In Manila, people looked at me like a failed woman: no husband, no child, no family backing me up. Friends became cautious around me. Relatives sighed whenever they saw me. No one said it outright, but I understood… they pitied me.

But no one knew that right after I signed those cold divorce papers,
I was already carrying his child.

His name is Ethan Parker, three years older than me. We had once been married, once lived together in a small apartment in Quezon City. Ethan wasn’t a bad man. He never was.

He was just… too silent.

His mother, on the other hand, was the opposite.

She never accepted me. To her, I was just a provincial girl from Laguna, never good enough for her son. At every family meal, I felt like an outsider.

The breaking point came with my first miscarriage.

That day, I was curled up in pain on a hospital bed in a public hospital. Ethan arrived late. His mother didn’t come at all.

That evening, she said it straight to my face:

“This family doesn’t keep a woman who can’t give birth.”

Ethan stayed silent.

That silence… killed something inside me.

I carried that pain out of my marriage, signed the divorce papers quietly—no arguments, no fights, no begging to stay.

Two weeks later… I found out I was pregnant again.

My hands trembled as I stared at the pregnancy test—two bright red lines. My heart was pounding out of control. I sat on the floor for a long time, not crying, not smiling.

I should have called Ethan.
I should have said, “I’m having your child.”

But I didn’t have the courage.

I was afraid he’d think I was trying to cling to him.
I was afraid his mother would try to take the baby from me.
And most of all… I was afraid of the pity in the eyes of the man who used to be my husband.

So I decided to hide it.

For nine months, I lived like someone on the run. I quit my office job, moved into a small rented room in Santa Mesa, changed my phone number, deactivated Facebook, and avoided everyone I knew.

I was too scared to go to big hospitals. I only visited small private clinics.

Every time a doctor asked,

“Where is the baby’s father?”

I would force a smile and say,

“There isn’t one.”

The day labor started, the pain came violently. I was rushed to a district hospital in Manila, my back soaked in sweat, my hands gripping the bedsheets until my knuckles turned white.