At first I didn’t answer him, because my body seemed to understand before my pride.
The room tilted around me, slowly, as if the floor had turned to water beneath my bare feet.
Lucie’s hand remained pressed against her belly, her fingers outstretched, as if she could hold it all in by force.
I saw the phone on the nightstand, with the screen facing down and the charging cable half unplugged from the wall.

Beside her, a glass of water had been spilled, which explained one of the stains, but not the fear in her eyes.
“Adrien,” she whispered again, and this time my name sounded less like a call than a plea.
Then I moved, clumsily and late, kneeling beside the bed with shame already burning behind my eyes.
Her skin was cold when I touched her wrist, and that coldness frightened me more than the wet sheets.
“How long?” I asked, though my voice sounded raspy, almost like someone else’s.
He looked at me, blinking, trying to concentrate, trying to make the words pierce through the pain.
“Since ten o’clock,” she said. “Maybe earlier. I thought it was cramps. Then I tried to call you.”
I looked at the phone again, and the dark screen suddenly seemed heavier than any accusation.
Twenty missed calls, he had told me, while I was on the air, pleased with my surprise.
I wanted to tell her that I had arrived early because I loved her, but now words seemed useless.
Instead, with trembling fingers, I reached for his phone and turned it over.
The screen lit up.
His call history filled the glass as if it were evidence against me.
My name, repeated over and over, each attempt marked by a moment when I had not been there.
There were also two calls to the emergency line, both brief, too brief, and both ended before anyone could help.
“I couldn’t speak,” she murmured, following my gaze. “I panicked. Then I thought maybe I was overreacting.”
That phrase hurt me in a way I didn’t deserve.
Because while she was afraid of exaggerating, I had stayed by her side inventing a betrayal.
I swallowed hard and helped her sit down, but she screamed and grabbed my arm.
It wasn’t a loud or dramatic sound, just a staccato sound that suddenly made the apartment seem too small.
“We have to go,” I said, reaching for the blanket at the foot of the bed.
He shook his head, and the movement was so slight that it was hardly noticeable.
“Wait,” she whispered. “My bag. My medical file. It’s in the drawer.”
I opened the drawer too quickly and papers, receipts, an old movie ticket, and her prenatal records fell to the floor.
The folder was blue, with his name written in neat black letters on the cover.
I remembered seeing her write it, her tongue caught between her teeth, proud of being prepared.
Now my hands could barely close it around him.
When I turned around, Lucie was staring at me with an expression I couldn’t decipher.
It’s not suspicion.
It’s not anger.
Something worse, perhaps.
A conscience weary of not having asked the first question that a loving husband should have asked.
“Did you think I was with someone?” she asked in a low voice.
The words didn’t sound like an accusation.
They landed softly, and that softness made them impossible to avoid.
I opened my mouth, but nothing honest could come out of my lips without ruining me.
Outside, somewhere below our window, a motorcycle passed by on the empty street with a faint metallic whir.
Lucie heard that sound as if it gave her a breath of fresh air.
Then she looked away from me and touched her belly again.
“I saw your face,” she said. “Before you touched me. I saw what you were thinking.”
I wanted to deny it.
I wanted to say no, never, impossible, that fear had confused me for just a second.
But the truth stood between us, with the towel on the floor and the nightgown on backwards.
“I don’t know what I was thinking,” I whispered.
It wasn’t enough.
We both knew it.
She closed her eyes and, for a moment, her breathing became shallow and irregular.
I helped her put a coat over her nightgown, careful not to look at the stains anymore.
The back seams peeked out from under the collar, small and absurd, as proof of how powerless the night had been.
She noticed my gaze and answered before I could ask.
“I put it on after I showered,” she said. “I was dizzy. I couldn’t tell the front from the back.”
The explanation was so simple that it became unbearable.
There is no secret lover.
Without rushing to leave.
Just a woman, alone, pregnant, scared, and too weak to dress properly.
I tied her shoes because she couldn’t bend down, and she watched my hands with silent weariness.
His silence was not empty.
It was filled with every minute he had waited.
Every unanswered call.
Every wrong thought that I allowed to grow inside me.
In the elevator, he leaned against the wall and pressed the folder to his chest.
The fluorescent light made her face look almost gray.
I stayed by her side, without touching her this time, because I didn’t know if my touch still comforted her.
The numbers above the door slowly descended.
Fourth floor.
Third.
Second.
Each pause felt like a small punishment.
At the entrance, the night air hit us hard, and Lucie took a deep breath through clenched teeth.
I guided her to the car, opened the passenger door, and placed my hand on the roof.
He stopped before entering.
For a terrifying second, I thought she was going to faint.
Instead, he looked at me and asked, “Were you afraid for me first, or were you angry first?”
The question was gentle enough to be almost kind.
That made it worse.
He could have lied.
She could have chosen the milder version, the one in which love had simply been startled by fear.
The version in which I was a good man who made a terrible mistake at a terrible time.
But she had already seen my face.
And I had already seen his call history.
“I was the first to get angry,” I said.
Her eyelids trembled, but she didn’t cry.
She nodded only once, as if some suspicion she had harbored inside had finally been answered.
Then he got into the car.
I drove faster than I should have, even though every red light seemed designed to test me.
Lucie sat rigidly, both hands on her stomach, breathing with each wave of pain.
Between one intersection and the next, my phone vibrated in my jacket pocket.
I ignored him.
Then it started buzzing again.
And again.
At the next red light, I took it out, hoping to find a job, hoping for anything normal.
She was my mother.

