hysterical. "If it wasn't him, who else could it be?" Arthur walked over and gently placed his hands on her shoulders. "Don't panic yet. Something isn't right here." "We can't just guess." His hands were steady. His voice was steady. It carried a grounding, reassuring power. Chloe slowly forced herself to breathe.