
The Night They Conceived to Save His Son
The Night They Conceived to Save His Son Chapter 1
The headboard strikes the shared wall in a rhythm I have memorized over the past three weeks.
Three hard thuds.
Pause.
Two soft ones.
Beep. My noise-canceling headphones finally die. Not a graceful death. The left cup goes silent mid-song, then the right. Suddenly, the study is full of the sounds I’ve been paying forty dollars a month in white noise apps to avoid.
I sit on the hardwood floor, my back pressed against the cold radiator. The desk lamp throws a weak yellow circle across the room. Outside that circle, everything is shadow.
Thud. Pause. Thud.
Serena’s voice bleeds through the drywall. Soft at first, then climbing higher. I know her rhythms now. I know the way she builds. I know the exact breathless pitch she hits right before my husband says something low and encouraging in that voice I used to think belonged only to me.
My husband. Lucas.
I pull my knees to my chest. I press a throw pillow over my left ear. Then my right. I count the water stains on the ceiling. There are seven. I've counted them every night.
"Just like that." Lucas’s voice, muffled but unmistakable. "Take it, Serena. Almost there."
I stop counting.
My stomach churns, a sickening twist of bile and humiliation. The heavy slap of skin against skin echoes through the wood framing of our house. The worst part isn't the sound itself. It’s the involuntary math my brain does.
Nineteen nights.
Tonight is night nineteen of them sleeping together in our marital bed. The duration has been averaging forty-two minutes. I know because I track it the way you track a fever, hoping the number will eventually peak and break. I didn't mean to learn his new stamina. I didn't want to.
I stare at the desk.
Leo’s medical file sits open under the lamp, the pages worn soft at the edges like a wound I keep forgetting to bandage. Rare congenital hemolytic anemia. Insufficient response to current treatment protocols. Sibling donor preferred. Cord blood stem cells representing the highest probability of compatibility.
Leo.
He is six years old. Biologically, he is my nephew—my late sister Dana’s son. But biology is a technicality. I held him when he took his first struggling breath. I stayed up with him through every fever, every nightmare. When Dana died, I became his mother in every way that mattered. He calls me Auntivy, all one word, but his eyes look at me the way a child looks at his whole world.
And my world is dying.
He is fading by degrees in a sterile hospital room forty minutes from this apartment. His small arms are mapped with purple bruises from the needles. Just yesterday, he looked up at me with my sister's eyes and asked if he was going to sleep and not wake up.
When the specialist said a half-sibling’s cord blood was his absolute best shot, I begged for IVF. I begged for clinics and test tubes and sterile environments. I begged to use a surrogate we would never have to meet.
But Serena—a woman Lucas miraculously found, the "perfect genetic match" who volunteered out of the goodness of her heart—claimed her body couldn't handle the harsh hormone injections of IVF.
Natural conception is faster, Lucas had reasoned, pacing this very study, his jaw tight. The doctors said the success rate is higher with natural insemination. We don’t have time to wait for egg retrievals and lab cultures, Ivy. Leo doesn't have a month to waste. Do you want him to die because of your pride?
So I agreed.
I traded my marriage bed, my dignity, and my sanity for my son’s life.
The wall goes quiet.
I exhale. My hands are clenched so tight my fingernails leave crescent-moon cuts in my palms. The silence feels enormous, heavy with the scent of old paper and dust in the study. I let myself sink into it for exactly four seconds.
Then, Lucas’s voice.
"Round two. Doctor said twice tonight increases the odds of implantation."
I close my eyes. Tears burn, hot and acidic, sliding down my cheeks.
Serena’s response is a murmur at first, something soft and placating. But then she speaks up. Clear. Conversational. Deliberate, as if she knows exactly how thin these walls are.
"Your wife is right next door, Lucas."
The silence that follows lasts three heartbeats. My pulse hammers against my ribs. I wait for him to defend me. I wait for him to tell her to lower her voice, to show some respect for the woman freezing on the floor in the next room.
