LOGINEleanor stood in front of the bathroom mirror that morning, running a brush through her hair, watching the curve of her stomach in the reflection. Nine pounds of baby, the books said, give or take. A whole person, built inside her body over the course of a year that had broken her down and put her back together in equal measure.
"You ready for this?" she whispered to her reflection. "Last week. Last week was just us." The thought made her laugh and tear up at the same time. She thought about the nursery down the hall, painted soft yellow, the crib Julian had assembled with his own hands. She thought about how far they'd come from that morning four years ago when he'd left without a goodbye kiss. She didn't let herself think, even for a second, that the distance they'd traveled might have been an illusion the whole time. One week before her due date, Eleanor's friends insisted on one last night out before the baby came. "Nothing crazy," Priya promised, looping an arm through hers as they walked into the restaurant, a small Italian place tucked between two brownstones in the West Village. "Dinner, maybe dessert. You deserve a night that isn't about doctor's appointments and nursery paint colors." Eleanor laughed for the first time in days, easy and unguarded, settling into the booth with the particular relief of a woman whose feet had been swollen for weeks. They talked about nothing important baby names, maternity leave, whether Julian would survive his first diaper change. It felt, for a few hours, like the years before motherhood swallowed every conversation whole. "You're glowing," Priya told her as they hugged goodbye outside the restaurant. "Julian's a lucky man." "I'm the lucky one," Eleanor said. "He better know that." Priya pulled back, studying her face with the particular scrutiny only a best friend could get away with. "You've been different the last few months. Lighter. I'm glad. After everything you went through trying to get here, you deserve this kind of happy." "I keep waiting to wake up," Eleanor admitted, one hand resting on her stomach. "Like it's all going to disappear if I stop paying attention." "It won't." Priya hugged her again, tighter this time. "Go home. Rest. Tell that husband of yours I said he better treat you like a queen for the next eighteen years, minimum." There was a small pause before Priya let go, her brow creasing. "What?" Eleanor asked. "Nothing. It's stupid." Priya shook her head. "I just keep thinking about how Cassidy's been at family stuff lately. Quiet. Avoiding Julian's eyes whenever he's in the room. I noticed it at the shower too. You haven't picked up on it?" Eleanor waved a hand, brushing the comment away with the easy confidence of a woman who believed her happiness was finally, finally secure. "She's just stressed about work. We talked about it." "Maybe," Priya said, though she didn't sound convinced. "Just keep an eye out, okay? Promise me." "I promise." Eleanor laughed, already turning toward home, already certain there was nothing in the world that could touch what she'd built. She would think about that conversation a thousand times in the days that followed, replaying it like a warning she hadn't known how to hear. Eleanor laughed, the sound carrying down the quiet street as she turned toward home. She believed it completely. She had no warning at all, walking those last few blocks home in the cool October air, that her happiness was already a thing of the past, even if she didn't know it yet. --- The townhouse was dark when she got home. That wasn't unusual Julian sometimes worked late even now but something about the quality of the silence made her pause at the door, key still in the lock. "Julian?" she called. No answer. She stepped inside, kicking off her shoes, rubbing the small of her back where the weight of the baby pressed hardest these days. The house felt different. Heavier somehow. Like it was holding its breath along with her. She moved through the living room. Empty. The kitchen. Empty, save for two wine glasses on the counter, both nearly full, both untouched. A woman's perfume hung faintly in the air, something floral and unfamiliar, nothing Eleanor owned. *Maybe he's asleep,* she thought, though something in her stomach had already begun to twist, slow and cold. *Maybe he had a long day.