I
had to leave work early to make it to the ultrasound on time. Thankfully, the cafรฉโs owner, Lisa, is unquestionably high most days and doesnโt particularly care about any of her staffโs personal lives, interests, orโquite oftenโnames. She didnโt bother to ask what the nature
of my appointment was when she sent me on my way.
Iโve been working at the cafรฉ long enough that Iโve earned that level of trust. Enough to bail on the end of my shift, at least. Iโm not technically a supervisor, but Iโve picked up a few extra tasks here and there when asked.
I make the schedule, mostly so I can control who closes the night before I open. I also train the new employees when Lisaโs not around. But I donโt want the title of assistant manager, though sheโs offered it to me a few times. That title comes with expectations of sticking around. It was never supposed to be a permanent position. Iโve had one foot out the door since I started. Not that Iโve done anything to getย twoย feet out.
Snow has just started falling when I get off the bus and begin walking toward the big blue medical building across the street. Walking through the
front doors, I spot Bo in the lobby. Heโs standing under a directional sign, looking down at his phone. I make a quick note that the ultrasound office is on the second floor before looking at him as I make my way over.
Heโs wearing a brown suede coat and blue jeans. Much more casual than his outfit from last week at the cafรฉ, but still more put-together than me in my black yoga pants and a teal sweater I knit last winter zipped under my knee-length puffy purple jacket and far-too-long scarf that Iโve nearly suffocated myself under.
Have I mentioned I hate winter?
โWell, fancy meeting you here,โ I chime, unwinding the scarf from around my neck.
When Bo looks up, heโs already smiling. โHey,ย you.โ He slips his phone into his back pocket. โWeโve got to stopย bump-ingย into each other like this,โ he says, awfully proud of himself.
โReally? Bumping?โ I raise a brow.
He shrugs, his cheeky grin far too wide for his face. Hisย stupidly
handsome face.
โReady?โ I ask, tilting my chin toward the stairs.
He nods, immediately following me as I start walking toward the second floor. โOh, wait,โ Bo says urgently, reaching for my hand. He tugs me closer by my wrist, and I huff in a breath at the surprise of being pulled to an abrupt stop.
โSorry. Before I forget.โ He pulls his phone back out of his pocket and holds it up in front of us, turning his camera around so he and I fill up the small screen. โThree, twoโฆโย Click.
I smile automatically when presented with my own reflection, but Iโm still questioning why we just took a photo together in the middle of the
lobby when Bo places his phone into his pocket and starts walking toward the stairs as if nothing odd happened at all.
โWhat was that?โ I ask, my tone half amusement and half confusion.
Bo pouts disingenuously, as if to sayย oh, you poor thing.ย โA cell phone, honey.โ
โYes, thank you. Iโm familiar. But why did you take our photo?โย And you probably shouldnโt call me honey. It does things to my stomach. Like what Iโd expect a cartwheel in space to feel like.
โIโm documenting! Weโre about to meet our kid. I donโt want to forget anything.โ
โOkay.โ I smile, despite my eyes narrowing in on this strange, strange man. โFair enough.โ I charge up the steps, making it to the first landing before dread sets over me, realising Boโs half a staircase behind, walking at his own, necessary pace.
I fight the urge to apologise and drawย moreย attention to our difference in speed, and instead decide to act as if Iโm fascinated by the shitty mural on the landing until Boโs once again next to me. Then I walk slower, matching his pace until we reach the ultrasound office.
I give my name and identification to the receptionist before weโre seated in a waiting room alongside aย veryย pregnant woman and her partner. The room has bright blue walls and awful fluorescent lighting. Decals of butterflies and forest animals half-cling to the walls, and thereโs a small selection of magazines in the corner, which the far-more-pregnant lady is rifling through.
She looksโฆย smug.ย Rubbing her belly like itโs a fortune tellerโs crystal ball. Smiling with a pointed-up nose as if she, and she alone, is keeping the human species from extinction.
โFirst one?โ she asks, her voice like spun sugar as she points toward my stomach. She snaps that finger back into place, raising her shoulders with giddy amazement.
