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Chapter 4

Author: Just a baby
last update publish date: 2026-06-28 17:08:33

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 whether to stay or run.

And there, beside the bed, far too close Julian.

With Cassidy pressed against his side.

Eleanor's heart monitor ticked upward before her mind even caught up to what her body already understood.

"Why are you doing this," she whispered, her voice raw and broken. "I've loved you whole-heartedly."

Julian looked at her.

He smiled.

It was the smile of a stranger wearing her husband's face.

"And I never loved you."

The words landed like a physical blow. Eleanor felt the air leave her lungs entirely, as though the fall down the stairs had only winded her once, and this was winding her twice.

"I did this for our son," Julian continued, his voice eerily calm, almost gentle. "He's sick. He needs this."

Eleanor's eyes went to Cassidy, confusion warring with horror. "What son? She's not even…" Eleanor stopped, the question dying halfway out of her mouth as she searched Cassidy's face for some kind of denial that never came.

"We only need the baby," Julian said.

Eleanor's heart rate spiked, the monitor beside her shrieking its alarm in time with the panic rising in her throat.

"What baby?" Eleanor's voice cracked. "Cassidy isn't pregnant. There is no son. What are you talking about, Julian? Look at me and explain this to me."

Nobody answered her.

Diane finally looked up, and what Eleanor saw in her stepmother's eyes wasn't shock.

It was guilt.

"Diane," Eleanor breathed. "You knew."

"Eleanor, sweetheart, you have to understand…"

"You knew." Eleanor's voice rose, shaking, fury and grief tangling together until she could barely speak through them. "All this time ….the joy, the excitement, you sitting there crying about a grandchild .you *knew* this was the plan?"

Diane's mouth opened. No sound came out. Her father turned away from the window, finally, his face a mask of devastation that told Eleanor everything she needed to know about how long this secret had lived inside her own family.

"Dad." Eleanor's voice softened, breaking in a different direction now. "Did you know too?"

Her father's silence answered for him. He pressed a fist against his mouth, shoulders shaking, unable to look at her.

"Everyone knew," Eleanor whispered, the realization settling over her like cold water. "Everyone in this room knew, and I was the only one who didn't."

"There is no son," Eleanor said again, louder now, desperate for someone in the room to make this make sense. "Tell me there's no son, Julian. Tell me this is some sick joke and none of you actually let me believe…"

"He's seven," Julian said quietly. "From before you. He needs a transplant the doctors can't give him without a genetic match. Cassidy is his mother. I am his father."

The room spun.

"You have a child," Eleanor whispered. "You have had a child this whole time. Every appointment. Every ultrasound. Every single time you asked Dr. Bell if the heartbeat was strong you already had a son and you let me believe I was the only thing you'd ever wanted."

"I needed another one," Julian said, as if it were the simplest thing in the world. "A healthy one. One who could save him."

"So you used me." Tears streamed down Eleanor's face, hot and endless, soaking into the thin hospital pillow beneath her head. "Four years. Four years of making me feel broken, of sending me alone to that clinic, of letting me drink myself numb because I thought something was wrong with my own body and it was never about us at all. It was about *him*. About a child I never even knew existed."

"I'm sorry it had to be this way."

"You're not sorry." Eleanor's voice broke completely now, dissolving into something closer to a wail than words. "You don't even sound sorry, Julian. You sound relieved."

"Eleanor…." he started.

"Don't." She turned her face away from him, toward the window, toward anything that wasn't his face. "Don't say my name like you still have the right to."

A long, terrible silence stretched through the room. Even the machines seemed to hold still for a moment, as if waiting to see what either of them would do next.

The monitor beside her began to scream louder, faster, the rhythm of her own heart betraying the panic clawing through her chest.

Dr. Bell rushed into the room, two nurses behind him, already reaching for her chart.

"Everyone needs to leave, now," he ordered, his eyes scanning the monitors with growing alarm. "Now. I mean it."

Julian didn't move at first, his eyes fixed on Eleanor's face as if memorizing it.

"You heard him," Priya snapped, physically stepping between Julian and the bed. "Out. All of you. Now."

"What's happening to her?" Priya demanded, the first words she'd spoken since Eleanor woke, her voice cracking with fear.

"Her blood pressure is dropping. The fall may have caused internal bleeding." Dr. Bell's voice was clipped, urgent, his hands already moving across her chart. "We need to get her into surgery immediately."

"And the baby?" Julian's voice, suddenly sharp with a different kind of panic. Not fear for her. Fear for what she carried.

Dr. Bell hesitated, glancing once at Eleanor's face before answering.

"At this stage, an emergency cesarean is the only option that gives either of them a real chance," he said carefully. "But given the extent of the trauma — there's a significant risk we may only be able to save one. Her. Or the baby."

The room went silent. Even Diane's quiet sobbing seemed to pause, suspended in the weight of what had just been said.

Eleanor felt her own eyes filling with tears she no longer had the strength to hold back.

She looked at Julian really looked at him, for what she somehow understood would be the last time she ever would.

"You don't even care which one survives, do you?" she whispered.

Julian didn't answer.

He didn't have to.

The silence told her everything she would ever need to know about the man she had loved for four years.

Cassidy had gone pale beside him, her hand slipping slowly from his arm. "Julian," she said quietly, "tell her you care. Tell her something."

"This isn't the time, Cassidy."

"It's always *not the time* with you." Cassidy's voice cracked, years of swallowed guilt rising to the surface all at once. "I never wanted it like this. I told you that from the start. I told you we should just talk to her, tell her about our son, ask for her help honestly instead of…"

"Enough." Julian's voice was sharp enough to silence the whole room.

Eleanor watched the exchange through the haze settling over her vision, some distant part of her almost pitying the stricken look on Cassidy's face. It didn't matter now. None of their guilt would change what was happening to her body.

Eleanor felt her vision beginning to blur at the edges, darkness creeping in from every direction, her body finally giving in to whatever damage had been done in that long, terrible fall down the staircase.

"We need to hurry," she heard Dr. Bell say, his voice growing distant, swallowed by the ringing in her ears, "she is slipping away."

The last thing Eleanor heard, before the world went black, was her own husband's voice flat, cold, final, the voice of a man who had already made his choice long before this moment arrived.

"Even if she dies," Julian said, "you must rip out the baby."

Somewhere far away, beneath the rising panic and the dimming lights, a small, stubborn part of Eleanor still refused to believe the man who said those words was the same one who had once waited in the rain with two coffees, just to make sure she had a choice.

She let the darkness take her anyway. There was nothing left to fight for it with.

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