* She thought about calling out again, but something stopped her some animal instinct telling her that silence might tell her more than a shouted name ever could. She climbed the stairs slowly, one hand on the railing, the baby kicking against her ribs as if sensing her unease before she did. That's when she heard it. A voice. Cassidy's voice. Coming from their bedroom. "You promised me that you would get a cure for him," Cassidy was saying, her tone raw, breaking. "But I don't understand why it has to be this way. I hate it." Eleanor's blood went cold. She pressed her back against the wall just outside the doorframe, one hand braced against her stomach, the other clutching her phone so tightly her knuckles ached. Her mind raced through explanations, innocent ones, reasonable ones. and found none that fit the tenderness in his voice. "It's almost over," Julian said, his voice low, intimate in a way Eleanor had never once heard him use with anyone but her. "A few more days. That's all we need." "And then what?" Cassidy's voice cracked. "We just go on like none of this happened? Like she didn't exist?" "That's not what I said." "It's what you meant." Eleanor crept closer, every instinct screaming at her to turn back, every maternal nerve in her body telling her to run but she couldn't. She had to know. She had to see it with her own eyes, because some small, stubborn part of her still believed there had to be an explanation that didn't end her marriage. She reached the doorway. And what she saw broke something in her chest that would never fully heal. Julian had Cassidy pulled into his arms. He kissed her forehead slow, tender, the way he used to kiss Eleanor's. The way a man kisses someone he's loved for a long, long time, not someone he's only just discovered. "Don't worry," Julian murmured against Cassidy's hair. "She is about to put to bed. After that, she would be removed out of the picture." The words hit Eleanor like ice water down her spine. Eleanor's phone slipped from her fingers. It hit the hardwood floor with a crack that sounded, to her, like the whole world splitting open. Julian's head snapped toward the doorway. "Elle…." She was already running. --- She didn't remember deciding to run. Her body simply moved, propelled by something past thought, past reason pure animal panic, the need to put distance between herself and what she'd just heard. *Removed out of the picture.* The words chased her down the hallway like something alive, something with teeth. "Eleanor, wait!" Julian's voice, closer now. Footsteps behind her his, and Cassidy's lighter ones trailing after, frantic, calling her name too. She reached the top of the staircase, her vision blurred with tears, her chest heaving with breath she couldn't seem to catch fast enough. In the space of a single heartbeat, every memory of the last four years seemed to rush at her at once the rain-soaked coffees outside her dorm, the wedding vows on a rooftop in Brooklyn, the ultrasound photo pressed to her chest like a secret. None of it made sense against the words still echoing in her ears. *She is about to put to bed. After that, she would be removed out of the picture.* She had been so certain, just hours ago, that her life was finally, *finally* whole. Her hand found the railing. Her foot found nothing but air. The world tilted. She remembered the sensation of falling more clearly than almost anything else in her life the horrible weightlessness, the instinct to curl protectively around her stomach even as her body twisted through empty space, the impossible length of those few seconds that felt, somehow, like hours. She remembered Julian screaming her name, his voice tearing in a way she'd never heard before. She remembered Cassidy screaming too a different kind of scream, something closer to grief than panic. She remembered hitting the floor, the impact knocking the breath from her lungs in one violent rush, pain exploding through her hip and spine and the curve of her belly all at once. For one terrible, lucid second, before the darkness took her, she heard footsteps pounding down the stairs above her, voices shouting her name, and beneath all of it, faint and impossibly calm, the sound of her own heartbeat in her ears, refusing for now to stop. And then, mercifully, nothing at all.*This is just a little scare that we gave you. Pay up. Next time it lands you in your grave.*I read it twice.Then I put the phone face-down in my palm, looked straight ahead at the traffic moving past the hospital entrance, and breathed.There were people everywhere. A woman pushing a stroller. A man in scrubs eating something wrapped in foil. An elderly couple moving slowly toward the automatic doors. None of them were looking at me.None of them knew that the woman standing on this pavement with a cracked phone and bruised ribs had been dead three days ago.I breathed again.Victor Dane. The name rose from Lilian's memory clean and cold, the way your body remembered danger before your mind caught up to it, a tightening across the shoulders, a low instinct that said *this one is serious*. Frank Hayes had borrowed from Dane's operation over a period of three years, the debt quietly snowballing the way debt did when you couldn't touch the principal. When Frank died, the balance trans