I nod, wearing a polite, thin-lipped smile.
โYour first isย soย special. Oh, but you must beย reallyย scared,โ she pouts insincerely.
No shit.
โPoor thing,โ she coos, frowning.
Did I answer her that time? I check with Bo, whoโs suddenly fascinated by the nonexistent lint on his jeans, picking at his knee. His subtle side-eye matched with his tilted smirk tells me heโs also hearing how ridiculous fertile-Myrtle is being. Though, based on her tone, she might preferย Mother Maryย as her nickname.
โThis is probablyย ourย last scan.โ She places a hand with a diamond ring so large on her stomach that I worry about the load-bearing weight of her placenta. โWeโre thirty-nine weeks.โ She places herย otherย hand on her husbandโs shoulder. Heโs beaming at her with pride, his eyes glued to her. He looks distinctly like Ned Flanders, with a bushy moustache and aย golly- goshย way about him.
โWeโll be having this baby any day now,โ Ned chimes to Myrtle, loud enough for the room to hear.
โWow, and youโre not even showing.โ I point to his stomach, wearing a shit-eating grin thatย couldย be mistaken as friendly.
โOh boy, sheโs funny.โ Myrtle points to me, looking at Bo. โHopefully thatโs genetic.โ
โFunny wife, happy lifeโthatโs what I always say,โ Ned adds from beside her.
Bo gives me the smallest, briefest glance that asks about a hundred things. I agree, silently, to all of them.
โOh, I wouldnโt know. We only just met in the lobby. I wanted to see what all the fuss was about, and she allowed me to follow her up,โ Bo delivers, deadpan.
โIโm Guinevere, by the way.โ I present my hand to shake. โSorry, forgot to introduce myself before.โ
โLance,โ he replies, looking at the couple across from us. โYou are?โ โMelissaโฆโ she answers, oddly shy all of a sudden.
โTed.โย Close enough.
โGood to meet you both.โ Bo bows his head across the aisle. โAnd you,โ he says, winking at me, out of our new friendsโ view, as to not blow our cover.
โSoโฆ youโre not the father?โ Ted (nรฉe: Ned) asks. โWhose father?โ Bo replies, dumbfounded.
โHerย baby.โ Ted looks at me, his lips parted and pointing away from one another. Poor man could not be more confused.
โOh! Gwenโs baby?โ Bo points to me with his thumb. I fight a laugh so hard my nose twitches.
โYes,โ Ted clarifies, growing more bewildered by the second. Bless him.
Melissa only looks annoyed, glaring at her cuticles.
โNo, he isnโt,โ I confirm, my voice wavering. โBut,โ I turn to Bo, โif you
areย available, the job can be yours.โ
โOh, wow.โ Bo places a hand across his heart, holding eye contact with me. It takes everything in me not to crack a smile. โI would beย honouredโฆโ
Melissa clears her throat, capturing our attention. โYou know, if you didnโt want to talk, you could have just said so. You donโt have to be rude.โ
Ted, seemingly oblivious, is still enraptured by our little performance. โSo you donโt know who the dad is?โ
โItโs a bit of aย Mamma Miaย situation, Iโm afraid,โ I answer.
โHere we go again,โ Bo mutters under his breath as Melissa pulls Ted toward her and begins whispering into his ear. Once finished telling her husband toย stopย interacting with us, Melissa reaches next to her and opens aย Peopleย Magazine from the early 2000s with an aggressive flourish.
Bo and I avoid eye contact, but I feel his shoulders shaking next to mine as he suppresses his laughter to no more than a few broken breaths. Iโve only ever been that stupid in public with Sarah, knowing that sheโd always have my back. I suppose it can be taken as a good sign that being stupid alongside Bo came so easily.
Though I do feel aย littleย bad for Ted. Sweet, simple Ted.
โMcNulty?โ The tech calls from around the corner, appearing only once I look toward the incoming voice.
