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“I wasn’t asking for prophecy,” I say. “I was asking for information.”

Inside, I’m thinking:We’ve known each other for four minutes and you’re already narrating my life arc.

The nurse beside him stills. Interested. I clock that immediately. Always know who’s on your side.

“I just think it’s important you’re aware,” he continues, warming to his theme, “that many women later regret not continuing a pregnancy when time is limited.”

I smile. Pleasant. Polite. With just enough teeth to be noticed.

“With all due respect,” I say, “you don’t know my circumstances, my support system, or whether I even like children before ten a.m.”

Which is generous of me, frankly.

The nurse’s lips twitch.

“I’m simply trying to ensure you don’t make a hasty decision,” he says.

I think of the list on my phone. The colour-coded calm of it. The fact I have, in fact, been thinking about this for days.

“I agree,” I reply. “That’s why I asked for options, not guidance from the Book of Revelations.”

The nurse coughs. That is absolutely a laugh.

The GP clears his throat, finally sensing the room. “Termination is available within the legal timeframe, of course.”

“Thank you,” I say, because this is what I came for. “That’s all I needed. Available. Not recommended. Not discouraged. Just… available.”

Inside, something settles. Information received. Box ticked.

He looks faintly ruffled. “I wasn’t discouraging.”

“Good,” I say brightly. “Because that would be inappropriate.”

There’s a pause while he recalibrates. I imagine a small internal reset button being pressed.

“Shall we discuss antenatal care?” he asks, tone corrected.

“Yes,” I say. “That would be lovely.”

The nurse hands me a leaflet as I stand. As she does, she murmurs, barely audible, “Handled that beautifully.”

I smile at her. “Practice.”

And it’s true. Years as a receptionist for one of the most successful urban planning firms in London has trained me well. I spend my days managing egos in expensive suits, deflecting unreasonable demands, and keeping control of rooms where everyone assumes they’re the most important person in it.

Once you’ve calmly handled a senior partner who believes the rules don’t apply to him because he owns three sports cars and a house in Tuscany, a slightly judgemental GP barely registers.

Turns out you can ask a simple question and still end up batting away someone else’s assumptions.

Useful skill.

I have a feeling I’m going to be using it a lot.

5

Fringe-gate

Geoff