I woke up on the bathroom floor.For a second I didn't move. Just lay there, cheek against cold tile, staring at the gap between the base of the sink and the floor where a thin line of dust had gathered along the edge. My breathing was shallow. My head throbbed low and steady.Then it all came back.The mirror. The hands that weren't mine. The flood of someone else's memories pouring through the one I already had.I sat up slowly, pressing my back against the wall, drawing my knees to my chest. A strange calm had settled over everything, the way it sometimes does after a storm has already broken, not peace, exactly, but the particular quiet of a person who has run out of room to panic and has to start thinking instead.Lilian Hayes.I said the name out loud, soft, testing the shape of it in a mouth that wasn't mine.She'd been a waitress. A girl who smelled like coffee and fryer oil at the end of a double shift, who counted tips at a corner table before walking home because cab fare w
The first thing I noticed was the ceiling.White. Plain. A water stain shaped like nothing in particular, sitting in the upper left corner above a fluorescent light that buzzed faintly every few seconds.I stared at it for a long time.Something told me not to move too fast. My body felt wrong, every muscle carrying a weight it shouldn't, like I'd been wrung out and put back together with half the pieces missing. The kind of pain that doesn't announce itself all at once. It waits for you to shift position, then introduces itself properly.I tried to sit up.Three things happened at once: a sharp pull across my ribs, a throb at the back of my skull that made my vision white out at the edges, and a sound that came out of my own throat that I didn't recognize.My voice. That was my voice.Except it wasn't.I lay back down, breathing through my teeth, staring at the ceiling again. I told myself it was the anesthesia. They'd put me under for the surgery, and sometimes it did things to you,
Eleanor pov The ceiling tiles blurred past above me, one after another, white squares smearing into a single pale streak as the gurney rolled.I couldn't feel my legs anymore. I could feel everything else. every wrong angle of my own body, every place the fall had broken something it shouldn't have. But my legs were just gone, far away, someone else's legs.I remember thinking, absurdly, that I should be more afraid than I was. I had spent my whole life afraid of small things, afraid of failing tests, afraid of disappointing my father, afraid of an empty pregnancy test turning up negative one more time. None of those fears had prepared me for this particular kind of calm, the strange stillness that settles over a body once it has decided, somewhere below conscious thought, that it doesn't have the strength left to panic."Stay with me, Eleanor." A man's voice. Dr. Bell's, I thought, though it kept sliding in and out of focus, like a radio station slowly losing its signal. "Stay with
The hospital room smelled like antiseptic and lilies.Eleanor woke slowly, pain blooming through her body in waves, her back, her ribs, a deep ache low in her abdomen that made her gasp the moment consciousness returned.For a few disoriented seconds, she didn't remember anything at all. Then it came back in fragments the staircase, the cold rush of falling, Julian's voice somewhere above her growing smaller and smaller. She tried to move her hand to her stomach and found it heavier than it should have been, an IV taped to the back of it, a second tube disappearing somewhere beneath the blanket.*The baby.* The thought hit her before anything else. *Is the baby okay?*The lights were too bright. The room was full of faces.Her father stood near the window, gray-faced and silent, looking older than she'd ever seen him. Diane sat beside him, twisting a tissue in her hands, unable to meet Eleanor's eyes. Priya was there too, eyes red-rimmed, pacing near the door like she couldn't decide
Eleanor stood in front of the bathroom mirror that morning, running a brush through her hair, watching the curve of her stomach in the reflection. Nine pounds of baby, the books said, give or take. A whole person, built inside her body over the course of a year that had broken her down and put her back together in equal measure."You ready for this?" she whispered to her reflection. "Last week. Last week was just us."The thought made her laugh and tear up at the same time. She thought about the nursery down the hall, painted soft yellow, the crib Julian had assembled with his own hands. She thought about how far they'd come from that morning four years ago when he'd left without a goodbye kiss.She didn't let herself think, even for a second, that the distance they'd traveled might have been an illusion the whole time.One week before her due date, Eleanor's friends insisted on one last night out before the baby came."Nothing crazy," Priya promised, looping an arm through hers as th







