
He Comforted Her While I Lost Our Baby
Chapter 1
The fever hit me on a Tuesday.
I woke up shivering under two blankets in our Los Angeles apartment, my skin burning and my head pounding like someone was driving nails through my temples. The thermometer read 103.2. I stared at the number and thought about calling in sick to work, but then I remembered I'd already used my last sick day three weeks ago when Vincenzo needed me to cover a client dinner he couldn't make.
I called him at noon. My voice came out thin and cracked. "Vin, I'm really sick. Can you come home?"
There was a pause. I heard keyboard clicks in the background. "How sick?"
"Fever. 103. I can't really get up."
"Okay." More clicking. "I'll wrap up this call and head out. Give me an hour."
"Thank you," I whispered.
I lay back down and closed my eyes. The apartment was too bright. Everything hurt. I thought about the first time I got sick after moving to LA, back when we'd only been together a year. Vincenzo had driven three hours through a rainstorm to bring me medicine and homemade soup because the delivery apps were all delayed. He'd stayed the whole night, checking my temperature every few hours, bringing me water before I even had to ask.
That felt like a different lifetime. A different version of him. Or maybe just a different version of us.
My phone buzzed. I reached for it, expecting a text saying he was on his way.
It was Delaney.
I didn't open it. I knew what it would say. Something about the crib she'd ordered, or the paint color for the nursery, or some other small crisis that needed Vincenzo's immediate attention. There was always something. Always.
Five minutes later, Vincenzo called.
"Hey, so Delaney needs help with something."
I didn't say anything. I just waited.
"She's trying to put together the crib and one of the parts is missing, and she's really stressed about it. You know how she gets when she's stressed, and the doctor said she needs to avoid—"
"You said you'd come home."
"I will. I just need to stop by her place first. It'll be quick. Thirty minutes, tops."
I looked at the ceiling. There was a water stain in the corner that had been there since we moved in. We kept saying we'd get it fixed. We never did.
"Okay," I said.
"You sure? You sound upset."
"I'm not upset. I'm sick."
"I'll be there soon, Clare. I promise."
He hung up. I set the phone down on the nightstand and pulled the blanket up to my chin. The shivering wouldn't stop.
Eleven minutes later, my phone buzzed again.
This time it was a text from Vincenzo. Not words. Just a link.
DoorDash. Chicken soup. Already ordered. Estimated delivery: 40 minutes.
I stared at it for a long time. The blue hyperlink. The little logo. The automated efficiency of it.
I didn't open the link. I just turned the phone face-down and closed my eyes.
Something shifted in my chest. Not the sharp pain of anger or the heavy ache of sadness. Something quieter. Colder. Like a door closing very softly in a distant room.
I fell asleep before the soup arrived.
---
When I woke up, it was dark outside. The fever had broken a little, enough that I could sit up without the room spinning. I checked my phone. Six missed calls from Vincenzo. Four texts.
*Still at Delaney's, the crib thing turned into a whole situation*
*Did you get the soup?*
*Call me when you see this*
*I'll be home late, don't wait up*
I deleted the texts without responding. Then I opened my laptop.
I typed: *one-way flights to Seattle*
The search results loaded. Dozens of options. Early morning. Late night. Next week. Tomorrow.
I opened a new tab. *Resignation letter template.*
Another tab. My old portfolio folder, buried in a subfolder I hadn't touched in seven years. I clicked it open. The files were still there. Sketches from my junior year at art school. A mood board for my senior thesis collection. Photos of a coat I'd made by hand, midnight blue with sharp architectural shoulders.
I'd forgotten how good they were. How much I'd loved making them. How alive I'd felt back then.
I sat there for a long time, the laptop screen glowing in the dark bedroom, and I didn't cry. I just looked at the designs and thought about the girl who made them. The girl who used to wake up excited. Who used to have plans that were hers.
I heard the front door open around eleven. Vincenzo's keys clattered into the bowl on the entry table. His footsteps moved through the apartment, slow and tired.
He opened the bedroom door. The light from the hallway spilled in.
"Hey," he said softly. "You awake?"
"Yeah."
He sat down on the edge of the bed. "How are you feeling?"
"Better."
"Good." He reached over and touched my forehead. His hand was warm. "Fever's down. That's good."
I didn't move.
"I'm sorry I couldn't get back sooner," he said. "Delaney was really overwhelmed, and you know how—"
"It's fine."
He paused. I could feel him looking at me in the dark, trying to read my face.
"You sure?"
"I'm sure."
He stood up. "Okay. I'm gonna grab a shower. You need anything?"
"No."
"Alright. Get some rest."
He left. I heard the bathroom door close. The water started running.
I closed my laptop and lay back down. The apartment was quiet except for the sound of the shower. I stared at the water stain on the ceiling and thought about the crib Vincenzo had spent the evening assembling. Delaney's crib. Delaney's baby.
Not ours.
Never ours.
I closed my eyes and let the stillness settle over me like a second blanket. It wasn't peace. It was something else. Something harder and cleaner and final.
It was the sound a door makes when it locks from the inside.
---
The next morning, I woke up before Vincenzo. I got out of bed, made coffee, and sat at the kitchen counter with my laptop. The resignation letter template was still open.
I started typing.
Vincenzo came out of the bedroom twenty minutes later, hair still damp from his morning shower. He stopped when he saw me.
"You're up early."
"Couldn't sleep."
He poured himself coffee and leaned against the counter, watching me. I could feel him scanning my face the way he always did when he was trying to gauge my mood. Looking for the wounded look. The one that told him I was hurt but would forgive him anyway.
It wasn't there.
"You seem better," he said.
"I am."
"Good." He smiled. It was the smile that used to make my chest feel warm. Now it just looked like a smile. "I was worried about you."
"I know."
He took a sip of his coffee. "What are you working on?"
"Just some emails."
"Want me to pick up dinner tonight? Make up for yesterday?"
"Sure."
"Italian?"
"Whatever you want."
He kissed the top of my head and grabbed his keys. "Love you."
"Love you too."
The door closed behind him. I heard his car start in the parking garage below.
I looked back at the laptop screen. The resignation letter was half-finished. Next to it, another tab: flight confirmations. Another tab: my portfolio.
I took a sip of my coffee and kept typing.
Something inside me had gone quiet. Not numb. Not broken.
Just decided.
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