That day, the Hanoi sky was overcast, cool, and rainy. Huong, eight months pregnant, carefully put on a cloth hat and set off with her bag for the market. Her husband, Tuan, had told her he had an urgent meeting that morning, so she left early. She didn’t think much about it, just felt a little sad: even though she was about to give birth, she still had to go out alone to buy every diaper, every towel, and baby milk.
The market was crowded. Huong had to walk very slowly to balance her large belly. After choosing a few things for the newborn and was about to leave, she heard a very familiar voice. It was her husband’s voice.
Turning around, Huong was stunned.
Tuan was holding hands with a young woman wearing a short skirt and high heels, smiling and chatting. She was carrying a bag and said, “What do you want to eat? I’ll buy everything for you.” — No, I don’t want to eat much, I’ll gain weight.
— Even if you gain weight, I’ll still love you.
Huong stood still, as if petrified. She didn’t dare come closer. From a distance, she clearly saw her husband, the man with whom she shared her life, now tenderly caring for another woman… while his wife, about to give birth, had to go to the market alone.
Tears didn’t come. Her heart was heavy.
She didn’t make a fuss. She didn’t cry. Huong just took out her phone and texted him:
“I just saw you at the market. I’m tired, I should have taken a taxi earlier. And you… keep playing your role until the end.”
After sending it, she turned off her phone. She didn’t wait for a reply.
Tuan was laughing when the phone vibrated. He read the message and his face turned pale. He let go of the girl’s hand and looked around.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
Tuan didn’t answer; she ran out of the market, muttering, “Huong… Huong is here…”
But Huong was already gone. Her belly was heavy, her limping gait through the crowd, and her eyes were dry. Her heart was empty. No anger, no resentment, just a suffocating pain.
When she got home, she didn’t go upstairs to the bedroom; she went straight to the kitchen. She placed everything she had bought for the baby on the table: a light blue newborn coat, wool socks, a box of scented talcum powder, diapers, a bottle of milk. One by one, like stabs to the heart.
She remembered the nights of pregnancy alone while he claimed to work late. She remembered the prenatal appointments she went to alone, waiting for hours in the hospital. She remembered his cold, distant eyes lately.
In the end, it wasn’t all her imagination… it was because he had someone else.
Tuan returned home an hour later, her face broken. Seeing her sitting with her back to the kitchen, he said in a broken voice:
“Huong… I’m sorry…”
“Sorry for what?” he asked without turning around. “For going to a meeting?”
“I was wrong. She’s just a passing thing. I never wanted to leave you. I didn’t think you’d see me…”
“If she hadn’t seen me, how much longer would you have hidden it from me?”
Huong stood up and stared at him with frightening calm:
“I don’t need you to leave her. I don’t need you to choose. I’ve already chosen for both of us.”
“Huong… don’t be like that… I was wrong…”
“The child I’m carrying doesn’t need a lying father. And I don’t need a traitorous husband.”
He took some prepared divorce papers out of his pocket.
“Sign them. Read them carefully and sign them. I won’t ask for anything, just the child. And peace.”
Tuan slumped back in the chair, his head in his hands. He never imagined that Huong, his docile wife, would be so determined. He thought she would cry, that she would beg, that she would forgive. But no: her eyes were cold as iron.
“Do you still love me?” Tuan asked.
“Maybe I loved you very much. But the moment I saw you holding her hand in the market… I knew my heart stopped loving you.”
That sentence was like the final verdict in their marriage. No shouting, no arguments. Just a woman who, for him, remained strong until the end.
Months later, Huong gave birth to a healthy son. Busy with her son and rebuilding her life, the smile returned to her lips. A calm smile, no longer ties.
As for Tuan, he would sometimes still appear at the door with a bag of gifts and his eyes full of regret. But the door never opened.
The story was over. That woman, once weak, learned to let go… and to live for those who deserved it most: herself and her son.