YEARS AFTER THE DIVORCE, HE LAUGHS AT HER AGAIN

Margaret arrives with two cups of coffee and a bag of cookies, sensing the storm in Lauraโ€™s eyes before a single word is spoken.

โ€œIt didnโ€™t go well,โ€ Laura murmurs. โ€œNo chance. Not naturally.โ€

Margaret sets the coffee on the table and sits beside her.

โ€œWhat does โ€˜naturalโ€™ even mean these days?โ€ she asks

Laura wipes her eyes with the sleeve of her sweater and stares into her untouched coffee. โ€œI justโ€”he was so sure Iโ€™d never be a mother. Like my body failed him. Like I failed him.โ€

Margaret doesnโ€™t reply right away. She simply reaches over, places a hand gently on Lauraโ€™s, and squeezes. โ€œThen prove him wrong.โ€

Laura lifts her gaze slowly, eyes glistening with uncertainty. โ€œYou meanโ€ฆ the sample?โ€

โ€œYou said itโ€™s still yours. Legally. You said you kept it just in case.โ€

Laura nods. โ€œItโ€™s tucked away at the clinic, under my name. He never bothered to revoke the consent.โ€

Margaret leans in, her voice low and deliberate. โ€œThen give yourself this chance. If you still want it, Lauraโ€ฆ donโ€™t let his doubts write the end of your story.โ€

The next morning, the world outside is still asleep as Laura stands at the window, wrapped in a robe. The city glimmers with a promise she hasnโ€™t dared believe in for years. She picks up the phone and dials the clinic.

โ€œI want to begin the process,โ€ she says, her voice trembling but clear. โ€œI want to use the sample. His. Mine.โ€

Within weeks, the whirlwind beginsโ€”hormone injections, blood tests, ultrasounds. Laura marks each date in a small blue notebook, scribbling hopeful messages to herself in the margins. Grow strong. Come to me. I already love you.

Her body feels like a battlefieldโ€”bruised, sore, exhaustedโ€”but for the first time in years, she doesnโ€™t feel empty. She feelsโ€ฆ alive.

On the day of the embryo transfer, she clutches Margaretโ€™s hand as they walk into the clinic. Dr. Harris smiles as he enters the room with a small clipboard and glowing eyes.

โ€œWe have three healthy embryos,โ€ he announces. โ€œWould you like us to transfer one or two?โ€

Laura stares at the monitor, then at the glowing vial that holds her future. โ€œPut in all three,โ€ she whispers.

Margaret raises an eyebrow. โ€œYou sure?โ€

Laura nods, more confident than ever. โ€œIโ€™m not here to play it safe anymore.โ€

The following weeks are a blur of hope and nausea, prayers whispered into pillows, and cautious Googling of early pregnancy signs. She doesnโ€™t tell anyone elseโ€”no family, no distant friends from her old life, not even the women in her yoga group. This is hers. Hers alone.

When she takes the first home test, her hands are shaking. The line appears faint at first, like a ghost. Then darker. Then undeniable. She stares at it in stunned silence, a sob breaking from her throat, and Margaret finds her on the bathroom floor, clutching the test like a lifeline.

A week later, the blood test confirms it: sheโ€™s pregnant.

Tears spill freely as Dr. Harris grins at her during the ultrasound. โ€œYou might want to sit down,โ€ he says with a chuckle, pointing to the screen. โ€œThatโ€™s oneโ€ฆ twoโ€ฆ and yes, definitely three heartbeats.โ€

Triplets.

Laura gasps and clasps her hands over her mouth. She laughs through her tears. Triplets. Michaelโ€™s frozen legacyโ€”brought to life without him, without his permission, his control, or his final say. She walks out of that clinic with her shoulders straight and her head held high, the city around her transformed.

