âA-Aunt Emma?â
âHiya, Josh.â
I sound stupidly cheerful, considering Iâm sitting in the middle of our broken coffee table covered in scrapes and bruises while fresh blood wells all along my arms and legs.
âW-what happened?â
âUm, I justâfell. Iâm okay, I swear.â
He circles around slowly. His bottom lip is trembling but heâs trying hard to keep it together. Which is why the trembling is getting so much more pronounced. I canât even try to comfort him with a hug because I donât want any of the glass slicing him.
âYou fell?â he repeats.
âYep. Whoopsie-daisy!â
It takes some careful maneuvering to get up out of the glass pile. I end up using the coffee tableâs frame to tug myself up onto my feet. Glass crackles around me and Joshâs eyes bulge wider.
âYouâre hurt.â
âIâm fine. Nothing a little Neosporin wonât fix.â
âAunt Emma.â Joshâs voice is trembling now, too. âYou need to go to a hospital.â
âNo! I just need to clean up andâ
âIf you donât go to a hospital right now, Iâm calling Ruslan.â
I freeze. Did I just get threatened by an eight-year-old? Better question: is the threat working? âJosh, honey, thereâs no need to involve Ruslan.â
âThen go to the hospital yourself,â he insists.
Stubborn much? He gets that from Sienna, too.
âOkay, okay, Iâm going. But first, let me call Aunt Pheebs. Sheâll need to stay with you guys while I go to the hospital.â
Josh doesnât look appeased. âWeâll come with you.â
I walk gingerly over to the sofa where I left my phone. âNo honey, itâs okay. Reallyââ
âDid he do this?â
Thankfully, my back is to Josh and he doesnât see my cringe. I manage to compose it just before I turn back around with my phone in hand. âIt was an accident, honey. You know how clumsy I can be.â
Josh isnât buying it. His eyes fill with tears. âHeâs a monster.â
My heart breaks. âSweetheartâ¦â
âHeâs a monster and Iâm gonna kill him.â
âJosh, no. You are a better man than that. Youâre a better man than him. Donât sink down to his level, okay? Trust meâitâs not worth it.â
He starts chewing on his bottom lip but he gives me a tiny nod. I have to be satisfied with that as I type a quick text to Phoebe. It takes some effort to keep my fingers from shaking.
EMMA: Hey hon, I know this is super last minute and I understand if you canât make it, but can you maybe watch the kids for a couple of hours?
She starts typing back almost immediately.
PHOEBE: So sorry babe. Just got in a meeting. Bossman is here so I canât get out of it. Heâs a hard ass, tooâjust not in a fun way like your boss man.
Itâs funny how her words send this weird stabbing pain straight through my heart.
Heâs not my man anymore. In fact, heâs not even my boss anymore.
PHOEBE: Whatâs going on? Is everything okay?
Since she canât do anything right now, thereâs no sense in worrying her.
EMMA: Everythingâs fine. Iâll figure something else out. Not a big deal.
It is unbelievably hard to keep myself together but Josh seems like heâs close to falling apart. Which means I definitely canât afford to do the same.
âOkay, hon. Change of plans. Aunt Phoebe is at work and she canât get out of it, soââ
âYou still have to go to the hospital,â he says firmly.
I sigh. âAlright then. Guess youâre all coming with me. Iâm gonna goââ I look down at myself. ââclean myself up a bit. I donât wanna scare the girls. Can you get them ready?â
He nods and heads to their room while I limp towards mine. My tiny little bathroom mirror shows that Iâm more torn up than I thought I was. Iâm hurting so much from head to toe, inside and out, that itâs like my brain isnât even bothering to register it as pain anymore. Just numbness radiating through me.
Josh is right, thoughâI do need to go to the hospital.
I swap my clothes out for long pants and a long-sleeved shirt that covers most of the damage. I actually look halfway presentable when I walk out. The girls are oohing and ahhing over the shards of broken glass.
âGirls, walk around the table, please, and make sure to keep your shoes on. Letâs go.â
We have to take Benâs busted Chevy because the Asshole Extraordinaire took the Mercedes. Turns out, driving while youâre bleeding from fifty different places on your body is quite a challenge. Every time I spin the steering wheel, my right underarm stings with sharp pain.
Once we get to the hospital, I have to fill out an endless parade of forms. Any allergies? Am I on any medications? When was the date of my last period? Cause of injury? It makes my head spin.