Three messages.
Are you home yet?
Call me before you speak to Lucie.
Please, Adrien. There are things you need to know.
I stared at the screen until the light turned green and a horn sounded behind us.
Lucie turned her head slowly.
“Who is it?” she asked.
“My mother,” I said.
At that moment, something changed in her face.
It’s not surprising.
Recognition.
As if a small missing piece had slid into place.
“He called me tonight,” Lucie said.
I gripped the steering wheel tighter.
“When?”
“Around nine o’clock. Before the pain became unbearable.”
Her voice was weak, but firm enough to instill fear in me about what would come next.
“She told me I shouldn’t trap you with a child if I wasn’t sure about our marriage yet.”
For a moment, the road disappeared behind a beam of lights.
From inside the closed car, I could hear my own breathing, rough and irregular.
“What did he say?”
Lucie looked out the windshield.
The hospital sign appeared further ahead, blue and white, too bright against the backdrop of the night.
“He said that sometimes men need proof before they believe they are fathers.”
My stomach turned.
Not because the sentence was shocking.
Because I recognized him.
My mother had said something similar weeks before, smiling as she drank coffee, pretending that concern was wisdom.
She had asked if Lucie seemed distant.
If pregnancy made women feel emotional.
If I had ever thought about taking a paternity test, it was simply to put my doubts to rest before they arose.
I had told him not to talk nonsense.
But he hadn’t told Lucie.
He had kept it small.
Harmless.
A family nuisance that’s not worth having at home.
Now that silence remained with us in the car.
Lucie’s phone had fallen into the gap next to her seat, vibrating slightly against the plastic.
I bent down at the entrance of the hospital and picked it up.
My mother’s number was also there, in Lucie’s missed calls and in one answered call that lasted six minutes.
Six minutes before the pain turned into fear.
Six minutes of words I hadn’t heard.
At the entrance to the emergency room, a nurse brought a wheelchair after taking a look at Lucie’s face.
The questions soon followed.
How many weeks?
Any bleeding?
Any falls, accidents, or previous complications?
Lucie answered as best she could.
I stood behind her, holding the blue folder, useless and sweating under my coat.
When they asked me if I was the father, Lucie hesitated for a moment.
Then she said yes.
That small delay pierced me like a needle.
Not because he no longer doubted the child.
Because I realized that my doubt had become visible enough to make her stop.
They took her behind a curtain.

I kept going until a nurse gently placed a hand on my chest.
“Just one minute,” he said. “Then we need space.”
Lucie lay on the examination table, staring at the ceiling tiles.
The room smelled of disinfectant and hot plastic.
A machine blinked beside him, patient and indifferent.
The doctor arrived with tired eyes and a calm voice that made everything more frightening.
He asked her questions, gently palpated her abdomen, and then ordered tests and an ultrasound.
Lucie turned her face towards me as they prepared the equipment.
“Don’t call your mother,” he said.
It wasn’t a request.
It was the first time he set a boundary between us and my family.
I nodded too quickly.
Then my phone vibrated again.
This time, the sound seemed enormous in the small room.
Lucie heard it.
The doctor heard it.
Even the nurse glanced into my pocket.
I took out my phone and saw my mother’s name shining there, persistent and familiar.

