LOGIN
I found out I was pregnant on a Tuesday morning.
I stood in the bathroom of our apartment, staring at those two pink lines until the cold from the tiles came up through my bare feet and my legs started to go numb. I didn't move. I couldn't. I just stood there and stared and waited for the fear to arrive, because I had always assumed that if this ever happened, fear would be the first thing I felt.
It wasn't.
The first thing I felt was joy. Pure, reckless, terrifying joy. The kind that fills your whole chest so fast it almost hurts.
I pressed the test against my chest and laughed — the quiet kind, the kind you keep inside your body because it's too new and too fragile to let out yet. Eight years with Daniel Ashford. Eight years of loving a man who moved through the world like it was built for him, and now this.
We were going to have a baby.
I practiced telling him all day. In the shower, in the car, in the bathroom at work between client meetings, standing in front of the mirror whispering to myself like a woman rehearsing a marriage proposal. Daniel, I'm pregnant. Daniel, I have something to tell you. Daniel, we're going to be parents.
None of it felt big enough. The words kept shrinking on my tongue.
His phone was on the bathroom counter when I came out.
I hadn't noticed it earlier. He must have left it when he rushed out that morning — one of his usual exits, jacket half on, coffee abandoned, already on a call before he hit the front door. I picked it up to move it and the screen lit up in my hand.
A message preview. No content, just a name.
Claire.
I set the phone back down.
I didn't know who Claire was. I had never heard that name from Daniel in eight years. I told myself it was nothing — a colleague, a work contact, one of the dozens of names that moved through his professional life without ever reaching mine.
I told myself that and I almost believed it.
I put the test in my bag and went to work.
He texted at nine that night. Working late. Don't wait up.
I waited up. I always waited up. That was one of those things I never said out loud — that I couldn't settle properly until I heard his key in the lock, until I knew he was home. I had loved him for so long and so completely that his absence felt like a physical thing. A weight. A gap in the room where he was supposed to be.
He walked in at half past eleven. Jacket over one shoulder, tie loosened, that particular brand of exhaustion that somehow still looked like confidence on him. He was that kind of man. The kind who made being tired look deliberate.
"Hey." He dropped the jacket on the armchair. Not the hook by the door. Never the hook by the door. I had stopped mentioning it years ago.
"Hey." I stood up. My heart was moving too fast. "Can we talk?"
Something in my face made him set his phone face-down on the counter without being asked. He almost never did that. I took it as a good sign. I was always looking for good signs with Daniel — small permissions to hope.
I reached into my bag. I set the test on the counter between us.
He looked at it without speaking. I stood on the other side of the counter and watched his face and waited for it to change. I had imagined this moment so many times on the drive home — his expression opening up, his arms coming around me. In the version I had rehearsed, he was scared but happy. In the version I had rehearsed, he pulled me close and said Maya and told me we'd figure it out together.
He looked up.
His eyes were calm.
"Get rid of it," he said.
I heard the words. I processed the words.
I waited for him to smile. To tell me he was joking. To let the mask drop and show me the man I had spent eight years believing was underneath it.
He didn't.
He just looked at me with those calm, steady eyes, and I understood — slowly and then all at once — that there was no joke coming. That this was exactly what it looked like.
"Daniel—"
"I'm not ready, Maya." His voice was even. Measured. The exact same tone he used in business meetings when someone brought him a problem he hadn't anticipated. "We're not ready. This isn't the right time."
"We've been together eight years," I said. The words came out before I'd chosen them.
"That doesn't mean we're ready for a child." He rubbed the back of his neck. "I'll pay for it. We can find somewhere next week. It doesn't have to be complicated."
Doesn't have to be complicated.
I looked at the test on the counter. At the two small lines I had pressed against my chest that morning like something sacred. Like something worth protecting.
I picked it up. Slipped it back into my bag. When I looked at him again I made absolutely sure my face showed him nothing.
"Okay," I said.
He nodded, picked up his phone, and went to the fridge.
I sat back on the couch. I turned the television on. I watched it for an hour without seeing any of it — laughed when the audience laughed, reached for my water glass at the commercial break, performed being fine so thoroughly that I almost believed my own performance.
He went to bed at midnight. He didn't check on me. He didn't ask if I was okay. He just said goodnight and disappeared down the hall like it was any other evening.
I sat alone in the dark living room, held my own hands, and didn't make a sound. I had learned a long time ago not to cry where Daniel could see me. He found it hard to respond to. He had told me so himself, early in our relationship, and I had taken that information and used it ever since to manage myself around him.
Even now. Even tonight. I was still doing that.
I sat in the quiet and held the wreckage of the last hour inside my chest and did not let a single piece of it out.
That was the first mistake. Not the only one. But the first.
