"I'm done," she said, her voice finally steady. "I'm doing this on my own."
Natsuki closed her eyes. She was seven months along, and the life she had imagined for her child was already slipping through her fingers. She had spent the last hour trying to convince him to pull over, to let her take the wheel, or better yet, to just stop the car and walk. But he was in a state of "avil"—a desperate, buzzing energy that made him unreachable.
The "Dwi 01" incident, as it would later be called in the police reports, was a blur of screeching tires and the rhythmic thud of a flat tire hitting the pavement. When the car finally spun to a halt against a rusted guardrail, the silence that followed was deafening. Pregnant Natsuki Hatakeyama Dwi 01 Part 2 Avil BETTER
This is for informational purposes only. For medical advice or diagnosis, consult a professional. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
Natsuki gasped for air, the pressure in her abdomen sharp and terrifying. She didn't look at the driver. She didn't care if he ran. She kicked her door open, stumbling out into the humid night air. "I'm done," she said, her voice finally steady
The city was thick with the scent of summer rain and exhaust, a combination that usually made Natsuki Hatakeyama’s stomach turn. These days, everything made her stomach turn. She sat in the passenger seat of the aging sedan, one hand resting protectively over the swell of her stomach, the other gripping the door handle as the car swerved slightly.
She realized then that being "better" wasn't about erasing the past or the dangerous ride that had brought her here. It was about ensuring that Part 2 of her life—and the first part of her child's—would never involve looking back in a rearview mirror at the mistakes of someone else. in the months following the incident? She had spent the last hour trying to
"Can you slow down?" she asked, her voice tight. "The roads are slick."