"She understands," Lucas says. His tone is flat, clinical. Unbothered. "This is for Leo."
Something inside my chest fractures. Clean in half.
She understands.
I stand up. I don't decide to do it—it’s an animal reflex. I cross the room to the shelf by the window. The blue ceramic vase sits there. The one we bought in Portugal on our honeymoon, back when his hands used to trace my spine, back when he looked at me like I was the only woman in the world. I carried it in my lap on the flight home because I was afraid it would break in checked luggage.
I pick it up.
The weight of it is satisfying in a terrible way. Cold and heavy. My arm pulls back. I want to hurl it against the wall. I want the sound of shattering porcelain to drown out the wet, rhythmic noises starting up again in the master bedroom. I want them to jump. I want them to know I am breaking.
But my eyes catch the medical file on the desk.
Leo Marcus Hartwell. Patient ID: 88492.
I think about Leo’s laugh. The way it sounds like hiccups. The way his tiny, fragile fingers curl around my thumb when they draw his blood.
My arm drops.
I set the vase back on the shelf. Both hands. Very carefully.
I sink back down to the floor, right there by the window, and let the tears fall because fighting them takes energy I no longer possess. They hit the hardwood in small, dark droplets. I watch them spread.
I am pathetic. I am letting them destroy me because I am too terrified of losing my boy. I would let them tear my heart out of my chest while I was still breathing if it meant Leo got to keep his.
The heavy thudding from the other room resumes, faster this time. The bedframe squeaks. A low groan vibrates through the floorboards.
Goddess, make it stop. Please make it stop.
I don't know how much time passes. The noises eventually taper off into low murmurs, and then, silence. I stay on the floor, my core hollowed out, staring at the dust motes dancing in the weak lamplight.
My phone lights up on the floor beside me.
The screen brightness is aggressive in the dark room. I stare at it without picking it up first, the way you look at a snake in the grass.
A text from Lucas.
I reach out with trembling fingers. I want him to say something kind. I want him to say, I'm sorry, I hate this, I love you, I'm thinking of you. So stupid. So ridiculously hungry for a crumb of the man I married.
I pick it up.
Lucas: Don't wait up. Serena's ovulating peak window. Stay in the study until morning.
I read it twice. Then a third time, scanning the pixels, searching for a trace of warmth.
There is none.
Stay in the study until morning.
Not a request. Not an apology wrapped in practical language. Just an instruction, clean and logistical, the kind of text you send to an employee. I am being managed. I am a variable he has scheduled around.
I grip the phone until my knuckles turn white. The study is twelve by ten feet. I measured it once. A desk, a radiator, a narrow couch I’ve slept on for nineteen nights, and a locked door.
She understands. This is for Leo.
He isn't wrong about Leo needing this. He isn't wrong about the narrow window of Serena's fertility cycle that the specialist mapped out. All of that is true.
But she understands is not the same as she's okay.
And this is for Leo is not the same as I still see you.
I reach over and grab Leo's medical file, pulling it down to the floor with me. I press it against my chest like a shield, burying my face in the thick paper. It smells like clinical despair and antiseptic.
I am a ghost in my own home.
Ping.
The phone screen lights up again, illuminating the dark hardwood.
I lower the file. I wipe my eyes with the back of my hand and pick up the device, expecting another cold command from my husband.
But it isn't from Lucas.
It's an unknown number.
I open the message. A photograph loads on the screen.
My breath catches in my throat. Heat pools in my stomach, quickly followed by a rush of ice-cold dread.
It’s a picture taken inside my master bedroom. The lighting is dim, cast from the bedside lamp. It shows Lucas’s bare back, his muscles relaxed in sleep, the sheets tangled around his waist.
And tucked underneath the photo is a single line of text.
Unknown: Could you bring some hot towels and a glass of water to the master bedroom? Lucas is too exhausted to get up. Oh, and Ivy? Make sure the water has ice.
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