For years, I answered to that name without thinking.
When my father died, she had become so fragile that refusing to accept it seemed cruel to her.
She had opinions about our apartment, our finances, Lucie’s job, the baby’s name.
I had smoothed all the sharp edges before they reached my wife.
Or at least I had told myself that I had.
But maybe I didn’t protect Lucie.
Perhaps I had only protected myself from having to choose.
The phone kept ringing.
Lucie was watching me, her face pale and her eyes darker than I had ever seen them.
At that moment I understood that the choice was not between answering or ignoring a call.
I was caught between the truth and the comfortable lie I had lived in for years.
The lie that I could fully love my wife while letting my mother poison the boundaries of our life.
The lie that silence was synonymous with neutrality.
The lie that doubt, if not expressed, leaves no wound.
I rejected the call.
Then I turned the phone off completely.
Lucie closed her eyes.
Not with relief, exactly.
With exhaustion.
The ultrasound gel was cold; she shuddered when it touched her skin.
The room fell into complete silence.
Only the machine was humming.
The doctor moved the probe slowly, with a carefully indecipherable expression.
I stared at the screen without understanding the shadows.
Lucie watched the doctor.
His fingers felt across the sheet of paper until I brought my hand close to his.
At first he did not accept it.
That refusal was minimal.
Almost invisible.
But it opened a wound inside me.
Then another pain crossed her face, and despite everything, her fingers closed around mine.
I clung to life, not as a forgiven man, but as someone who was allowed to do something useful.
The doctor adjusted the image.
A granular form appeared.
Then a flash.
Tiny.
Unstable.
Vivo.
“There is cardiac activity,” he said cautiously.
Lucie made a sound that almost resembled a sob, but stopped before it became one.
My knees buckled.
I wanted to cry, but even that seemed selfish.
The doctor continued speaking, explaining the risks, the observation, the possible complications, words like threatened miscarriage and bed rest.
Nothing was certain.
There is no loss.
It’s not security.
Only the fragile present.
Lucie stared at the screen as if blinking could make the flash disappear.
I stared at her.
In the sweat near the hairline.
Wearing the nightgown inside out under the open coat.
To the woman he had almost misunderstood at the very moment he most needed to believe in her.
After the examination, she was taken to a small observation room with a narrow window.
Dawn was beginning to paint the sky gray over the hospital parking lot.
The nurse told me to drink coffee, to breathe, to sit down before I fell.
I didn’t do any of those things.
I stood by the bed while Lucie rested, with one hand still on her belly.
My phone remained switched off in my pocket, heavy as a rock.
When he opened his eyes again, the room was filled with the light of dawn.
In that light he looked younger.
And more distant.
“I need you to tell me something,” she said.
I leaned closer.
“Anything.”
He looked at me carefully for a long time before speaking.
“If your mother asks you for proof, will you ask her for it in her presence?”
This time the question didn’t surprise me.
He took away the last place where I could hide.
Because a frightened part of me had already imagined tests, dates, guarantees, ways to silence what should never have been fed.
Outside the room, the squeaking of wheels could be heard as they traveled down the corridor.
Someone chuckled softly at the nurses’ station, and that everyday sound made the question sound even harsher.
I thought of my mother alone in her apartment, waiting for obedience disguised as concern.
I thought of Lucie alone in our bed, calling me twenty times while the pain doubled her over.
I thought of the baby’s heartbeat, blinking on a screen, asking nothing more of me than honesty.
—No—I said.
The word came out in a low voice, but it did not tremble.
Lucie kept staring at me.
So I said it again.
“No. And I should have said no long before tonight.”
Her eyes slowly filled, not with relief, but with something more complex.
Pain, perhaps.
Because a late answer still carries the consequences of its delay.
I took the blue folder from the chair and placed it on the bed next to her.
“For a moment I thought something horrible,” I said. “I’m not going to pretend I didn’t.”
He clenched his jaw.
I forced myself not to look away.
“And I let my mother’s words stick in my mind because it was easier than confronting her.”
Lucie turned her face towards the window.
A fine morning line was drawn on her cheek.
“I don’t know what that makes us,” she whispered.
Me neither.
That was the truth.
It is not broken beyond repair.
It’s not safe.
He is not innocent.
Something in between, being in a hospital room, waiting to find out what might survive.
Then my phone vibrated once, even though it was turned off.
A remembered vibration, perhaps.
Or guilt pretending to be sane.
I put my hand in my pocket, took it out, and placed it on the table without turning it on.
Lucie saw the gesture.
This time, she did not nod.
But she didn’t look away either.
After a while, he said, “When we leave here, I don’t want to go back home and find your messages.”
I understood what he was really asking.
It’s not an apartment.
This is not about voicemail.
About whether I would finally come between her and what I had considered harmless.
I looked at my phone.
Then, seeing the slight bruise that my own nails had left on the palm of my hand that same night.

“I’ll call her from here,” I said. “And you won’t have to say a word.”
Lucie closed her eyes again.
His hand slid once over her belly, slowly and with a protective gesture.
The outside corridor was illuminated by the morning light, and somewhere nearby, another machine began to emit a rhythmic, steady beep.
I picked up the phone.
I turned it on.
And before the first message had even finished loading, I already knew that the next words would cost me something.
The first message loaded before I had time to prepare.
Adrien, I know you’re angry, but a mother has the right to protect her child.
I stared at the phrase until the letters stopped looking like words and became something colder.
Lucie didn’t ask what he was saying.
She just stared at my face, and that restraint was worse than any demand.
After that, six messages arrived, each disguised as concern, each with the same poison.
She’s very excited right now.
Don’t let panic decide your future.
A paternity test would protect everyone.
You deserve to have certainty before committing forever.
I read them all.
Not because I wanted to.
Because turning our backs now would just be another version of the same cowardice.
My thumb hovered over the call button.
For years, I responded to my mother with explanations, gentle words, and small concessions.
That morning, in the hospital room, the explanations suddenly seemed like another way of asking Lucie to hold on longer.
I pressed the call button.
My mother answered on the second ring, breathless, as if she had been waiting with the phone in her hand.
“Adrien, finally. Listen to me before I fill your head with tears.”
I closed my eyes.
Lucie’s fingers tightened around the sheet, but she remained silent.
“No,” I said. “You will listen to me.”
The line fell silent.
I could hear my mother’s breathing, offended even before any accusation reached her.
“Lucie is in the hospital,” I said. “The baby is in danger, and your words helped bring me here.”