โYep!โ I push to stand and notice my legs suddenly feel a lot weaker than when I walked up the stairs. Honestly, Iโm grateful to Melissa, Ted,ย andย Bo for the welcomed distraction up until this point. I was beyond nervous at work all day and barely slept last night.
Itโs not that I think something terrible has happened to the baby. Itโs been pretty smooth sailing symptoms-wise, though Iโm still nauseous every day. Doctor Salim promises that having to keep a sick bag in my purse and crackers next to the bed is a good sign the baby is growing strong.
The fear, I think, is coming from how real this all suddenly seems. As if every step closer to the patientโs table at the end of this hallway is a recommitment to choosingย thisย path forward. A reminder that Iโve made thisย veryย big decision withย veryย little logic and a whole lot of instinct.
Keepingย theย baby felt hypothetical to some degree. Once weโre in that room, Iโm keepingย myย baby.ย Ourย baby.
Boโs walking faster than my legs will let me go, ahead of me, next to the technician. He turns over his shoulder and gives me a sweet, encouraging wink and smile before turning back around.
I canโt help but wonder if he feelsย thisย too. The seriousness of this moment. The immense pressure. The looming feeling, as if gravity has been sucked out of this building and weโre floating down this hallway. Barrelling, really, toward this new reality.
Probably not.
Though when I find myself lying on the table in the middle of the room, hiking my shirt up to expose my still unchanged belly, I look toย himย for comfort on my left. And Bo provides it, reaching out a hand for me to hold.
โItโs okay,โ he tells me. His voice reminds me of the way parents comfort their children before the plane takes off. A tone ofย people have done this before; thereโs no reason to worry, but a tiny hint of concern of their own lying underneath, as if to say,ย then again, plane crashes do happen.
โPromise,โ he says, his brows furrowing as he nodsโhis expression more concentrated and steady. I must look as scared as I feel for him to have to throw a word likeย promiseย around.
The tech is talking, aย lot,ย to my right. And Iโm only picking up about half of it. I keep my eyes on Bo. Watching him listen to her intently and nod along keeps me from spiralling even further. Heโs present, at least. Heโll leave with whatever information we might need.
The techโs hand on my right shoulder makes me turn toward her and the machine sheโs standing in front of. โIโm going to apply the gel nowโitโll
be cold. Weโll make sure to wipe it all off once finished.โ She shows me a bottle of gel, and I nod, smiling weakly.
I tighten my hold on Boโs hand. He squeezes back rhythmically, as if heโs attempting to match my heartbeat. I find myself briefly wishing I had brought Sarah along too. That way, I wouldnโt be clinging to this guy for dear life.
Cold gel lands on my stomach, and I feel pressure as the tech lowers the probe and presses down more forcefully than I was expecting. Sheโs really digging around down there. After a few achingly long seconds, I start to worry that maybe she canโt find the baby. That maybe thereย isย no more baby.
Dread creeps up my spine like ice water as a million and one worst-case scenarios take my brain hostage. I feel a chill in the room that wasnโt there before, a cool breeze washing over my skin, raising each hair, goose bumps forming across my skin. Every nerve ending sends a signal that it isย absolutelyย time to panic. But then Boโs gasp pulls me back from the ledge.
I look at him as he, wide-eyed and slack-jawed, stares at the screen behind me that Iโm too afraid to face. He exhales shakily, joy overtaking his features. He leans forward, whispering something I donโt quite make out that Iโm not even sure he intended to say. Then he stills when the probe moves again, angling against my stomach.
I watch as Boโs small wonderment bursts into a full-fledged, beaming smile that he attempts to subdue by biting his lip and shaking his head.
โWinnifred?โ the tech says from behind me. โDid you want to see as well?โ
I turn slowly, bracing for impact with squinted eyes and puckered lips.
But there, on the black and white screen, is a small, perfect, bean-like
thing.
My baby.
Notย theย baby. Butย myย baby.
And itโs not nearly as terrifying as I thought it would beโknowing itโs mine.ย Itโs actually really fucking unreal. An honour. An amazing, incredible, spectacular, sublimeย thing.