The months pass in a flurry of preparationsโ€”cribs, baby names, soft clothes, and midnight cravings. Margaret insists on moving in temporarily. โ€œYouโ€™re going to need a village,โ€ she says, hauling in her suitcase and a pack of diapers. โ€œAnd Iโ€™m it.โ€

Lauraโ€™s belly swells with purpose, her days filled with movement and meaning. Every little kick feels like a rebellion, a small voice saying, Weโ€™re here, Mom. Weโ€™re real.

The night she goes into labor, rain hammers against the windows as Margaret races her to the hospital. The pain is unbearable, primal, but Laura fights through it with a scream that tears the room apart. Hours pass. And thenโ€”three cries, three lives, three tiny miracles are placed gently in her arms.

She names them Oliver, Chloe, and Max.

Her world rearranges itself in an instant. Sleepless nights become their own kind of rhythm. Bottles, lullabies, and little socks fill the house. And though exhaustion grips her, Laura never stops smiling. Thisโ€”thisโ€”is what love feels like.

Two years pass like a heartbeat.

She stands now on the tarmac of a private airfield, the morning sun golden on her cheeks. The plane behind her glistens, sleek and white, with her name painted discreetly across the side: L. Kingsley Foundation. Inside are her three toddlers, giggling under the care of their nanny, as she adjusts the strap on her designer bag.

A black SUV pulls up nearby, and out steps Michael.

Laura doesnโ€™t flinch. She watches him approach, her face calm, unreadable. He hasnโ€™t changed muchโ€”still handsome, still confidentโ€”but his eyes widen when he sees her. Not just her tailored dress, the diamond studs in her ears, or the body transformed by motherhoodโ€”but the poise. The effortless grace. The freedom.

โ€œLaura?โ€ he asks, incredulous. โ€œWhatโ€ฆ What is all this?โ€

She smiles faintly. โ€œHello, Michael.โ€

His eyes move past her to the jet, then back again. โ€œYouโ€™reโ€ฆ flying private?โ€

She laughs softly. โ€œYes. The foundation is doing well. Weโ€™re expanding to Europe.โ€

โ€œThe foundation?โ€ he repeats, confused.

โ€œL. Kingsley Foundation for Fertility Access,โ€ she says. โ€œI started it after the triplets were born. For women whoโ€™ve been told no too many times.โ€

Michael blinks. โ€œTriplets?โ€

She tilts her head. โ€œYour DNA has quite the overachiever gene, apparently.โ€

His mouth opens, but no words come out. He looks stunned, caught in some karmic loop he never saw coming.

โ€œYou usedโ€ฆ the sample?โ€ he finally asks.

โ€œI did. Legally mine, remember?โ€ she says. โ€œYou didnโ€™t want children. I did. That was the difference.โ€

He stares at her, then the plane, then at the laughing toddlers inside. His gaze lingers on their facesโ€”Oliverโ€™s eyes, so much like his. Chloeโ€™s smile, unmistakably his motherโ€™s. Maxโ€™s dimpled chin, a mirror of his own.

โ€œThey look like me,โ€ he murmurs.

Laura doesnโ€™t blink. โ€œYes. But theyโ€™ll never know you.โ€

Michael steps forward, a little desperate now. โ€œCan Iโ€ฆ Can I meet them?โ€

She shakes her head slowly. โ€œYou laughed at me, Michael. Said I was broken. Said I wasnโ€™t enough. You gave up before you ever gave me a chance.โ€

His shoulders sag. โ€œPeople change.โ€

โ€œPeople reveal,โ€ she replies. โ€œI didnโ€™t build this life to prove anything to you. I built it because I deserved it. They deserved it.โ€

The pilot gestures from the stairs. Itโ€™s time.

She turns, walks a few steps, then pauses.

โ€œGoodbye, Michael.โ€

She climbs the stairs, her heels clicking with purpose. The cabin door closes behind her, and the engines begin to roar. From the window, Laura watches him shrink into the distanceโ€”just a blur now, small and irrelevant.

As the jet lifts into the sky, she presses her palm gently to the window and whispers to herself, โ€œThis is how it feels to fly.โ€

And for the first time in her life, Laura soars.