Léo’s POVThe site at seven in the morning was cold and particular. The rain had left the ground soft in places, the tyre tracks from the morning’s first delivery already pressing deep into the mud near the eastern boundary.Léo stood at the edge of the cleared concrete foundation, leaning his weight onto his crutch, and looked at the space the way he looked at any site before the work actually began: without the finished version in his head, but with a sharp, practical eye for what was actually there.What was actually there was considerable.The foundation was completely intact, which he’d confirmed three weeks ago when the last of the rubble was cleared and he had spent an hour walking the perimeter, tapping the concrete.The structural beams salvaged from the eastern site were already laid out on the ground, waiting. The steel was good, heavy and unyielding.By some strange accident of the original building’s footprint, the proportions of the cleared space were remarkably close to
Maya's POVThe phone rang at seven in the morning and I knew from the hour alone that it was not good news.Sarah did not call at seven in the morning for ordinary things. I answered before the second ring."Bouchard Holdings pulled the sponsorship." Her voice had the specific quality of controlled fury, the flatness of someone who is managing something they are very angry about because losing the management would cost more than it was worth. "The spring showcase is cancelled. The venue is locked."I sat up. Léo's hand found my back in the dark, the automatic steadying of someone who had learned to read the quality of my silences."What clause?" I said."Brand alignment. Standard escape hatch but the timing is deliberate. Two weeks out. Buyers confirmed, press committed, the full lineup announced last week." A pause. "I traced the connection. The Bouchard shipping contract went through Ashford and Associates eighteen months ago. Daniel saved his margins on the eastern routes. The favo
Léo's POVThe reception area of Ashford and Associates was the kind of space designed to communicate importance before anyone had said a word. Polished marble, expensive furniture placed with the care of someone who understood that arrangement was a form of argument, lighting calibrated to make the visitor feel that they had arrived somewhere that took itself seriously.Léo walked through it with the crutch at his usual measured pace. The receptionist looked up and then looked at the closed glass door to the inner office and then back at him, and whatever calculation she ran produced the result that she pressed the access button without speaking.The door clicked open.Daniel was at the window with his back to the room. He did not turn when the door opened, which was a choice.Léo closed the door, set the crutch against the wall, and sat in the chair opposite the desk. The chair was lower than it should have been, which was also a choice. He ignored it."Close the door," Daniel said,
Elena's POVThe afternoon had settled into its quiet working rhythm, the needle moving through the wool hem in the particular even pace that Elena's hands found when her mind was elsewhere and the work was handling itself. The light through the south window had shifted to the low, amber register of late afternoon, crossing the worktable at an angle that told her it was past four without her needing to check the clock.The scars on her palms pulled slightly in the damp weather. They always did. She had stopped noticing this the way you stopped noticing things that had simply become part of the conditions.Colette was sorting buttons across the table, separating them into the shallow tray by size with the quiet absorption she brought to tasks that other people found tedious. The little girl was in the corner with her crayons, her tongue pressed to her lip, the crayon moving across the paper with the purposeful deliberateness of someone who had a specific thing in mind and was committed
Chloe's POVThe afternoon bell released the school into the particular noise it made when everyone had been inside for six hours and had strong opinions about that. Children pushed through the gates in clusters. A football rolled across the pavement and two boys argued over it in the way of people who had been arguing about this specific thing for considerably longer than the current afternoon. A teacher clapped her hands with the expression of someone who knew it was not going to work and was doing it anyway out of professional obligation.Chloe walked through all of it at her usual pace. Marcus arrived on time. There was no reason to move faster than her usual pace.She saw the car from the pickup lane entrance. Black sedan, wrong angle, everything screaming wrong. Not Marcus. The window was already coming down before she had fully processed the rest of it.Daniel leaned across the passenger seat wearing the bright, easy expression of a man who had decided how this conversation was
Maya's POVLéo had fallen asleep on the sofa with the blueprints on his chest.I came out of the cutting room at half past eleven and found him like that, the pencil still loose in his hand, his head back against the cushion. The physical therapy had been three times this week and he never said it was hard but I could see it in the way he moved through the latter part of each day, the slight economy of motion that meant he was managing something he had decided not to complain about. He had pushed the morning session later twice this week so that he could be at the site when the frame went up, and I had not argued about this because I knew what the site meant to him and because arguing about it would have cost him more energy than the session itself.I lifted the blueprints off him carefully, rolled them, and set the pencil on the side table. He stirred."You should be in bed," I said quietly.His eyes opened. "I was waiting.""The work will be there in the morning.""I wasn't talking
Léo's POVThe loft felt different. It was the same exposed brick, polished concrete, and steel beams running across the ceiling, but the air inside had grown heavier denser, charged like the moment before a storm.Maya was home but moving slowly. I had watched her come through the door, holding ont
Maya's POVI signed the discharge papers with a trembling hand. The nurse stood at the door, arms crossed, mouth a flat line of disapproval."You are leaving against medical advice. You have a grade two concussion. You need observation for at least forty-eight hours.""I have people who will observ
Chloe's POVThe classroom was loud. The teacher was writing on the board, the chalk squeaking against the surface. Chloe sat in the back, arranging her grey pencils in order of darkness. The order was important. The darkest pencil was for the foundations. The lightest was for the details. The struc
Elena's POVThe VOSS brand was frozen. Maya was in a hospital bed. Daniel was circling the perimeter, looking for a way back in.Elena stood in the loft. The forms with the Worn collection were draped in white, a silent army waiting for a war that had been postponed. The space felt empty without th