I watch as the baby moves in tiny, fluttering rotations. Relief warms my skin and senses like standing under a sunbeam on an otherwise cloudy day, my heart swelling with joy to the point where I feel it might give out.
The tech smiles softly as she presses the probe against me further, trying to get a better view on the screen. โTheyโre certainly active,โ she says. โYouโre going to have your hands full with this one.โ
โHmm,โ I murmur my agreement.ย Hands are kinda the issue here, lady.
The baby moves on the screen again. A little twitch-like jump that reminds me of a flea. And I forget the world.
Do it again,ย I shout internally, imagining my veins and the blood pumping through them as radio transmitters, hoping foolishly that the baby can hear me somehow.
Bo laughs, deep and low, as the kid does another flip away from the probeโs view. โSeems like they want some privacy,โ he says.
โOh myย gosh, Mom and Dad-uh. Leave me alone,โ I say like a moody teenager.
โYou guys areย soย annoying,โ Bo adds in his own similar whine. Weโre already so obnoxious. I love it. Probably more than I should.
The tech types as she continues clicking around the image, making notes and taking measurements. Her concentrated face could be just that:
concentration. But it could equally be concern. Maybe thereโs something not quite right only someone with a trained eye could notice.
โTheyโre okay?โ The two words fall out before I think to ask them.
โAll seems well to me,โ she answers, turning to face me instead of the screen. โDo you want to hear the heartbeat?โ
โYes, please,โ Bo and I answer in unison.
With a few buttons pressed and knobs twisted, a quiet sound begins. Turned louder, the babyโs heartbeat fills the room, reverberating against the walls in a perfect rhythm. The most life-altering, exquisite sound.
Itโs all I can hear. Above my panted breaths. Above Boโs seemingly subconscious happy murmurs of amazement. Aboveย everything.ย The city outside, the voice of anxiety in my head, the subtle creaking of my ribs tightening under the weight of all this change.
Ba-dum, ba-dum, ba-dum.ย Like a steady train.
Ba-dum, ba-dum, ba-dum.ย Not a mistake.
Ba-dum, ba-dum, ba-dum.ย Aย happyย accident.
โWow,โ I breathe out, tears blotting along my lower lashes. โHeart rate is one-sixty-seven,โ the tech says, typing.
โIs that good?โ Bo asks softly, as if to not disturb the moment. โYes, thatโs right where we want it.โ
He huffs a sigh of relief. Then his warm lips are pressed on the back of my hand. I turn away from the screen toward him, hit with a rush of surprise at that form of contact. Which may be absurd, considering all weโve done.
โThank you for letting me be here,โ he says. Or maybe he mouths it, Iโm not sure. All I can hear is that steady beating heart.
โCan you record this?โ I ask hoarsely, emotion tightening my throat.
Bo lets go of my hand to pull out his phone, then, after a moment, holds it up slightly, the voice recorder on his phone blinking red.
A few moments later, the nurse turns the volume down slowly and shuts off her machines. โWeโll print off some photos for you. You can expect to hear from your doctor within the next few daysโโ The tech stops herself. โWell, actually, given that itโs only two days before Christmas, you most likely wonโt. But,โ she leans close to whisper, โI can tell you thereโs absolutely nothing to worry about. Just between us.โ She winks.
โThank you,โ I say.
โIโll give you two a minute,โ she says, handing me a warm towel. โFor the gunk.โ She points to my stomach as she walks around the bed and leaves.
โThat was amazing,โ Bo says as I wipe off my stomach. โTheyโre a lot less human-looking than I was expecting, though.โ
โLike a little jelly bean,โ I say, smiling fondly.
โAnd it was moving a lot,โ he says in disbelief. โLike, itโs free to just move about in there. Itโs wild.โ
โThey seem to be making themself at home, yes.โ I sit up, lowering my shirt. โWowโฆโ I say again, becauseย wow.
โYeahโฆโ Bo says on a long breath, a crooked smile in full, bold agreement.
