
The Night They Conceived to Save His Son
Chapter 2
I didn't bring the ice water. I didn't bring the hot towels.
I sat on the floor of the study until the sun bled through the blinds, painting the room in harsh, unforgiving light.
Now, the fertility monitor lands on the kitchen island with a sharp, plastic clatter.
My twelve-dollar green smoothie sloshes over the rim of my glass. A thick green arc splatters across the pristine white marble.
I stare at it. The little pink device sits in a nest of splattered kale, its digital screen glowing with numbers I don't want to read. Hormone levels. Basal body temperature. The intimate mathematics of another woman's body laid out on my breakfast counter.
"Two weeks until the optimal conception window," Lucas says.
He pulls out the leather barstool across from me. He sits down like he's announcing a quarterly earnings report.
I look up. He is wearing his custom navy suit, but the tie is loose. His hair is slightly damp from the shower. But beneath the expensive sandalwood cologne, I can smell it. The faint, musky scent of sweat and Serena's cloying vanilla perfume. He smells like sex. He smells like satisfaction.
My stomach pitches. Acid burns the back of my throat.
"Serena moves in today," he adds, reaching for the coffee pot.
The kitchen is too bright. The morning light makes everything look clinical, exposing the sharp angles of my husband's jaw and the dark circles under my eyes.
"You've been monitoring her cycle," I say. My voice sounds hollow. Detached.
"The specialist set up the protocol. It syncs to an app." He pours his coffee. Unhurried. Relaxed. The languid energy of a man who spent the night emptying himself into someone else. "I showed you the treatment plan, Ivy. This is part of it."
I have seen the plan. Forty-seven pages, tabbed and highlighted.
"There are fertility clinics," I say, gripping the edge of the marble counter so hard my knuckles ache. "There are nurses who specialize in exactly this. We can rent her an apartment. We can hire a private—"
"We talked about this."
"We didn't talk. You instructed. There's a difference."
Lucas sets his mug down. His jaw tightens. The relaxed post-sex glow vanishes, replaced by the cold, calculating CEO I know too well. He reaches into his leather briefcase and pulls out a single sheet of paper. He slides it across the marble.
I recognize the header. St. Catherine's Pediatric Hematology. I recognize the column of numbers.
Leo's platelet count has dropped again.
The number sits at the bottom of the page like a death sentence. My throat closes. The fight drains out of my muscles, leaving me shivering in the warm kitchen.
He knows exactly what he is doing. He is weaponizing my dying boy. And it works. Goddess, it works every single time.
"The window is narrow," Lucas says. His voice drops into that measured, gentle tone. It’s worse than when he yells. "If we miss this cycle, we wait another month. Leo doesn't have another month, Ivy. The doctors were very clear."
"I know what they said."
"Then you know why Serena needs to be here. Precise timing. Here, in this house, where we can manage every variable." He leans forward, his dark eyes locking onto mine. "Unless you want to be the one to explain to Leo why his body is failing while we missed the window."
I look at the platelet number.
I look away.
I want to scream. I want to shatter the glass pitcher against the wall. But I swallow the bile. I submit.
"You want me to prepare the yoga room," I whisper.
"The guest room."
"It's my yoga room."
"It has a bed in it."
It has a bed because I put one there two years ago for my mother. Then I pushed it against the wall, draped it with a linen throw, and reclaimed the space as mine. It was the only room in this sprawling mansion that felt like it belonged to me.
"The mattress needs fresh sheets," Lucas dictates, picking up his coffee again. "Good ones. She'll be sleeping there for—"
"How long?" I cut in.
He doesn't blink. "However long it takes."
I stand up. My chair scrapes loudly against the hardwood. If I open my mouth again, I will shatter. So I say nothing. I leave the splattered smoothie and the glowing fertility tracker and the damning platelet count on the island.
I walk upstairs.
....
The yoga room smells like cedar and the lavender spray I use after practice.
My mat is rolled in the corner. There are two blocks, a bolster, and a folded wool blanket. A small shelf holds an oil diffuser and three books I've been meaning to read since spring.
I start with the mat.
I carry it to the hallway closet and shove it behind the heavy winter coats. Then the blocks. Then the bolster. I clear the shelf. I strip the linen throw off the mattress and ball it up against my chest.
Footsteps sound in the doorway. Lucas's heavy, certain tread.
"The pillowcases should match," he says.
I look at him over my shoulder. He leans against the doorframe, arms crossed, watching me dismantle my sanctuary.
"Use the ones in the linen closet," he continues. "The white Egyptian cotton set. She's going to be pregnant, hopefully. Sleep quality matters for fetal development."
Fetal development. My chest tightens. A sharp, physical ache radiates from my ribs. He talks about her body like it’s a sacred vessel. He talks about our bed like it’s a laboratory.
"I'm getting the sheets," I say through gritted teeth.
I walk past him to the hall closet. I grab the Egyptian cotton set. The expensive one. The one we registered for at our wedding, the one Lucas said was "too nice for everyday use."
I march back into the room and snap the fitted sheet over the mattress with violent force. The crisp fabric cracks like a whip in the quiet room.
Lucas watches. He doesn't offer to help.
"The specialist recommended a wedge pillow," he says casually. "For positioning. After."
After. My mind flashes to the text message from last night. Make sure the water has ice. My core twists with fresh nausea.
"It arrives today," he adds. "And leave some extra blankets. Some women run cold in early pregnancy."
"She isn't pregnant yet, Lucas."
"Preparation matters."
I straighten up. My hands are trembling. The room is stripped bare. It looks like a hotel room now. Sterile. Waiting for its new occupant.
Lucas’s phone buzzes in his pocket.
He pulls it out. I watch his face.
The shift is instantaneous. The hard lines around his mouth soften. His eyes brighten. It’s an involuntary reaction. The kind of look a man only gives when a woman he desires is calling.
He answers it. "Hey. Yeah, she's—" A pause. "Already?"
I shove the final pillow into the Egyptian cotton case.
"Come on up," he says into the receiver. "Door's open."
He lowers the phone. The softness vanishes the second his eyes meet mine. The CEO is back.
"That's Serena. She's downstairs." He steps fully into the room, closing the distance between us until I can smell the sandalwood and sex again. "Go let her in. And Ivy?"
I freeze.
"Starting today, you are her caregiver." His voice leaves absolutely no room for argument. "She needs someone available around the clock. Meals, scheduling, supplements. Whatever she asks for."
I stare at him, my pulse hammering against my ribs.
"I don't have a nursing license," I say, my voice trembling. "I am your wife."
"She doesn't need a nurse. She needs someone to manage the house so she can focus on conception." He steps closer. He reaches out and tucks a stray strand of hair behind my ear. The gesture is so mockingly tender it makes my skin crawl. "You're here anyway. Do it for Leo."
The doorbell rings.
A sharp, piercing chime that echoes through the grand foyer below.
Lucas tilts his head toward the hallway. "Go."
I turn away from him. My legs feel like lead. I walk out of my former sanctuary, down the long hallway, my hand trailing along the smooth oak banister.
Through the frosted glass panel beside the massive front door, I can see the blurred silhouette of a woman. She is standing there, patient and expectant. Waiting to claim her space.
Waiting to claim my life.
I reach the bottom step.
My palm presses against the cold brass of the doorknob. I take one ragged breath, steeling myself for the humiliation waiting on the other side.
I turn the handle and pull the door open.
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