After I get assigned an appointment, weâre sent to the emergency room lobby to wait. Forty minutes go by and I canât decide if itâs the longest wait of my life or if it passes in a blink.
When they call my name, I leave Josh with the girls and step into the doctorâs office for my appointment. I have to strip down and let her examine my cuts.
âYou mentioned in your forms that this was a⦠fall?â Dr. Nara asks with a raised eyebrow, emphasizing her skepticism in the last word.
I shrug, which hurts. âIâm clumsy.â
The doctorâs dark brown eyes bore into mine. âMs. Carson, Iâve seen my fair share of âclumsyâ women walk into this hospital. I can tell the difference between an accident and abuse.â
I answer a little too fast. âIâm not being abused. I fell.â
Dr. Nara sighs. âI know how hard it is to leave an abusive relationship. Especially with three children and one on the way, butââ
I flinch back, causing her to pull back the little tweezer sheâs holding to pick out the microscopic glass shards that have apparently been embedded in my skin.
âCareful, Ms. Carson.â
âIâm sorry, itâs just⦠What did you say?â
âDenial is very common among young women who are suffering at theââ
âNo, not about that. About the three-children-and-one-on-the-way part?â
She frowns and then consults her clipboard. âYouâve mentioned the date of your last period as June. That was two months ago.â
âOh, that⦠I couldnât really remember my last period. I just put in the date that I could remember.â
The doctorâs brow pinches together. âIf you can remember June, why not July?â
âThe human brain works in mysterious ways?â
Dr. Nara gives me a sympathetic nod. âAs I said, denial is common amongst women who suffer from abusive relationships. Iâm sure another pregnancy is less than ideal for you right now butââ
I sigh. âItâs not that. I have a blocked fallopian tube. The chances of me getting pregnant are basically zero. And those three kids are my sisterâs, not mine. Iâve never been pregnant. I doubt I am right now.â
She cocks her head to the side. âYou have one defective fallopian tube?â
âYes.â
âAnd the other one?â
âExcuse me?â
âIs your second fallopian tube blocked also?â
âUm, well, no. I mean, not that I know of. But the way my luckâs been goingâ¦â
The doctor nods. âMaybe we should do some tests, just to rule it out?â
I swallow. âSure.â
âIâll clean you up first and then weâll get the bloodwork done.â
I spend the next half an hour staring up at the fluorescent lights until I start seeing weird patterns dancing in front of me. Somehow, they all look like babies.
âAlright, Ms. Carson. We have your test results back.â I jerk upright and wince. âWhoa thereâletâs take it easy, shall we? Youâve been cut up pretty bad. Those wounds will take a few weeks to heal completely.â
âT-the results?â
She gives me a look that I canât quite interpret. Is that sympathy? Pity? Apology?
âYou are in fact pregnant, Ms. Carson.â
Pity. Definitely pity. The buzz of the overhead lights suddenly sounds like a babyâs cry.
âHow⦠h-how is that even possible?â I stammer. âI had a test done, like, just a few days ago. That was when they caught my blocked tube.â
âThings change quickly. There could also have been some malfunctioning equipment or a faulty reading of the results. But thereâs no denying this, Ms. Carson. Youâre pregnant.â
Goosebumps erupt all over my arms. Iâm pregnant. I donât know whether to laugh or cry. I donât know whether to feel happy or sad. I donât know what the fuck Iâm supposed to do now.
âMs. Carsonâ¦â I look towards the doctor, hoping that she might have the answers. âYou are still in the early stages of your pregnancy. As a rule, we donât normally encourage this, butâyou donât necessarily have to stay pregnant if you donât want to.â
I frown. What is she saying? Sheâs offering me a way outâ¦
My first instinct is NO.
My second instinct isâhell fucking no.
I force my eyes to the doctorâs and my resentment of her suggestion ebbs slightly. All sheâs seeing is a victim of domestic abuse with three children to raise. Sheâs trying to help me.
But she doesnât know the whole story.
She doesnât know that this baby was born from something real. That I happen to love the father of this child even if he doesnât love me and despite how he has treated me. She doesnât know that Iâve wanted this baby from the moment I saw my sister become a mother. She doesnât know that I have always taken my miracles where I can get them. Inconvenient or not.
âIâm gonna keep this baby,â I say firmly.
And Iâm gonna save my other babies. Itâs up to me now and thereâs only one path forward.
We have to leave this city.
For good.