โA baby,โ I say, flashing my eyes at him. โA baby,โ he repeats, shaking his head.
โInsane.โ
Bo sighs, dragging a hand down his face. โPretty fucking cool,โ he says, then looks up at me. We share a small, giddy smile before I hop off the table and we make our way out toward the receptionistโs desk.
After the tech hands us an envelope with two identical ultrasound photos, we walk downstairs to the lobby in companionable silence. Arriving at the main floor, I notice the snow is coming down harder, illuminated only by the streetlamps outside.
โYikes,โ I say, looking out toward the no-doubt blistering cold, winding my scarf around my neck.
โCan I give you a ride?โ Bo asks, buttoning up his coat. But then he stops and watches me intently for a moment. โActually, Iโm going to insist. Iโm giving you a ride.โ
I roll my eyes with affection. โYes, that would be nice. Thank you.โ Then I remember Sarahโs suggestion. โActuallyโฆ do you have plans tonight?โ
He finishes doing up his coat, shoving both hands into his pockets. โNo.โ He raises a brow, lifting the corner of his mouth alongside it. โWhat were you thinking?โ
โWant to come to Caleb and Sarahโs with me? Weโre doing a game night.โ
He nods enthusiastically. โYeah, sure. Iโd love that. My car is around the corner.โ Bo opens the front door, and we step out into the storm. He leads me by a floating hand above my waist toward his car as the wind whistles around us. The passenger door is opened for me and closed behind me. Then Iโm regaining my senses and attempting to warm my hands with my breath as he opens his door briefly before throwing himself inside.
His car isย reallyย nice. I donโt know a lot about cars, but with a monitor screen the size of a tablet in the centre console and leather-wrapped seats with buttons for seat warmers, I imagine it cost a pretty penny.
โGreat ride,โ I say like a total dunce.
His lip twitches as he pushes a button and the car erupts with beeps and lights and a subtleย vroomย of the engine. โThanks.โ
โYou remember how to get to Sarahโs?โ
โThink so. Pretty sure everything about that house is carved into my memory.โ He pulls off the side street, windshield wipers working overtime.
At first, I think he means it because of how nice their home is, or something alluding to Sarah and Calebโs obvious wealth. But then I realise the way in which he said it. As if the home was infamous. Referring, subtly, to theย lastย time we were both at Sarah and Calebโs. I feel my cheeks warm with a blush and thank the moon for not shining too brightly.
โIโm glad you asked me to come. Honestly, I havenโt been sure about how to doย this, but I think spending some non-appointment time together would be good. To get to know each other. Weโre sort ofโฆโ His voice trails off as he looks over his shoulder, changing lanes.
โStuck together?โ I offer.
โI was going to say something like working toward a mutual goal, but that sounded too unattached.โ
โI called us colleagues the other day, and Sarah was aghast.โ โAghast, huh?โ he teases.
โFlabbergasted, if you will.โ
โBut there is no proper term for this,โ he says in a way of agreement. โCo-parents, I guess.โ
โButย parentsย feels like a title reserved for when a kid is physically present,โ Bo says. โNo offence.โ He speaks to my belly.
โLetโs aim for friends?โ I suggest.
โFriends that are having a baby together.โ โYes. Friends with foetuses.โ
โA totally new type of benefit.โ He laughs. โBut yes. Friends is good.โ โGreat,โ I concur.
โIโm going to friend the shit out of you, Freddie McNulty.โ โSo aggressive,โ I say, giggling.
โA trait of mine you should probably know. Iโm wildly competitive. Even in a mutually beneficial task. So prepare to be friended. Hard.โ
โYouโve already made it weird.โ I sit straighter, crossing my arms. โAnd you should know, Iโm also very competitive. Which, Iโm sad to say, is why youโll never win. Iโm going to be your best friend so fast that your head will spin. As for you? Youโll be a mere acquaintance to me.โ
โYouโre on,โ Bo fires back.
โAnd donโt call me Freddie,โ I say, crossing my arms. โSure thing,ย Frederick.โ