LOGINEleanor 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 me just a little longer." I wanted to tell him I was trying. I don't think the words made it out of my mouth. Somewhere behind me, I heard Priya's voice rise sharp and furious, cutting through the rush of footsteps and wheels. I couldn't make out the words. I caught the shape of her anger instead that particular pitch she only used when she loved someone so much it turned into rage. I didn't hear Julian's voice answer her. I don't know if that was because he didn't speak, or because some small, merciful part of my mind had already decided it didn't want to hear him again. --- The lights changed. Brighter, colder, a wide white room swallowing the gurney whole. Hands lifted me. Voices counted numbers I couldn't follow *seventy over forty, dropping, get me a line* words that meant something terrible, though I was too far underwater to understand exactly what. I thought about the baby. That was the strange thing, the thing I would have laughed at if laughing had still been a thing my body could do. Lying there with my own life clearly slipping out from under me, the only thought that came back again and again, stubborn and clear through all the noise, was: *please let her be okay. Please let this one thing survive what he did to us.* Not him. Not me. Her. I think I tried to say that out loud. I think someone told me to stay calm, to breathe, that everything was going to be fine. I didn't believe them. I don't think they believed themselves either. "BP's crashing." A woman's voice now, urgent, close to my ear. "She's losing too much too fast." *I know,* I wanted to say. *I can feel myself going.* There's a particular kind of quiet that comes right before the loudest things happen. I felt it settle over me like a blanket, heavy, almost peaceful, in a way that frightened me more than the pain had. I thought of my mother, the one who died when I was small, the one I'd spent my whole life trying to remember the sound of, piecing her together from old photographs and the stories my father told less and less often as the years went on. I wondered, distantly, if I was about to find out whether I'd gotten her voice right all these years. I thought of Julian's face the morning he found out I was pregnant the real one, the joy that hadn't been a lie, even if everything underneath it had been. I let myself believe, just for a second, that some part of that joy had been real. It was easier than the alternative. I thought of the rooftop in Brooklyn, the vows I'd made believing every word of them, the version of myself who hadn't yet learned that love could be a performance staged for an audience of one unsuspecting wife who'd spent four years thinking the failure belonged to her alone. Then even that thought began to slip. --- I don't remember the cut. I don't remember hands moving inside me, though later much later, in the version of this story other people would tell me I'd learn how fast it had to happen, how little time there was left to be careful. What I remember is sound, mostly. Fragments of it, breaking through whatever dark water I was sinking into. A voice, very far away: *"She's coding. We're losing her…"* Another voice, sharper, closer to panic than I'd ever heard a doctor allow himself to sound: *"Get the baby out now. Move. Move."* I remember thinking, with the strange detached calm of someone watching their own life from just outside their body, that this was it. That I had spent four years begging for a child I now might never hold. That the last thing I would ever feel was the absence of my own heartbeat where it used to be. I didn't feel afraid, in the end. I thought I would be. I wasn't. I felt sad. So sad it had a weight to it, pressing down on whatever was left of me, sad for the woman I'd been at twenty-six standing on a rooftop in Brooklyn saying *I do* to a man I thought I knew completely. And then, cutting through all of it a cry. Thin. Furious. Alive. I don't know if I actually heard it, or if some last, desperate piece of me simply needed to believe I had. But it was the only sound in the whole world that mattered, and for one suspended second, it pulled me back toward the surface, toward my own body, toward whatever was left of the life I'd been living. *She's here,* I thought. *She made it. She's really here.* I tried to hold onto that. I tried to follow the sound of her crying like a rope thrown down into the dark, something to climb back up by. My own heartbeat had other plans. --- I don't know how long passed between her cry and the moment everything in me began to go quiet. Time had stopped meaning anything by then it had folded in on itself, minutes and seconds bleeding together into one long, formless stretch of fading light. I thought about the nursery, painted soft yellow because it would work for either. I thought about the crib Julian had built with his own hands, not knowing then that I'd wonder, lying here, whether even that small act of care had been real, or just another piece of the performance. I decided it didn't matter anymore. None of it could touch what I'd just heard that cry, thin and furious and undeniably alive, cutting through every machine and every voice like the one true thing left in a room full of lies. Whatever else had been a lie, she wasn't. She was real, and she was here, and for reasons I couldn't fully explain even to myself, that felt like enough to hold onto. I felt the monitor before I heard it some strange, looping awareness of my own pulse slowing, stretching, the gaps between beats growing wider and wider, like a song losing its rhythm one measure at a time, the melody I'd carried inside my own chest for twenty-eight years finally running out of notes. I thought of the hallway outside, though I couldn't have told you how I knew anyone was there at all. I thought of Priya, arms crossed, refusing to look away from those doors. I thought of my father's silence, of Diane's guilt, of Cassidy's tear-streaked face, of Julian standing frozen and waiting to hear which version of this story he'd have to live with. I wondered if any of them would tell my daughter the truth one day, or if they'd build her a kinder lie the way they'd built one for me, the way this whole family seemed to specialize in kindness that was really just another shape of silence. I thought: *I hope she never has to know any of this. I hope she gets to be born into something kinder than what made her.* The room around me had gone soft and far away, voices folding into one long, indistinct hum. I couldn't tell anymore whose hands were on me, whose voice was counting, whose fear was filling the room like smoke. I only knew the sound beside me. The one keeping time with whatever was left of my heart. A single beep. Faint. Uncertain. I reached for the next one the way you reach for a stair in the dark, certain it has to be there, certain your foot will find solid ground if you just trust the rhythm enough to keep going. It didn't come. Then …. a long, final silence.*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







